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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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we have been working with students from the university of arizona and also the university of icelandare doing a greatjob being able to develop some new experimental types of drones that are able to push the edge of what can be done. even though we don't see it with our eyes we can actually map out regions that are hot and potentially having lava flowing underneath the crust. we are also testing a series of things like grippers, basically a claw that can be used to pick up loose examples, but also drills that can actually core a sample using the drill and bring it back to a lander or even a roverfor further analysis. the different drones, the different instruments, the different mission concepts we're putting together will enable new exploration of the red planet and to see parts of the planet we have never seen before, and i hope we will have an opportunity, perhaps in the coming decade, to send a drone dedicated to exploring mars�* volcanoes and for the first time see if potentially they are harbouring evidence of life. past or present. are we alone in the universe, but also where d
we have been working with students from the university of arizona and also the university of icelandare doing a greatjob being able to develop some new experimental types of drones that are able to push the edge of what can be done. even though we don't see it with our eyes we can actually map out regions that are hot and potentially having lava flowing underneath the crust. we are also testing a series of things like grippers, basically a claw that can be used to pick up loose examples, but...
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Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. thanks forannouncer: washingtonl continues. host: this is erin durkin of national journal. she reports on health care issues, joining us to talk about the new effort by the biden administration when it comes to vaccination rates. thank you for joining us. guest: thank you for having me. host: what is the best way to understand what put forth this new push yesterday? guest: the president had made a goal for july 4 to get one shot to 70% of adult americans, and right before the july 4 weekend, they were just coming in shy of that goal, but that was anticipated. and so what you really heard
host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. thanks forannouncer: washingtonl continues. host: this is erin durkin of national journal. she reports on health care issues, joining us to talk about the new effort by the biden administration when it comes to vaccination rates. thank you for joining us. guest: thank you for having me. host: what is the best way to understand what put forth this new push yesterday? guest: the president had made a goal for july 4 to...
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Jul 15, 2021
07/21
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host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. thanks for >> tonight on c-span, president biden meets with a group of the nation's governors and mayors to discuss infrastructure. then senate floor remarks from chuck schumer and republican leader mitch mcconnell. u.s. senator's and texas legislators hold a press conference on voting rights. quite c-span is your unfiltered you a government. including broadband. >> it supports c-span as a public service along with these other television providers, giving you a front row seat to democracy. >> president biden met with a group of the nation's governors and mayors at the white house to discuss infrastructure. >> we will talk about infrastructure. president biden: i want to thank you all for being here to discuss initiative following this. this is a bipartisan issue. there is
host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. thanks for >> tonight on c-span, president biden meets with a group of the nation's governors and mayors to discuss infrastructure. then senate floor remarks from chuck schumer and republican leader mitch mcconnell. u.s. senator's and texas legislators hold a press conference on voting rights. quite c-span is your unfiltered you a government. including broadband. >> it supports c-span as a public service...
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Jul 11, 2021
07/21
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host: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda. it is the one year anniversary. could you remind people about not only what the new trade agreement is, but what brought on its, i guess, what led to it being created? caller: a number of forces there. basically this is a revised version of the north american free trade agreement that was in effect beginning in january, 1994. that agreement was negotiated in 1991 or 1992 and in many respects was seriously out of date. there also was a lot of political opposition to nafta on both sides of the aisle, and the previous administration, some logic that a new version would be attractive to a wide swath of members of congress, members of the public as well. host: some of the specifics of the usmca, ordinance for cars and trucks, protection for property, it would strengthen labor and environmental protection, would have protections for financial instituti
host: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda. it is the one year anniversary. could you remind people about not only what the new trade agreement is, but what brought on its, i guess, what led to it being created? caller: a number of forces there. basically this is a revised version of the north...
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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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BBCNEWS
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we have been working with students from the university of arizona and also the university of icelandg able to develop some new experimental types of drones that are able to push the edge of what can be done. this large drone is a beast, it has two 6 horsepower motors and over 1.5 metres wing tip to wing tip and is able to lift potentially 35 kg. today we are mainly trying a thermal infrared camera which measures the temperature of the lava, which is a first for us to be able to do from the air with this system. even though we don't see it with our eyes we can actually map out regions that are hot and potentially having lava flowing underneath the crust. we are also testing a series of things like grippers, basically a claw that can be used to pick up loose examples, but also drills that can actually core a sample using the drill and bring it back to a lander or even a rover for further analysis. the different drones, the different instruments, the different mission concepts we are putting together will enable new exploration of the red planet and to see parts of the planet we have ne
we have been working with students from the university of arizona and also the university of icelandg able to develop some new experimental types of drones that are able to push the edge of what can be done. this large drone is a beast, it has two 6 horsepower motors and over 1.5 metres wing tip to wing tip and is able to lift potentially 35 kg. today we are mainly trying a thermal infrared camera which measures the temperature of the lava, which is a first for us to be able to do from the air...
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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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BBCNEWS
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my name is christopher hamilton, i am an associate professor at the university of arizona and a planetarygeldingadalir, which is a new volcanic eruption that has occurred in southern iceland in reykjanes. iceland provides an ideal test—bed for being able to test different kinds of drones for mars because the wonderful characteristics of the environment are actually very similar to what we would expect on mars. so this has been a really exciting year for mars exploration. the drone ingenuity has demonstrated flight on mars for the very first time, being able to operate in a very thin atmosphere, about i% of what the earth's atmosphere is. is it still giving you that warning? no. the other drone we are using has a larger payload, has a number of different cameras and zoom functions, really beautiful, but also a lidar instrument. so lidar uses light to be able to range the distance between the sensor that is emitting a set of photons and a surface. it's a world first to be able to use a drone—based lidar to image the lava flow and develop a time series topography which we can use to inform t
my name is christopher hamilton, i am an associate professor at the university of arizona and a planetarygeldingadalir, which is a new volcanic eruption that has occurred in southern iceland in reykjanes. iceland provides an ideal test—bed for being able to test different kinds of drones for mars because the wonderful characteristics of the environment are actually very similar to what we would expect on mars. so this has been a really exciting year for mars exploration. the drone ingenuity...
