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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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end of a 20 year career at the department and eight years as chief cal's vice chancellor outlined some of the chief bennett's accomplishments, including instituting peer reviews with other university police departments working to end the use of the carotid chock chokehold at all. you see campuses. and developing a mental health response team on campus chief margo bennett announced today she will be retiring in june. the department is searching for her replacement. a judge today approved a two year restraining order against richmond police chief piece of french and her husband, who was a. oakland police sergeant, their 18 year old daughter accused them of threatening her and her boyfriend as well as his mother. chief. french and her husband say the 34 year old man had actually been pimping their daughter as a sex worker in oakland. the alameda county d. a. has charged him in the case and in court today, chief french and her husband voluntarily agreed to stay away from and not contact their daughter, although she is free to contact them. if she chooses. police in south san francisco, say a man is under arrest for sexual battery at a shopping centre. investigators say woman was touch
end of a 20 year career at the department and eight years as chief cal's vice chancellor outlined some of the chief bennett's accomplishments, including instituting peer reviews with other university police departments working to end the use of the carotid chock chokehold at all. you see campuses. and developing a mental health response team on campus chief margo bennett announced today she will be retiring in june. the department is searching for her replacement. a judge today approved a two...
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Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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FOXNEWSW
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what that means for the broader economy, peter marici, a business professor at the university of maryland and the former chiefinternational trade commission. here's what joe biden thinks about this. listen. >> we're actually making real progress. maybe it doesn't appear dramatic enough. but we're making consistent, steady progress, though. todd: here's what the numbers look like. jobs added, 194,000, jobs forecasted to be added 500,000. peter, in what world is that steady progress on jobs? >> it's not in my world, that's just a very disappointing report. it indicates that not that there isn't enough demand. there are 11 million unfilled jobs. but the workers are staying home. they're basically collecting government benefits off the biden government and it's keeping americans from working and being productive. todd: one of the people in this world that i am most close to, i'm not going to say who this individual is, works in the job recruiting field. this person says the inability to fill open jobs is at an all -- he's never seen anything like it. he says it's off the charts and there's no sign of it ending an
what that means for the broader economy, peter marici, a business professor at the university of maryland and the former chiefinternational trade commission. here's what joe biden thinks about this. listen. >> we're actually making real progress. maybe it doesn't appear dramatic enough. but we're making consistent, steady progress, though. todd: here's what the numbers look like. jobs added, 194,000, jobs forecasted to be added 500,000. peter, in what world is that steady progress on...
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has presented the 1st lab grow hamburger to the world, professor of vascular physiology of last chiefs university. mark past professor bus is really great her in our program today. welcome. thank you. so a lot of questions regarding meet some say artificial made some say it's really anyways, let's start for from where we said last. yes. okay, so let's start with the simplest question i guess for the dummies. how does making or growing meat in a lab work? you take a cell sample from the cow you bring into a lab, putting it by a reactor, feet necessary new trends in liquids and san what? right, well that's pretty much it. so you can take a sample from a cow. you're extract this themselves from that sample so every muscle has themselves and they are sitting there to repair tissue and they can provide, they can pull the freight so they can divide many, many times. um and then because these are muscles specific themselves, they already kind of know how to make muscle tissue. so you let them proliferate until you have many, many cells. then you let them make that tissue. and then after 3 weeks, you har
has presented the 1st lab grow hamburger to the world, professor of vascular physiology of last chiefs university. mark past professor bus is really great her in our program today. welcome. thank you. so a lot of questions regarding meet some say artificial made some say it's really anyways, let's start for from where we said last. yes. okay, so let's start with the simplest question i guess for the dummies. how does making or growing meat in a lab work? you take a cell sample from the cow you...
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has presented the 1st lab grow hamburger to the world, professor of last killer physiology of last chiefs university. mark past professor bus is really great her in our program today. welcome. thank you. so a lot of questions regarding meet some se, artificial meet some say it's really anyways, let's start for from where we said last. yeah. okay. so let's start with the simplest question i guess, for the dummies. how does making or growing meat in a lab work? you take a cell sample from the cow you bring into a lab putting in by a reactor feet necessary.
has presented the 1st lab grow hamburger to the world, professor of last killer physiology of last chiefs university. mark past professor bus is really great her in our program today. welcome. thank you. so a lot of questions regarding meet some se, artificial meet some say it's really anyways, let's start for from where we said last. yeah. okay. so let's start with the simplest question i guess, for the dummies. how does making or growing meat in a lab work? you take a cell sample from the cow...