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Jul 14, 2021
07/21
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st: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda.
st: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda.
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Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anks for talking to us about the one-year anniversary of the usmca. guest: my pleasure. glad to do it. host: coming up, erin durkin. that is coming up next. you're in the program, how are farmers markets doing in helping those -- later on in the program, how are farmers markets doing in helping those with food assistance needs? later in the program, amanda shreve. >> president biden discusses the american families plan at a college in illinois. watch live today beginning just after 2:00 p.m. eastern on c-span. online at c-span.org, or listen on the free c-span radio app. >> the secret service was founded in the aftermath of the assassination of abraham lincoln, it was not until the death of john f. kennedy that the presidential protection service got closer protection from the wreck and people. carolinian began reporting on the secret service for the washington post in 2012. in the prologue of her new book, zero fail, she started her coverage on the scandal in which agents brought pros
host: david gantz, a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anks for talking to us about the one-year anniversary of the usmca. guest: my pleasure. glad to do it. host: coming up, erin durkin. that is coming up next. you're in the program, how are farmers markets doing in helping those -- later on in the program, how are farmers markets doing in helping those with food assistance needs? later in the program, amanda shreve. >> president biden discusses the american...
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Jul 28, 2021
07/21
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CNNW
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walmart now has ten academic partners including the university of arizona and southern new hampshireis also offering more degree options in fields like business administration and cybersecurity. walmart has an incentive to expand the program, one executive said employees who participate are twice as likely to get promoted. it is about attracting, retaining and promoting workers here. a real investment. >> and coming up with creative ways to do it. a lot of places had done that before and then scaled back. >> perks are back. thanks for joining us. >> have a great wednesday. "new day" is next. when you earn a degree with university of phoenix, we support you with career coaching, including resume building, interview prep, personal branding and more, for your entire career. so if you commit to earning a degree with us, we commit to standing by you until the day you retire. that's career services for life. find out more about our commitment at phoenix.edu. age before beauty? why not both? visibly diminish wrinkled skin in... crepe corrector lotion... only from gold bond. so, you have dia
walmart now has ten academic partners including the university of arizona and southern new hampshireis also offering more degree options in fields like business administration and cybersecurity. walmart has an incentive to expand the program, one executive said employees who participate are twice as likely to get promoted. it is about attracting, retaining and promoting workers here. a real investment. >> and coming up with creative ways to do it. a lot of places had done that before and...
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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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oktar, an emergency physician at florida international university, and the university of arizona's collegecine in phoenix. he joins us tonight from miami. good to see you again. terrible circumstances, doctor. there is a doctor at tampa general who described this situation feeling as if we are being hit by a train, and that train being covid. how bad is the situation where you are right now? >> yeah, that's actually a great analogy. that's what it feels like. the last few shifts i have had have been wicked stressful, and i'm used to this. so i have been dealing with it for years and i lived through the pandemic including in arizona where there were hot spots. i don't know if i got soft or just really it is that bad, but we are in rough, rough straits in the emergency department. huge backups, massive delays, and it is ex tleemly stressful for us to try to see everyone. remember, they're very sick. so i think feeling like you got hit by a train is exactly right. every day you wake up, you get hit again. >> wow. what are you hearing from patients? i mean a lot of the things we've been hearin
oktar, an emergency physician at florida international university, and the university of arizona's collegecine in phoenix. he joins us tonight from miami. good to see you again. terrible circumstances, doctor. there is a doctor at tampa general who described this situation feeling as if we are being hit by a train, and that train being covid. how bad is the situation where you are right now? >> yeah, that's actually a great analogy. that's what it feels like. the last few shifts i have...
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Jul 28, 2021
07/21
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university of arizona -- >> you have to go to certain -- >> you have to go to certain schools. lights the shortage of workers. i mean, what's happening is amazon, walmart, starbucks, are competing for workers. >> they have to incentivize your -- >> exactly -- >> you want -- >> exactly right. >>> we've got a couple of love stories here. >> we love love. >> we need that. >> two good love stories. here's what happened -- the ex-girlfriend of a new zealand t triathlete -- this is good -- so he won a medal in the olympics, and his ex-girlfriend had this confession -- listen -- >> i went to primary school with him. and he's grown so much. yeah, real -- real proud. >> what would you like to say to him? he's over in tokyo -- >> i regret breaking up with you. >> i mean, don't we all want that? don't we all want that to be able to say, you know, here i am have the -- >> now you want to be with me. >> right. >> now i got the medal. >> jericka is not sold, vlad. >> i'm with jericka on that. that's no love story. >> you're on top of the world and all your exes are like, man, i should have zi
university of arizona -- >> you have to go to certain -- >> you have to go to certain schools. lights the shortage of workers. i mean, what's happening is amazon, walmart, starbucks, are competing for workers. >> they have to incentivize your -- >> exactly -- >> you want -- >> exactly right. >>> we've got a couple of love stories here. >> we love love. >> we need that. >> two good love stories. here's what happened -- the...
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Jul 11, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN
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host: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda. it is the one year anniver.
host: our first guest is david gantz, with -- a professor of law emeritus at the university of arizona. anchor for joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. host: we are under, when it comes to trade concerns, something called the u.s. fda. it is the one year anniver.
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Jul 27, 2021
07/21
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she's a tucson girl, university of arizona bear down, making our home do -- hometown proud. ing up next, keir simmons getting a lesson on the history of japanese whiskey and sake how did he get that assignment >> keir simmons. >> did you bring any >> did you bring any >> yes, i did. welcome to this world. you have some big shoes to fill. people will tell you what to eat. everyone will have an opinion. and, yes, there will be tears. lots of new introductions. sleepless nights. that's normal. okay. so many new toys. it's not going to be easy. but, together, we got this. kaiser permanente. thrive ♪ you probably think visa is a credit card company, huh? ♪ but it's actually a network. ♪ connecting just about everyone to just about everyone else. ♪ it can open eyes with a cup of coffee and change minds on what makes a business, a business. and it is working to connect everyone, everywhere. so, meet visa. a network working for everyone. ♪ one of the best parts of the olympics is getting to know the local culture of the host city that, of course, includes the >> now it's time for the
she's a tucson girl, university of arizona bear down, making our home do -- hometown proud. ing up next, keir simmons getting a lesson on the history of japanese whiskey and sake how did he get that assignment >> keir simmons. >> did you bring any >> did you bring any >> yes, i did. welcome to this world. you have some big shoes to fill. people will tell you what to eat. everyone will have an opinion. and, yes, there will be tears. lots of new introductions. sleepless...
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Jul 27, 2021
07/21
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FBC
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billion in five years, they are adding four more schools they partner with that include the university of arizonar security. you work at walmart you have a future, that is the message. stuart: i would like to hear bernie sanders be less nasty about walmart if they are doing that for their employees. >> i agree. he always says walmart workers live in poverty. they are making 15 plus an hour and getting free education. stuart: walmart is doing more for education then bernie sanders is. the dow 30 down across the board but the dow industrials are split 50/50, the dow is close to 200 points. growing number of schools will require masks in the fall. lara trump, mother two young children, does she support that? lera is with us after this. ♪♪ ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ ♪♪ freedom ♪♪ you can close with more certainty. and twice as fast. if i could, i'd ten-x everything. like a coffee run... or fedora shopping. talk to your broker. ten-x does the same thing, ♪♪ see how easy...? don't just sell it. ten-x it. i've spent centuries evolving with the world. some changes made me s
billion in five years, they are adding four more schools they partner with that include the university of arizonar security. you work at walmart you have a future, that is the message. stuart: i would like to hear bernie sanders be less nasty about walmart if they are doing that for their employees. >> i agree. he always says walmart workers live in poverty. they are making 15 plus an hour and getting free education. stuart: walmart is doing more for education then bernie sanders is. the...
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Jul 22, 2021
07/21
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from weta studios in washington, and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitythe rise of new covid infections is prompting evermore questions about how people should respond. the cdc added to the sobering picture of the pandemic impact in u.s. life expectay has fallen by 1.5 years. the largest one-year decline since world war ii. black and hispanic americans were hit the hardest. at times, dropping by more than three years. a big decline is mainly due to the pandemic. john yang looks at some of the key questions people are asking as the delta variant spreads. reporter: while new cases are rising in all 50 states, the heaviest concentrations are being reported in the deep south and a few other states, like missouri. more than a 99% of new hospitalizations are among the unvaccinated. even though deaths remain very low, there is new anxiety about where the pandemic could be headed in this country. a professor of family medicine at georgetown university, and senior medical advisor to physicians for human rights, also advises weta, which owns the newshour. thanks fo
from weta studios in washington, and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitythe rise of new covid infections is prompting evermore questions about how people should respond. the cdc added to the sobering picture of the pandemic impact in u.s. life expectay has fallen by 1.5 years. the largest one-year decline since world war ii. black and hispanic americans were hit the hardest. at times, dropping by more than three years. a big decline is mainly...
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Jul 20, 2021
07/21
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from weta studios in washington and from the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: there are two stories today that show the threat of governments using cyber tools to target adversaries, both internationally and within their n borders, and to discuss that i am joined by nick schifrin. first on china, tell us what it is that the u.s. and its allies are saying. nick: this is an international naming and shaming of chinese hacking and espionage. for the first time, nato along with the eu, japan, australia, new zealand joined the u.s. and accused china of using cyber criminals to conduct hacking. the accused china of the big microsoft exchange hack earlier this year. i talked with james lewis from the think tank the center for strategic and international studies about the scope of the challenge posed by china, and today's announcement. >> they are the most aggressive espionage opponent we have come a more aggressive than russia. this is a huge step forward because we have many countries joining the u.s. in condemning china for its rampant espionage. it's a significant
from weta studios in washington and from the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: there are two stories today that show the threat of governments using cyber tools to target adversaries, both internationally and within their n borders, and to discuss that i am joined by nick schifrin. first on china, tell us what it is that the u.s. and its allies are saying. nick: this is an international naming and shaming of chinese hacking and espionage. for the...
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Jul 1, 2021
07/21
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from w eta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite studio of journalism at arizona state universitydy: the u.s. is on the verge of completing a unilateral and unconditional withdrawal from afghanistan, nearly 20 years after it invaded, and the outgoing u.s. military commander has delivered a stark warning about the future of the country. nick schifrin is back right now, and he joins me. good to have you with us to talk about this. what are military leadersaying they believe could happen? nick: this is perhaps as blunt and pessimistic statement as the military has ever made about afghanistan.it's the first time the biden administration or military has publicly acknowledged the ultimate risk of this withdrawal. this is general scott miller, the u.s. commander in kabul, saying civil war is certainly a path that can be visualized if this continues on the trajectory it is on right now. that should be a concern to the world, and it is a concern to the region, for creating an environment where there is even more violence than there is today. what is behind this warning? first, taliban stre
from w eta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite studio of journalism at arizona state universitydy: the u.s. is on the verge of completing a unilateral and unconditional withdrawal from afghanistan, nearly 20 years after it invaded, and the outgoing u.s. military commander has delivered a stark warning about the future of the country. nick schifrin is back right now, and he joins me. good to have you with us to talk about this. what are military leadersaying they...