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Oct 14, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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doctor clyde yancy is a member of the henrietta lacks foundation, and also chief of cardiology at northwestern university'sf their diversity and inclusion department. he joins us from chicago. thank you forjoining us. thank you for the invitation. why is a day like today significant for you? this is an incredibly important day. the only way we can avoid the missteps of the past is to acknowledge the history, and in this case not only acknowledge the history but celebrate the gift. it wasn't a gift under usual circumstances but so many have benefited, so it is very important to acknowledge the history and what we can do differently as we go forward. we heard a little bit of the signs they about some of the impact, but broaden that out for us. what has the been here? think about how important it is to have tissue that we can study that not only approximates the human condition but actually is the human condition. so many times were you animal data on animal cells when at the point is a doesn't always strike very well with human experience. in at this very unusual case, we actually have human cells. it has be
doctor clyde yancy is a member of the henrietta lacks foundation, and also chief of cardiology at northwestern university'sf their diversity and inclusion department. he joins us from chicago. thank you forjoining us. thank you for the invitation. why is a day like today significant for you? this is an incredibly important day. the only way we can avoid the missteps of the past is to acknowledge the history, and in this case not only acknowledge the history but celebrate the gift. it wasn't a...
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Oct 3, 2021
10/21
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KNTV
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of this system. stephen: dr. derek angus, chief of critical care medicine at the university of pittsburgh, says, out of about 30 million people who have already caught covid-19 here in the u.s., only a few thousand have been enrolled in clinical trials so far. stephen: how is it a country with such vast medical resources, so much money put to medicine, have so little to show in terms of covid-19 treatments? dr. derek angus: it's not that we have nothing to show. we have a clinical research infrastructure that works perfectly well in peacetime, but it was left woefully inadequate for this epidemic. stephen: dr. angus says u.s. researchers usually don't communicate with the people providing health care, and there's no central leadership running the clinical trials, a problem made worse as researchers compete with each other for funding. dr. angus: universities competing for federal funds, to get one idea championed over another; this is essentially the system that we built. it's just that we don't notice on a daily basis how slowly we move. stephen: doctors told us covid-19 has been a huge wake-up call for clinical resea
of this system. stephen: dr. derek angus, chief of critical care medicine at the university of pittsburgh, says, out of about 30 million people who have already caught covid-19 here in the u.s., only a few thousand have been enrolled in clinical trials so far. stephen: how is it a country with such vast medical resources, so much money put to medicine, have so little to show in terms of covid-19 treatments? dr. derek angus: it's not that we have nothing to show. we have a clinical research...
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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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FOXNEWSW
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let's bring in marc thiessen and austan goolsbee from the university of chicago and president obama's former chiefgreat to have you with us. since we're waiting for the beginning of the world series, i think i would play this sound bite from tillman fertita. watch this. >> it's the european way. our great capitalism will come to an end. do i believe in taxes to make our country great? absolutely. i don't think a billionaire's tax is the way to do it. do it on income. you can't do it on balance sheets. it will never be right. >> martha: he's the rocket's owner. my head is in baseball. what do you think about that, austin? >> the argument that a billionaire says don't tax me, go tax someone else? i guess -- >> martha: there's the argument that you heard from mitt romney is it just chills investment. big business owners find ways to get around it and makes them not invest in new businesses, not build new factories, not hire new people. >> two things about that. that was the logic of donald trump cutting taxes for the same billionaires and big corporations by $2 trillion in 2017 was on the prom necess
let's bring in marc thiessen and austan goolsbee from the university of chicago and president obama's former chiefgreat to have you with us. since we're waiting for the beginning of the world series, i think i would play this sound bite from tillman fertita. watch this. >> it's the european way. our great capitalism will come to an end. do i believe in taxes to make our country great? absolutely. i don't think a billionaire's tax is the way to do it. do it on income. you can't do it on...
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Oct 15, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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at keller, assistant professor in supply chain management at new cost of university business school in the anti china. dan wang chief economist at hang sang bank china and in plymouth. stavros can, i'm pre this lecture maritime economics. and the head of the maritime transport research group at the university of plymouth. welcome to the program. let's begin in new castle 1st. we just color as i understand it, the most simple way of describing this global supply chain is the fact that it works on this kind of last minute principle. the idea is that with frictionless borders, with a all the supply chain working at once, everything gets to the shops, everything gets the stores just in time, nothing has stockpiled. and for that, for decades, that system has worked for the most part. but now with the pandemic and with briggs it and with say, shortage of workers, those that last minute principal is being really test it. is it still working? is it still the best way? i think the whole principle of just to time production and delivery, it's bugs in certain settings and it doesn't buck another setting. and it's really import
at keller, assistant professor in supply chain management at new cost of university business school in the anti china. dan wang chief economist at hang sang bank china and in plymouth. stavros can, i'm pre this lecture maritime economics. and the head of the maritime transport research group at the university of plymouth. welcome to the program. let's begin in new castle 1st. we just color as i understand it, the most simple way of describing this global supply chain is the fact that it works...