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Jul 23, 2021
07/21
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from w eta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityrtisan group of senators is negotiating the details of an infrastructure bill. after a procedural vote to debate failed yesterday, they say they are making progress and hope to have the details by early next week. the biggest sticking point in negotiations remains how to pay for it. the $1.2 trillion framework includes about $600 billion in new spending. that money would go toward public projects like shoring up roads and bridges, expanding broadband, and investing in electric vehicles. democrats are also planning a separate $3.5 trillion spending bill. for more on where infrastructure stands, i am joined by republican senator shelley capito toe of west virginia. she led a separate bipartisan effort on infrastructure last month. welcome back to the newshour. we appreciate you joining us. we know you are not part of the group that is negotiating the current planet but is it your sense there will be an agreement in coming days that both parties can sign on to? sen. moore capito: i think
from w eta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityrtisan group of senators is negotiating the details of an infrastructure bill. after a procedural vote to debate failed yesterday, they say they are making progress and hope to have the details by early next week. the biggest sticking point in negotiations remains how to pay for it. the $1.2 trillion framework includes about $600 billion in new spending. that money would go...
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Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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newshour," from weta studios in washington and, the west from walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: today marks six months since a pro-trump mob attacked the u.s. capitol on january 6 in an attempt to stop the certification of president biden's election results. i am joined by lisa desjardins. tell us now, where does it stand in terms of finding out and arresting those who broke into the capitol? lisa: let's talk about this sweeping investigation that's been all around the country led by tips in part to the fbi . here is where that stands so far. the fbi has arrested about 535 people in these investigations . from that group, 10 have pleaded guilty themselves. the rest have cases pending. there is a wide range of different kinds of charges. almost everyone in that group has been charged with improper entry, but a smaller group has been charged with conspiracy and over 100 people have been charged with assault. over 100 police officers were assaulted in that attack and that's what those charges are part of. there are still some 300 suspects that the fbi would like to identify. they
newshour," from weta studios in washington and, the west from walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: today marks six months since a pro-trump mob attacked the u.s. capitol on january 6 in an attempt to stop the certification of president biden's election results. i am joined by lisa desjardins. tell us now, where does it stand in terms of finding out and arresting those who broke into the capitol? lisa: let's talk about this sweeping investigation that's been all...
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Jul 3, 2021
07/21
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newshour from w eta studios in washington and in the west at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: for more than a week, rescue teams have worked tirelessly to clear and search the rubble of that collapsed condominium building in surfside, florida. amna nawaz has this conversation, recorded this evening before news of the emergency order to demolish the remainder of the partly collapsed building. >> judy, rescue efforts resumed late yesterday, after a 14-hour pause, over concerns that parts of the building that remain standing could fall and endanger workers. weather issues including heavy rain and lightning storms have also slowed or halted work in recent days. and now, as we reported earlier, hurricane elsa is on course to reach the florida coast this weekend. all this, as rescue workers continue their mission around the clock. we turn to michael fagel. he served as a safety and logistics officer after both the oklahoma city bombing in 1995 and the world trade center attacks on september 11, 2001. he now teaches disaster management and has written a number of text books on the s
newshour from w eta studios in washington and in the west at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: for more than a week, rescue teams have worked tirelessly to clear and search the rubble of that collapsed condominium building in surfside, florida. amna nawaz has this conversation, recorded this evening before news of the emergency order to demolish the remainder of the partly collapsed building. >> judy, rescue efforts resumed late yesterday, after a...
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Jul 14, 2021
07/21
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from weta studios in washington and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityld the beloved sinaloan tomato, one of sinaloa's biggest exports. every day thousands of pounds of tomatoes just like these are sent down the conveyor belt into packaging to be shipped off all over mexico and the u.s. but look closer. this belt is rigged with highly sensitive lasers trained to search for only the ripest, most perfect tomatoes. only those will make it to your table. think of the technology that went into this! and not just tomatoes. i don't ink i knew that blueberries grew in sinaloa. all produce here in sinaloa is big business. sinaloa is known as mexico's breadbasket. here in northern mexico conditions are just about as perfect as it gets for farming throughout the year.
from weta studios in washington and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityld the beloved sinaloan tomato, one of sinaloa's biggest exports. every day thousands of pounds of tomatoes just like these are sent down the conveyor belt into packaging to be shipped off all over mexico and the u.s. but look closer. this belt is rigged with highly sensitive lasers trained to search for only the ripest, most perfect tomatoes. only those will make it to...
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Jul 26, 2021
07/21
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KTVU
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jim bell is a professor at the school of earth and space exploration at arizona state university. e's also written a number of books, including the ultimate interplanetary travel guide, he says the future of. space exploration is exciting starts with a dream, right? you're never going to build a railroad across the country, right? you're never going to be able to talk to somebody in real time from new york to california, you're never going to be able to fly a metal box with wings. you know, it all starts with a dream like that, and the same thing is happening with access to space. he says. these billionaires are paving the way in the decades ahead. it's all gonna get just more and more. accessible to everybody. tourism we think about hey, i'm going to go to europe or i'm going to go to hawaii or whatever. hey i'm going to go to the moon for the weekend. you know, i think that's coming tie brennan fox news. a luxury travel agency in germany has sold eight tickets to fly virgin galactic into space for the price of $294,000. you can purchase a ticket to fly to space for just a few min
jim bell is a professor at the school of earth and space exploration at arizona state university. e's also written a number of books, including the ultimate interplanetary travel guide, he says the future of. space exploration is exciting starts with a dream, right? you're never going to build a railroad across the country, right? you're never going to be able to talk to somebody in real time from new york to california, you're never going to be able to fly a metal box with wings. you know, it...
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Jul 29, 2021
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i'm a graduate some of cum laude of the arizona state university and sturm college of law. -- sturm college of law. semper fidelis. i don't come here as any one of those sorts of titles. i come to you as a county election official. come to you representing the concerns, stresses, worries of tens of thousands of local county and municipal officials, appointed and elected permanent and temporary employees, volunteers, whole workers, election judges, marshals. --poll workers, election judges, marshals. i greatly appreciate you have invited our voices into this conversation. i ask you continue to listen to these people. we need your help. we need your protection. there's one more group i've yet to mention, who also get greater protection under the proposed legislation. the single most important group of people in our democracy, boaters. -- voters. my written testimony describes the following in more detail than i can get into. many of the security and integrity measures that we put in place and maricopa county, which resulted in an honest, fair and safe election in 2020. the subversive efforts
i'm a graduate some of cum laude of the arizona state university and sturm college of law. -- sturm college of law. semper fidelis. i don't come here as any one of those sorts of titles. i come to you as a county election official. come to you representing the concerns, stresses, worries of tens of thousands of local county and municipal officials, appointed and elected permanent and temporary employees, volunteers, whole workers, election judges, marshals. --poll workers, election judges,...