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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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KTVU
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of chief margo bennett's 20 year career at the department, including eight years as chief cows of vice chancellor highlighted chief but its accomplishments that included instituting peer reviews with other universityend the use of the parroted. crowded chokehold at all. you see campuses and developing a mental health response team on campus chief bennett is retired in june. the department is searching for her replacement now to san francisco supervisors are proposing a sick leave program for domestic workers. according to the chronicle. this measure would be introduced and require employees to pay into a fund workers such as house cleaners and nannies could then use the money to take paid time off when they're sick. supervisor hillary ronan is a co sponsor. she says she hopes to find ways to provide domestic workers with other benefits, including retirement and health insurance. the abigail hotel in san francisco will return as permanent housing for low income city residents. the abigail will provide 59 units of housing for adults transitioning from permanent supportive housing to affordable housing. the rooms have a private bathroom and the building includes the lobby, a community room and kitche
of chief margo bennett's 20 year career at the department, including eight years as chief cows of vice chancellor highlighted chief but its accomplishments that included instituting peer reviews with other universityend the use of the parroted. crowded chokehold at all. you see campuses and developing a mental health response team on campus chief bennett is retired in june. the department is searching for her replacement now to san francisco supervisors are proposing a sick leave program for...
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Oct 3, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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the university police chief retired in october of that year.s extortion claims was later found to have been inappropriately showing off the explicit photos involved to his colleagues. without a work related reason. by the time that was learned, that officer had already left the force. others were fired. >> university of utah president ruth watkins says she's resigning. >> then university of utah president ruth watkins, whose shockingly said lauren's death could it have been prevented, announced she would be stepping down. the questions about how lauren 's case was handled, never went away. university says it has implemented the recommendations in the review to improve student safety and gone further. appointing a chief safety officer, overhauling the school safety apparatus, adding specialized employees like social workers, who can deal with relationship violence. in october 2020, the university settled a lawsuit brought brought by lauren's parents, agreeing to t pay the mccluskeys ten and a half million dollars. >> the university acknowledges
the university police chief retired in october of that year.s extortion claims was later found to have been inappropriately showing off the explicit photos involved to his colleagues. without a work related reason. by the time that was learned, that officer had already left the force. others were fired. >> university of utah president ruth watkins says she's resigning. >> then university of utah president ruth watkins, whose shockingly said lauren's death could it have been...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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of some white house records are. richard painter was the chief white house ethics lawyer and is now a law professor at the university ecutive privilege. that president nixon could not exert executive privilege over the white house tapes recording his phone calls in which he had instructed others to obstruct the watergate investigation. sometimes executive privilege is upheld. but one thing is very clear — that the executive privilege belongs to the president of the united states, the current, sitting president of the united states, and that isjoe biden. joe biden has the right to assert the executive privilege with respect to communications of any prior president because he holds the presidency, and the courts would decide whether the executive privilege stands or does not. unlike richard nixon back in 1973, donald trump is no longer president. there is no way that he can assert the privilege sitting on a golf cart in florida as a former president. he has no standing to assert privilege. i don't believe the federal courts will pay any attention to this. right. well, his case claimed that the committee's requests are
of some white house records are. richard painter was the chief white house ethics lawyer and is now a law professor at the university ecutive privilege. that president nixon could not exert executive privilege over the white house tapes recording his phone calls in which he had instructed others to obstruct the watergate investigation. sometimes executive privilege is upheld. but one thing is very clear — that the executive privilege belongs to the president of the united states, the current,...
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Oct 23, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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she most recently published a biography of cheesed chief justice john roberts entitled the chief in 2019 birx is a graduate of georgetown university when she was eight finalist for the pulitzer prize explanatory journalism in 2016. so please join me and welcoming both of them to the stage. [applause] [applause] [applause] thank you and thanks to also laurent rosenberg who had quite the hustle and arranging all this. this is the very first time we've been back in person at the smithsonian. i have to say we have the added bonus this is justice buyers first in person washington d.c. he couldn't say in the world he was up at the 92nd street we have extra special things you also something even better because today was the first time that the press and the eight justices minus justice kavanaugh were in the courtroom for oral arguments. they had not been to gather on the bench to hear a case since march 4, 2020. this was quite a big day. joanne breyer was there watching justice kennedy the retired justice kennedy roberts was there how do i feel to you? what was it like for you? and everybody here. second to your question how did it feel?
she most recently published a biography of cheesed chief justice john roberts entitled the chief in 2019 birx is a graduate of georgetown university when she was eight finalist for the pulitzer prize explanatory journalism in 2016. so please join me and welcoming both of them to the stage. [applause] [applause] [applause] thank you and thanks to also laurent rosenberg who had quite the hustle and arranging all this. this is the very first time we've been back in person at the smithsonian. i...
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Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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MSNBCW
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of the covid news, i'm joined by dr. lilian abel, chief infectious disease specialist at the university of miami health system. doctor, good to see you. let's start with a booster shot rollout. "the new york times" writes that the booster rollout has complicated efforts to persuade the unvaccinated to get their first round of shots. one vaccinated man in ohio told "the times," quote, it seems like it's just a short time and people are already having to get boosters and the fact that they didn't realize that earlier in the rollout, shows me that there could be other questions that there could be out there. does this match the conversations that you and your colleagues are having with patients, doctor? >> i think from the beginning, we knew this was a new disease. we have a vaccine that's highly effective, but as you know, viruses can mutate. and as new strains of viruss have appeared, we are understanding better how effective are the vaccines for these new variants. for example, the delta variant. we also know from other vaccines like hepatitis and other conditions or even the flu vaccine that immunocompromised
of the covid news, i'm joined by dr. lilian abel, chief infectious disease specialist at the university of miami health system. doctor, good to see you. let's start with a booster shot rollout. "the new york times" writes that the booster rollout has complicated efforts to persuade the unvaccinated to get their first round of shots. one vaccinated man in ohio told "the times," quote, it seems like it's just a short time and people are already having to get boosters and the...
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Oct 6, 2021
10/21
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FOXNEWSW
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of this coming from the arlington police department. i want to bring them now jeff james, retired assistant special agent in charge for the secret service. current chief of police at a university in pennsylvania. joining us by phone. you are with me now. >> i am, harris. >> harris: jeff james, when you work at a university some of them are not much larger than his high school campus because high school campuses across many of our great states including texas are large. talk to me about securing the perimeter and going door to door. >> your emergency management plan has three phases. and it really starts with having the training and the practicing of your students and your staff. so when you are in that moment if, heaven forbid you do have a dynamic event like this, everyone reverts to the training that you've given them. now we are in the third phase where it's all the things like triaging for injuries, reunification, recovery. the very slow-paced process. where they have been in the situation, and that process of going classroom to classroom and making that slow and deliberate search, you can get to people faster, even older staff members who are having medical events because
of this coming from the arlington police department. i want to bring them now jeff james, retired assistant special agent in charge for the secret service. current chief of police at a university in pennsylvania. joining us by phone. you are with me now. >> i am, harris. >> harris: jeff james, when you work at a university some of them are not much larger than his high school campus because high school campuses across many of our great states including texas are large. talk to me...