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Jul 28, 2021
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west, from wata studios in washington and our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitycaptioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy.] >> pati narrates: i've spent my career as a chef exploring the food of my homeland, mexico. south of the border, meeting cooks, chefs and families. learning the history and stories behind the recipes. but i've done it all while living here in the u.s. throughout my mexican travels i've felt this nagging question: what happens to mexican food when it travels north of the border? what is mexican food in america? i don't think there's one answer to that question, but i do know it'll be a lot of fun tasting my way through the research. they call tucson, arizona the best 23 miles of mexican food in the u.s. sounds to me like a great place to start. this plate is making me so happy right now. (pati laughs)
west, from wata studios in washington and our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitycaptioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy.] >> pati narrates: i've spent my career as a chef exploring the food of my homeland, mexico. south of the border, meeting cooks, chefs and families. learning the history and stories behind the recipes. but i've done it all while living here in the u.s. throughout my mexican travels i've...
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Jul 8, 2021
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weta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journal i -- journalism at the arizona state universityrunning america's largest city is no easy task. the next mayor of new york will confront an economy battered by the pandemic as well as rising rates of gun violence and homicide that have made public safety the top issue for many voters. last night, two weeks after polls closed in the city, brooklyn borough president and former police captain eric adams was declared the winner of the democratic primary. the delay in calling the race came as a result of a new kind of voting, ranked choice. mr. adams' win makes him heavily favored to become the city's next mayor, facing republican curtis in the general election. eric adams joins me now. congratulations. >> thank you for having me on today. judy: i want to ask you about ranked choice voting from a distance, it look like a mess. did it work, do you think? >> i believe we're still at the period of analyzing the impact of it. was it successful, did we do a good job in educating voters, were we prepared? this took place in a year when we were
weta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journal i -- journalism at the arizona state universityrunning america's largest city is no easy task. the next mayor of new york will confront an economy battered by the pandemic as well as rising rates of gun violence and homicide that have made public safety the top issue for many voters. last night, two weeks after polls closed in the city, brooklyn borough president and former police captain eric adams was...
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Jul 24, 2021
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weta studios in washington, and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at aaron nola -- arizona state universityen the tokyo olympics officially kicked off, it was under the most unusual circumstances in modern times. while 16 days of international competition are what is planned, william brangham takes a look at the tensions behind these games. >> that's right. the strange dynamics of opening day were yet another sign of the times. today's ceremony acknowledged the pandemic and isolation experiend by many over the past year, and paid tribute to medical workers. usually, a star-studded show, it was a quieter ceremony. national teams paraded in waving to a nearly empty stadium. tennis star naomi osaka, arguably japan's most famous athlete, lit the olympic torch. it was noisier outside as protests continued holding the games at all in the middle of a pandemic. just 23% of japan's population is fully vaccinated. for more on this, i'm joined by philip crowder, he's reporting on the games from tokyo. thank you very much for being with us. this sounds like a very unusual opening ceremony by olympic st
weta studios in washington, and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at aaron nola -- arizona state universityen the tokyo olympics officially kicked off, it was under the most unusual circumstances in modern times. while 16 days of international competition are what is planned, william brangham takes a look at the tensions behind these games. >> that's right. the strange dynamics of opening day were yet another sign of the times. today's ceremony acknowledged the...
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Jul 2, 2021
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from w eta studios in washington and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitylina is known for it's moonshine but i grew up in a tea coddler, bible thumping household so i learned about shine a little later. i'm vivian and i'm a chef. my husband, ben and i were working for some of the best chefs in new york city when my parents offered to help us open our own restaurant. of course, there was a catch. we had to open this restaurant in eastern north carolina, where i grew up and said i would never return.
from w eta studios in washington and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitylina is known for it's moonshine but i grew up in a tea coddler, bible thumping household so i learned about shine a little later. i'm vivian and i'm a chef. my husband, ben and i were working for some of the best chefs in new york city when my parents offered to help us open our own restaurant. of course, there was a catch. we had to open this restaurant in eastern north...
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Jul 21, 2021
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from wtd studios in washington, and from the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitye wildfire season in the u.s. west and dish columbia is worsening making it evermore difficult for over 20,000 firefighters to do their jobs. windy weather, lightning strikes, and triple digit temperatures in states like montana are fueling the fires even further. human-cause climate change and a long-standing drought created earlier and more intense season. william brangham has the latest. william: judy, more than fires 80 are currently burning across 13 states right now. affecting over one million acres. one of the worst blazes a megafire in southern oregon , a bootleg fire. it has been burning for two weeks and is growing by several miles each day. it has already burned an area one third the size of rhode island. carrie bilbao is with the national interagency wildfire center, which tracks all of this, and she joins me from boise, idaho. thank you for being here. i know you are very busy. this may seem self-evident to you, but can you explain how the heat this ongoing drought makes i
from wtd studios in washington, and from the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitye wildfire season in the u.s. west and dish columbia is worsening making it evermore difficult for over 20,000 firefighters to do their jobs. windy weather, lightning strikes, and triple digit temperatures in states like montana are fueling the fires even further. human-cause climate change and a long-standing drought created earlier and more intense season. william...