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Oct 15, 2021
10/21
by
CNNW
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>> i did speak to his doctors, including the chief of medicine at university of california irvine, and his primary care physician. those are the first questions, was this related to his heart? because he had a heart operation back in 2004, bypass operation. he had a stent placed in 2010. they said this is not related to his heart. they also say this is not covid. he was tested for covid. and he, in fact, has been vaccinated and also received his booster shot. they say that this seems to be sepsis specifically unrelated to those two things. and responding well to antibiotics. they call it an infection, but it's an infection in the blood, which is known as sepsis. because when you get an infection in the blood, that essentially means that it is systemic and that is why it is so necessary to treat those with antibiotics aggressively, which he's receiving, sounds like he's responding. how do they know that? typically people feel better, but also their fever may start to decrease, the white blood cell count, which is usually an indication of infection, they said that was also trending downw
>> i did speak to his doctors, including the chief of medicine at university of california irvine, and his primary care physician. those are the first questions, was this related to his heart? because he had a heart operation back in 2004, bypass operation. he had a stent placed in 2010. they said this is not related to his heart. they also say this is not covid. he was tested for covid. and he, in fact, has been vaccinated and also received his booster shot. they say that this seems to...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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FBC
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public health the founder chief of staff at columbia university of urology joins us live on how withaniels in public enemies to sell misinformation and save lives. working here the closing bell in 34 minutes and when we do right now the dow would not close at an all-time record, s&p is also close, the nasdaq down eight, we're coming right back. ♪ this is wealth. ♪ ♪ this is worth. that takes wealth. but this is worth. and that - that's actually worth more than you think. don't open that. wealth is important, and we can help you build it. but it's what you do with it, that makes life worth living. principal. for all it's worth. everyone remembers the moment they heard, “you have cancer.” how their world stopped... and when they found a way to face it. for some, this is where their keytruda story begins. keytruda — a breakthrough immunotherapy that may treat certain cancers. one of those cancers is advanced melanoma, which is a kind of skin cancer where keytruda may be used when your melanoma has spread or cannot be removed by surgery. keytruda helps your immune system fight cancer but
public health the founder chief of staff at columbia university of urology joins us live on how withaniels in public enemies to sell misinformation and save lives. working here the closing bell in 34 minutes and when we do right now the dow would not close at an all-time record, s&p is also close, the nasdaq down eight, we're coming right back. ♪ this is wealth. ♪ ♪ this is worth. that takes wealth. but this is worth. and that - that's actually worth more than you think. don't open...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
by
CNNW
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monica gandhi, professor of medicine, associate division chief of hiv infectious disease and global medicine at the universityrnia at san francisco. great to have you with us. i want to pick up where we left off with jacqueline's reporting. the cdc is looking into this test to stay program. jacqueline pointed out, the numbers were impressive the superintendents she spoke with, but they had this layered approach, which included masking in schools. you've been vocal about getting kids back for in-person learning. do you think something like test to stay perhaps with this layered approach is the right way to do that? >> i really do. quarantines have become the new school closures in the fall of 2021 because you're asking children to stay out of school for a full 14 days at times because they were exposed to someone with covid when they were wearing masks. modified quarantine means if you're both wearing masks you don't need to have that. test to stay means if there was a true exposure, you can come in, test, as long as you're negative, you're not endangering anyone, come in, do your in-person learning, and stay.
monica gandhi, professor of medicine, associate division chief of hiv infectious disease and global medicine at the universityrnia at san francisco. great to have you with us. i want to pick up where we left off with jacqueline's reporting. the cdc is looking into this test to stay program. jacqueline pointed out, the numbers were impressive the superintendents she spoke with, but they had this layered approach, which included masking in schools. you've been vocal about getting kids back for...
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Oct 17, 2021
10/21
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KTVU
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they say the former commander in chief will remain overnight at the university of california, irvine medical center. and continue to receive intravenous antibiotics. they expect them to be discharged tomorrow, the spokesperson says. mr clinton is in great spirits and spending time with his family. the supply chain backlog is putting a lot of pressure on the white house to do something. cargo containers loaded with goods are clogging ports and their contents are not being transported to where they where they are needed. that is driving up prices and angering consumers. foxes david spun has the very latest. the president is facing multiple uphill battles that will last far longer than just this weekend. the supply chain crisis is one that may very well along with covid-19 stick with this white house until the new year manufacturers we work with. can't find workers they've even doubled their wages, sometimes even triple their wages added signing bonuses. they just can't find enough people to produce the goods. or to drive the trucks. cargo ships continue to sit in an ocean parking lot o
they say the former commander in chief will remain overnight at the university of california, irvine medical center. and continue to receive intravenous antibiotics. they expect them to be discharged tomorrow, the spokesperson says. mr clinton is in great spirits and spending time with his family. the supply chain backlog is putting a lot of pressure on the white house to do something. cargo containers loaded with goods are clogging ports and their contents are not being transported to where...