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Jul 9, 2021
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weta studios in washington, and from the west, from the walter kwok right school of journalism at arizona state universitynow the staggering death toll from covid-19. as we mark more than 4 million dead around the world, the actual number will likely never be known. and as the u.s. and other wealthy nations with relatively highaccination rates begin emerging from the pandemic, the disease then variants are accelerating in other parts of the world, killing more quickly than ever. nick schifrin begins our coverage. nick: has south africa walks through the valley of the shadow of death there iplenty of fear and little comfort. >> the debts are no not numbers on a new staon. these are people you know. it is family. it is let relatives. it is friends than colleagues. nick: the doctor is a physician and activist in johannesburg. he says that while the u.s. is normalizing, the world and africa are suggling because of vaccine shortages. >> if it stays like that, not only are we not safe, the road will also not be safe. nick: on the day like today, is difficult to comprehend, 4 million. equal to the victims of eve
weta studios in washington, and from the west, from the walter kwok right school of journalism at arizona state universitynow the staggering death toll from covid-19. as we mark more than 4 million dead around the world, the actual number will likely never be known. and as the u.s. and other wealthy nations with relatively highaccination rates begin emerging from the pandemic, the disease then variants are accelerating in other parts of the world, killing more quickly than ever. nick schifrin...
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Jul 10, 2021
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the pbs newshour from weta studios in washington, and the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: as we reported, haiti is leading an international investigation into the assassinatioof president jovenel moise. john yang has the latest. john: judy, the investigation is generating as many questions as answers. the 15 colombian nationals under arrest are former members of that nation's armed forces. eleven of them were captured after breaking in to the taiwanese embassy in haiti. meanwhile, the political storm is intensifying with competing prime ministers claiming the right to run the country. afr moise was assassinated, prime minister claude joseph announced a fifteen day state of siege. but a new prime minister appointed by moise -- ariel henry -- was supposed to have taken over that very day and says he's the rightful ruler. to help us try to sort through this, we are joined by pamela white, a former u.s. ambassador to haiti. and garry pierre pierre, the founder of the haitian times, a newspaper serving the haitian diaspora. thank you to both of you for joining us. garry, haiti
the pbs newshour from weta studios in washington, and the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university: as we reported, haiti is leading an international investigation into the assassinatioof president jovenel moise. john yang has the latest. john: judy, the investigation is generating as many questions as answers. the 15 colombian nationals under arrest are former members of that nation's armed forces. eleven of them were captured after breaking in to the taiwanese embassy...
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Jul 15, 2021
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from weta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitydy: as we heard earlier, democratic lawmakers have high hopes for new spending. but there are concerns about the notable hike in inflation in cent months. the consumer price index rose 5.4% last month, compared to one year ago. it was the biggest one-month jump since 2008. prices for used cars drove a significant part of that increase. but costs for many goods and services rose. during testimony on capitol hill today, federal reserve chairman powell gave his assessment. >> inflation has increased notably. inflation is being temporarily boosted by base effects as sharp pandemic-related price increases from last spring drop out of the 12-month calculation. in addition, strong demand in sectors where production bottlenecks or supply constraints have limited production has led to especially rapid price increases for some goods and services which should partially reverse as the effects of the bottlenecks unwind. judy: chairman powell was asked a number of questions about the risks of inflat
from weta studios in washington and in the west from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universitydy: as we heard earlier, democratic lawmakers have high hopes for new spending. but there are concerns about the notable hike in inflation in cent months. the consumer price index rose 5.4% last month, compared to one year ago. it was the biggest one-month jump since 2008. prices for used cars drove a significant part of that increase. but costs for many goods and services...
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Jul 28, 2021
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of the battle in florida. he is an emergency physician at florida international university as well as arizona college of medicinen phoenix. we first spoke when you were in the heat of the battle in that tremendous surge last summer in arizona. now you're working in miami. put this latest surge there and what you're seeing and experiencing into perspective for our viewers. >> i'm sorry that we have to talk on this topic again. i was really hoping it would get better, but it's actually, quite frankly, pretty terrible. i was working in phoenix last week and in miami this week. it was horrid in the e.r. last night. my colleagues here have been saying that for the last couple days at least. there have been hospitals throughout miami-dade county and it was an extremely stressful shift, lots of covid cases. it reminded me a lot of last summer in arizona. on top of that, everybody else is also coming in. last year there was a sense that people weren't coming to the e.r. now all those other people seem t to think that life has come back to normal. all those other cases are coming as well. it's a double whammy. >> you sai
of the battle in florida. he is an emergency physician at florida international university as well as arizona college of medicinen phoenix. we first spoke when you were in the heat of the battle in that tremendous surge last summer in arizona. now you're working in miami. put this latest surge there and what you're seeing and experiencing into perspective for our viewers. >> i'm sorry that we have to talk on this topic again. i was really hoping it would get better, but it's actually,...
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Jul 29, 2021
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. >> this is the "pbs newshour" from washington and the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityjudy: throughout most of the pandemic, the federal government has been able to prevent many evictions for people behind on their rent. that's due in large part to a moratorium imposed by the centers for disease control and tied to public health concerns. but the supreme court has said the moratorium must expire unless congress passes new legislation. it ends this weekend. as john yang tells us, there's great concern about what could happen next to millions of people. >> judy, according to the most recent census data, more than six million americans are behind on their rent and nearly a million say eviction is very likely for them in the next two months. one of them, lela jackson of columbus, ohio. >> i can't even apply for an apartment to leave here because i have two eviction filings, even though i still live here. it is not fair. it is not. it is so not fair. and i see other people going through the same thing. nobody wants to rent to a tenant with an eviction filing i don't know wha
. >> this is the "pbs newshour" from washington and the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityjudy: throughout most of the pandemic, the federal government has been able to prevent many evictions for people behind on their rent. that's due in large part to a moratorium imposed by the centers for disease control and tied to public health concerns. but the supreme court has said the moratorium must expire unless congress passes new legislation. it ends...
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what about the fact the viral evolution expert at oxford university, arizona category saying we have 92 percent of the bodies in this country. we now have the possibility of immune escape in terms of mutation at its highest level in britain here. obviously, scientists around the world criticizing the british government in a way, sage by inference, is now the time that we are most going to be able to expect a new british variant because of the high levels of explanation here in britain, they don't quite work that way. if you've got, if you've got very high levels of explanation in most of your population, you stop the virus and evolving in these areas because it's got less opportunity. the worst case scenario when you get partial vaccination in your community, your mailbox nation. and that's why we do need to push forward and get as much the populations actually said, i'm not sure that i quite agree with his argument and many others that don't agree with his argument. the, the concern for me is here is that the pediatric population. we probably only got about 25 percent of the population of childre
what about the fact the viral evolution expert at oxford university, arizona category saying we have 92 percent of the bodies in this country. we now have the possibility of immune escape in terms of mutation at its highest level in britain here. obviously, scientists around the world criticizing the british government in a way, sage by inference, is now the time that we are most going to be able to expect a new british variant because of the high levels of explanation here in britain, they...
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Jul 13, 2021
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pbs newshour" from w eta studios in washington and from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityto the crisis in haiti. it's been less than a week since the shocking assassination of haiti's president by gunman who broke into his home. now a possible conspiracy involving a haitian-born doctor living in florida has further roiled an already fraught situation, all this as political rivals jockey for power. there is now a new lead suspect in the assassination of president jovenel moise. haitian authorities said over the weekend that he is this man, 63-year-d christian emmanuel sanon, a haitian american who lives in florida. in 2011, he appeared to promote himself as a leader for haiti. >> with me in power, you are going to have to tell me, at are you doing with my uranium? what you going to do with the oil that we have in the country? what are you going to do with the gold that you want to exploit? judy: police chieleon charles said sanon had arrived in haiti in june. in a search of sanon's home, officers found weapons, bullets, and a hat with an emblem from the u.s. drug enforcemen
pbs newshour" from w eta studios in washington and from the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityto the crisis in haiti. it's been less than a week since the shocking assassination of haiti's president by gunman who broke into his home. now a possible conspiracy involving a haitian-born doctor living in florida has further roiled an already fraught situation, all this as political rivals jockey for power. there is now a new lead suspect in the assassination of...
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Jul 31, 2021
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of education. and arizona state university. our goal was to provide a framework for rebuilding history and civics learning for all learners k-12. what exactly is in this? the first and most important thing is it offers an inquiry framework, a review of the question that all learners k-12 have a chance to encounter as they work to bring together the historical understanding of narratives about the past and civics understanding about our government, institutions, the foundations of democracy, right and responsibility. bringing them together rather than giving people a list of what they should know, proposing questions every learner should have a chance to those questions are structured in 7 themes. i want to name those themes because it is important to understand what they are to understand the focus of the question. physics participations one. what is the? why do we evaluate it? the changing landscape. how is it the geography of this country is changing our borders and boundaries, how have we come to be? we the people, how to th
of education. and arizona state university. our goal was to provide a framework for rebuilding history and civics learning for all learners k-12. what exactly is in this? the first and most important thing is it offers an inquiry framework, a review of the question that all learners k-12 have a chance to encounter as they work to bring together the historical understanding of narratives about the past and civics understanding about our government, institutions, the foundations of democracy,...
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Jul 22, 2021
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that next doctor's assistant research professor at the global institute of sustainablelnd innovation at arizona state university with a healthy urban environment and the research focuses on adaptation urban policy and governance for the mitigation and adaptation of the hurt urban heat island effect to create neighborhood heat solutions that have thermal comfort and outcomes with the cities of phoenix and mesa and the nature conservancy the health department and community-based organizations. the third witness is the ceo and cofounder serving in the israeli i air force multiple near-death to stoke the fascination withth the weather tomorrow.il with the private security company with working with customers and federal agencies airlines and on-demand services and professional sports teams. the f final witness doctor bernstein interim director for center climate health and the global environment at thesc harvard school of public health. pediatrician at boston children's hospital and the assistant professor of pediatrics at harvard medical school. and with those advancing solutions other witnesses should know you eac
that next doctor's assistant research professor at the global institute of sustainablelnd innovation at arizona state university with a healthy urban environment and the research focuses on adaptation urban policy and governance for the mitigation and adaptation of the hurt urban heat island effect to create neighborhood heat solutions that have thermal comfort and outcomes with the cities of phoenix and mesa and the nature conservancy the health department and community-based organizations....
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Jul 17, 2021
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from weta studios in washington, and our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityok at critical race theory, this week on "firing line." >> just because i do not want critical race theory taught to myhildren in school does not mean that i'm a racist, damn it! >> it's an academic theory born decades ago. >> racism is more than a group of bad white folks, you see. it is built into the society. >> why is critical race theory at the center of a new national debate? >> the crusade against american history is toxic propaganda. >> john mcwhorter is a best-selling author. he's a professor of linguistics, a contrarian, and a commentator on race in america. >> "yes, we can't" has never been the slogan for black america, and it's not now. >> someone who has long followed critical race theory, he criticizes both what it's become and how it's used as a political punching bag.
from weta studios in washington, and our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityok at critical race theory, this week on "firing line." >> just because i do not want critical race theory taught to myhildren in school does not mean that i'm a racist, damn it! >> it's an academic theory born decades ago. >> racism is more than a group of bad white folks, you see. it is built into the society. >> why is critical race theory...
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Jul 27, 2021
07/21
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from weta studios in washington, and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityhe national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] [ theme music plays ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ -today on "cook's country," christie and bridget unlock the secrets to foolproof, spice-crusted steaks... adam reveals his top pick for electric griddles... jack challenges bridget to a tasting of supermarket bacon...
from weta studios in washington, and from our bureau at the walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state universityhe national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] [ theme music plays ] ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ -today on "cook's country," christie and bridget unlock the secrets to foolproof, spice-crusted steaks... adam reveals his top pick for electric griddles... jack challenges bridget to a tasting of...