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Oct 18, 2021
10/21
by
CNNW
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he went to city university of new york, and the fact that he could make it, rise toni the position of joint chiefsschool that you could make it. >> absolutely. jamie, thank you, as always. >> sure. >> for being here. we are waiting to hear also from president biden himself. we have seen many statements coming in from former secretaries of state as well, fo former president george w. bush and after that let me hand it off to my colleague john king. "inside politics" begins right now. >>> hello, everybody, and welcome to "inside politics." i'm john king in washington. thank you for sharing this day with us. we begin this hour with sad breaking news and a most painful reminder of are our pandemic reality. colin powell has died of covid complications. general powell, secretary powell, was 84. he was a trailblazer whose public service spanned four decades, the first african-american to sever as national security adviser, then the first african-american chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and then the first african-american secretary of state. as america's top general he was the architect of an overwh
he went to city university of new york, and the fact that he could make it, rise toni the position of joint chiefsschool that you could make it. >> absolutely. jamie, thank you, as always. >> sure. >> for being here. we are waiting to hear also from president biden himself. we have seen many statements coming in from former secretaries of state as well, fo former president george w. bush and after that let me hand it off to my colleague john king. "inside politics"...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
by
BBCNEWS
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of the day's other news. the imf�*s first woman chief economist gita gopinath is set to return to harvard university in januaryhind the creation of a taskforce to deal with the covid—19 pandemic. gopinath also helped set up a team to address the climate crisis. the imf says it'll start looking for a replacement soon. chinese developer sinic holdings has defaulted on $246 million of bonds. it comes just days before a critical deadline for evergrande to pay some of its offshore bondholders. there's fear of the potential spillover effect on the chinese economy caused by a collapse of the property giant. the uk's financial conduct authority has fined credit suisse over £147 million for serious financial crime due diligence failings related to loans worth over us$1.3 billion, which the bank arranged for the republic of mozambique. these loans and a bond exchange were tainted by corruption. credit suisse has also agreed with the fca to forgive us$200 million of debt owed by the republic of mozambique as a result of these tainted loans. a new initiative to force the global shipping industry has been announced. spearh
of the day's other news. the imf�*s first woman chief economist gita gopinath is set to return to harvard university in januaryhind the creation of a taskforce to deal with the covid—19 pandemic. gopinath also helped set up a team to address the climate crisis. the imf says it'll start looking for a replacement soon. chinese developer sinic holdings has defaulted on $246 million of bonds. it comes just days before a critical deadline for evergrande to pay some of its offshore bondholders....
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Oct 8, 2021
10/21
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CNNW
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rainy associate dean of medicine at brown university. dr. sanjay gupta our chieft diagnosed it this way. >> thinking about the country as my own parish, i think that's how i think about things. if i was talking to the family of a patient i would say the patient is still in the intensive care unit, but we are getting ready to maybe move the patient out of icu on to the general care floor. >> that right, do you agree with that? >> yi do agree with the additional point that we're almost ready to most patient out of icu, but with a caution they might have to come back, right? we're heading into colder months. so much of our country is still not vaccinated, and there may be other var yabts on iants on the across the globe. this is good news. what goes up must come down, seeing the slow of yet another surge but doesn't mean we're in for more trouble in some states and as the season gets colder. >> the some states part is critical. we watched this during the summer. surge was more in southern states, states with lower vaccination rates. this is a cnn analysis. in nine st
rainy associate dean of medicine at brown university. dr. sanjay gupta our chieft diagnosed it this way. >> thinking about the country as my own parish, i think that's how i think about things. if i was talking to the family of a patient i would say the patient is still in the intensive care unit, but we are getting ready to maybe move the patient out of icu on to the general care floor. >> that right, do you agree with that? >> yi do agree with the additional point that we're...
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Oct 31, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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of-a-kind. so we think god for anti-virginia. >> my name is hazel editor-in-chief of the tri-city news wire and they teach at howard university multicultural media history. my question is this. as i was listening to you all i remember a history lesson about the shot that was heard all around the world in the revolutionary war. emmett till sort of gave the whistle that we heard all around the world. we know what happened after the revolutionary war. i would like to know where we go from here and which each of you would like to see calm from what happened to our little brother, emmett till? what do you say new future? >> is that directed to anyone special? >> anyone who wants to respond. >> i would just respond first of all his life was definitely not his name. he was 14 years old and hadn't even begun to live and what happened to him didn't have anything to do with law enforcement didn't have anything to do with him committing a crime and his life was taken away from him. the epitome of injustice and we don't ever want that to happen again. so keeping this in the present i feel is so important and not just black folks but people whatever et
of-a-kind. so we think god for anti-virginia. >> my name is hazel editor-in-chief of the tri-city news wire and they teach at howard university multicultural media history. my question is this. as i was listening to you all i remember a history lesson about the shot that was heard all around the world in the revolutionary war. emmett till sort of gave the whistle that we heard all around the world. we know what happened after the revolutionary war. i would like to know where we go from...
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Oct 9, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN3
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serves as executive director of initiatives for hubble state university as a former executive director of the california center for rural policy for she continues to serve as a chief policy advisor. she's worked in the state legislature covering one of the largest school district in the lower 48 and served on city council and as mayor. she's also involved several boards of directors the member of the aspen institute strategy group. so welcome connie thanks for joining us for. >> thank you so much for joining me. >> just to get us started out to turn to each of you to describe about the work you do the work your organizations do, and rural america. a assistant secretary i will turn to first. a gerbil you head up the economic development association or eda at the department. many people might not be familiar with eda so could you just describe pda's role, and how it works, the key principle behind the programs and activities? it will be great to talk a little bit about eda's relationship for rural places for. >> tony thank you so much for facilitating today's discussion. i am very excited and i appreciate the work to spur the transformational ideas needed to solve t
serves as executive director of initiatives for hubble state university as a former executive director of the california center for rural policy for she continues to serve as a chief policy advisor. she's worked in the state legislature covering one of the largest school district in the lower 48 and served on city council and as mayor. she's also involved several boards of directors the member of the aspen institute strategy group. so welcome connie thanks for joining us for. >> thank you...
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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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CNNW
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grace lee, associate chief meld cal officer for practice innovation at sanford university school of medicine. great to have you with us. there's so much anticipation about what is happening in this moment as that independent advisory board is debating. they will make their recommendation, whatever it may be, ideally later today. when you looked at some of this data, the information that we have publicly, that we know, is there anything that gives you pause in recommending this vaccine if, in fact, it is authorized, to your patients? >> well, a couple things. so first, yes , the publicly available data is a nice summary of what the data show. it's important to have this review process, including independent advisory meetings open to the public. i think transparency has been key to public trust. the scientific advisers are debating both the benefits and the risks of vaccination as well as the risks of covid-19 infection in our children. so as a parent, and as pediatrician, the questions that i always ask are, is it safe, is it effective, and will it be impactful in the lives of children. >> yo
grace lee, associate chief meld cal officer for practice innovation at sanford university school of medicine. great to have you with us. there's so much anticipation about what is happening in this moment as that independent advisory board is debating. they will make their recommendation, whatever it may be, ideally later today. when you looked at some of this data, the information that we have publicly, that we know, is there anything that gives you pause in recommending this vaccine if, in...
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Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN
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army general paul nakasone, national security agency director, chief of the central security service. this is hosted by american university in washington, d.c. >> he. we commanded u.s. army cyber command
army general paul nakasone, national security agency director, chief of the central security service. this is hosted by american university in washington, d.c. >> he. we commanded u.s. army cyber command
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Oct 6, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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of extra work to do this. but to come back to the justification originally, for this £20 uplift, universal credit, one of its chiefthem to do more hours a week. this clearly became impossible during lockdown. there was also the situation where many people are on furlough, but not getting the full amount, their employers were not topping up, and universal credit would help here. now, that has changed. we are now back to a situation where we have over1 million vacancies. you know, people can find jobs much more easily than they could have done a year ago. ilen they could have done a year ago. len shackleton, thank you. professor of economics at of buckingham. the headlines on bbc news... boris johnson closes the conservative party conference with a promise his government has more "guts" than any before when it comes to the issues facing society and the economy. the £20—a—week increase to universal credit — claimed by almost 6 million people — comes to an end today. and how a 200 million year dinosaur fossil was discovered in the drawers of the natural history museum. australia and papua new guinea are ending the agr
of extra work to do this. but to come back to the justification originally, for this £20 uplift, universal credit, one of its chiefthem to do more hours a week. this clearly became impossible during lockdown. there was also the situation where many people are on furlough, but not getting the full amount, their employers were not topping up, and universal credit would help here. now, that has changed. we are now back to a situation where we have over1 million vacancies. you know, people can...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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of our nation's chief banking regulators. about a month ago president biden announced his intention to nominate cornell university law professor sole amarova to serve as comptroller of the currency. i was on the floor recently and spoke about her nomination, and i noted at the time that she had been celebrated on the far left for promoting ideas that she herself as described as, and i quote, radical. it's one of the few things on which i agree p with her. these are radical ideas. in fact, they are very radical ideas. and most disturbing about this, madam president, is they demonstrate -- these ideas of her -- a very clear aversion to america's free enterprise system at a very fundamental level, despite the fact that our free enterprise system has produced an incredible level of prosperity and standard of living. i have to say i don't think i've ever seen a more radical choice for any regulatory spot in our federal government that i can think of than professor amarova. let me be clear that assessment is based on the things that professor amarova has written and said in her own words often quite recently. today i want to focus o
of our nation's chief banking regulators. about a month ago president biden announced his intention to nominate cornell university law professor sole amarova to serve as comptroller of the currency. i was on the floor recently and spoke about her nomination, and i noted at the time that she had been celebrated on the far left for promoting ideas that she herself as described as, and i quote, radical. it's one of the few things on which i agree p with her. these are radical ideas. in fact, they...