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Jul 25, 2021
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. >>> if you missed it yesterday, we discovered that matt went to arizona state university, the walter kronkite school offied here. good to have you, matt. >> got to crank it up a bit. >> step it up. >> rob, thank you. >> well, since you ruined my daughter's birthday -- >>> coming up on "good morning america," jen shah facing new allegations of scamming seniors in a telemarketing scheme. we have the latest court documents. >>> and sleep tips for those struggling to get some rest, all the rest they need during the pandemic. more on that ahead here on "gma." the pandemic. more on that ahead here on "gma." le with rybelsus®. ♪ you are my sunshine ♪ ♪ my only sunshine... ♪ rybelsus® works differently than any other diabetes pill to lower blood sugar in all 3 of these ways... increases insulin when you need it... decreases sugar... and slows food. the majority of people taking rybelsus® lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7. people taking rybelsus® lost up to 8 pounds. rybelsus® isn't for peopl with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid ca
. >>> if you missed it yesterday, we discovered that matt went to arizona state university, the walter kronkite school offied here. good to have you, matt. >> got to crank it up a bit. >> step it up. >> rob, thank you. >> well, since you ruined my daughter's birthday -- >>> coming up on "good morning america," jen shah facing new allegations of scamming seniors in a telemarketing scheme. we have the latest court documents. >>> and...
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Jul 4, 2021
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of the political history and leadership program in school of historical philosophical and religious religious studies, arizona state university. right next to my hometown in scottsdale, arizona, so it's a great pleasure to have both in and adrian here today and if you would please start us off. just tell us a little bit about your book. basic information for those who haven't had a chance to read it yet. thank you in absolutely. thanks to the now center for having us today and thanks to the virginia book festival for including us. i'm looking forward to a great event. so my book looks at international influences on the creation of the confederacy. as the civil war opened and the spring of 1861 the newly declared confederate states of america, of course had to fight against the north against the united states, but much of their attention was also perhaps unexpectedly abroad. so i have one example the editors of the richmond daily dispatch wrote in may of 1861 using an international context to explain to their audience the meaning of the impending struggle and as they put it the struggle for nationality is the identical struggl
of the political history and leadership program in school of historical philosophical and religious religious studies, arizona state university. right next to my hometown in scottsdale, arizona, so it's a great pleasure to have both in and adrian here today and if you would please start us off. just tell us a little bit about your book. basic information for those who haven't had a chance to read it yet. thank you in absolutely. thanks to the now center for having us today and thanks to the...
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Jul 27, 2021
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melissa cordero, an assistant research professor juliann level institute of sustainability and innovation at arizona state university and works for the healthy urban environment initiative in exchange for resilience her research focuses on adaptation equity, phone about it, urban policy and governance for the mitigation and adaptation to extreme heat and urban heat island effect. currently working to create neighborhood heat solutions to improve thermal comfort and public health outcomes cities of phoenix, tempe and mesa as well as major conservative, maricopa county health department and community-based the permits. third witness -- the ceo and cofounder of tomorrow.i owe. he served in an israeli air force for 11 years. multiple near-death weather-related expenses during his service built a fascination with the weather. tomorrow.i owe was founded as a often based climate security company to bridge the gap between forecast and decision-making working with customers including federal agencies, utilities, airline, on-demand services and professional sports teams. our final witness doctor aaron bernstein. the interim d
melissa cordero, an assistant research professor juliann level institute of sustainability and innovation at arizona state university and works for the healthy urban environment initiative in exchange for resilience her research focuses on adaptation equity, phone about it, urban policy and governance for the mitigation and adaptation to extreme heat and urban heat island effect. currently working to create neighborhood heat solutions to improve thermal comfort and public health outcomes cities...
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Jul 21, 2021
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nicky cooley, interim assistant director for the institute of tribal and environmental professionals at northern arizona university. ms. cooley leads a program to help tribal nations as they prepare for tribal impact. and she works with partners across the united states and alaska on climate change mitigation and resilience planning. ms. cooley is of the navajo nation. derek holly is the president of reaching america, a nonprofit with a focus on the african-american outreach. mr. holly has over 25 years of experiencing in advertising and marketing. dr. park is assistant professor of public policy at ucla's lufkin school. and it's labor economics and public finance. his research focuses on how climate change has economic outcomes and in particular, studies the labor and human capital impact of climate change and the prospects for long run climate adaptation and environmental determinenates of economic ability. without objection, the witness's written statements will be made part of the record. with that, ms. flowers, you're now recognized to give five minute presentation of your testimony, welcome. >> thank you. th
nicky cooley, interim assistant director for the institute of tribal and environmental professionals at northern arizona university. ms. cooley leads a program to help tribal nations as they prepare for tribal impact. and she works with partners across the united states and alaska on climate change mitigation and resilience planning. ms. cooley is of the navajo nation. derek holly is the president of reaching america, a nonprofit with a focus on the african-american outreach. mr. holly has over...
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Jul 16, 2021
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of you dad. - [man] i will tell you this, southern new hampshire university can change the whole trajectory of your life. (uplifting music) >>> president trump lost the 2020 election eight months ago. so in places like arizonaend months ago is actually ramping up. the state gop now saying they need more material and the contractors running the audit say they want to go door-to-door to ask voters about their participation in the election. that's something that the department of justice has warned verges on voter intimidation. joining us now, mark mckinnon, former adviser to george w. bush and john mccain. it's great to see you. mark, where does this end? this is endless. they've already confiscated the machines because they can no longer be used in the election because they've now been tampered with. they've been opened by unverified people. >> yeah, well, they're not finding any examples of systemic voter fraud. the greatest proud in american politics right now, andrea, is this notion that there's systemic voter fraud. there is none. there's simply no evidence, republicans and trump supporters have had more than six months, millions of dollars, court cases. the texas attorney general took the case to the su
of you dad. - [man] i will tell you this, southern new hampshire university can change the whole trajectory of your life. (uplifting music) >>> president trump lost the 2020 election eight months ago. so in places like arizonaend months ago is actually ramping up. the state gop now saying they need more material and the contractors running the audit say they want to go door-to-door to ask voters about their participation in the election. that's something that the department of justice...