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Oct 29, 2021
10/21
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army general paul nakasone, national security agency director, chief of the central security service. this is hosted by american university in washington, d.c. >> he. we commanded u.s. army cyber command from october 2016 until taking over this role. he is a native of white bear lake, minnesota, graduate of st. john's university, where he received his commission through the reserve officers training corps. he holds graduate disease from the u.s. army war college, national defense intelligence college, and university of southern california. gen. nakasone has held command and staff positions across all levels of the army with korea, iraq, afghanistan. in fact, his last overseas visit posting was as director of intelligence j2 at the international security assistance force joint command in kabul, afghanistan. gen. nakasone has also commanded the cyber national mission force at u.s. cyber command previously. has commanded a company, battalion, and brigade, and served as the senior intelligence officer at the battalion, division, and core level. i am proud to say that i consider him a mentor and friend. it's a privilege to hav
army general paul nakasone, national security agency director, chief of the central security service. this is hosted by american university in washington, d.c. >> he. we commanded u.s. army cyber command from october 2016 until taking over this role. he is a native of white bear lake, minnesota, graduate of st. john's university, where he received his commission through the reserve officers training corps. he holds graduate disease from the u.s. army war college, national defense...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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chief executive of uk music. | that. chief executive of uk music. thank you. new research has suggested infrared light could help ease the symptoms of dementia. the study led by scientists at durham university is needed. with meat now is one of the scientists behind the study. and doctor susan cole has from alzheimer's research uk. thank you forjoining us. why did you begin looking at this particular area as a possible treatment for dementia, infrared light therapy? this is 20 years in the making. i've been working on this for the last 20 years. investigating the possibility of using infrared light as a therapy. 0ver that time, of using infrared light as a therapy. 0verthat time, i of using infrared light as a therapy. 0ver that time, i was sceptical at the beginning but over that time we have been working on the mechanisms and trying to understand them and the potential use in ageing. and also the potential for age—related diseases for alzheimer's. the culmination of this is the recent clinical trials in humans, this study that is released today relates to ageing, these are middle aged individuals that used the treatment for about three months. have shown improvements in some facets of the
chief executive of uk music. | that. chief executive of uk music. thank you. new research has suggested infrared light could help ease the symptoms of dementia. the study led by scientists at durham university is needed. with meat now is one of the scientists behind the study. and doctor susan cole has from alzheimer's research uk. thank you forjoining us. why did you begin looking at this particular area as a possible treatment for dementia, infrared light therapy? this is 20 years in the...
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Oct 3, 2021
10/21
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KPIX
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of concordia university and their law school is in ohio. >> host: and unt uc berkeley? >> yes i'm very much a local and i have family in the bay area. >> host: you are the chief executive officer in san francisco. i looked at this copious website and you have five identified service areas. maybe you want to tell us about those. >> certainly. we serve the homeless in various ways and we serve aging and disabled adults. we serve refugee individuals as well as children. in the homelessness area, we serve an immense amount of beautiful, beautiful human beings who need shelter and who need love and need protection from what is happening on the streets. we have many homeless mothers and babies who are part of our community as well as other centers that we have. in our aging and support services, we have older adults who come to our centers to be amongst friends and you feel nurtured and companionship. they are amazing, amazing people who just need to be with community and to be cared for instead of being at home lonely and without food or without safe surroundings. the children we serve through the various programs in the bay area, they are children who perhaps don't have th
of concordia university and their law school is in ohio. >> host: and unt uc berkeley? >> yes i'm very much a local and i have family in the bay area. >> host: you are the chief executive officer in san francisco. i looked at this copious website and you have five identified service areas. maybe you want to tell us about those. >> certainly. we serve the homeless in various ways and we serve aging and disabled adults. we serve refugee individuals as well as children. in...
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Oct 12, 2021
10/21
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FBC
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joining me right now university of investment fund chairman denise and cfra chief strategist sam stovallg things off with you on the major spike in oil, hoovering $81 an hour. 7-year high, brent is also trading above $83. you've been saying that the bull market for equities is over and that we are headed into a bear market started with big tech. tell us about that and about the impact that the price of oil is going to have on stocks. >> two big topics, let's talk about that bear markets process and takes a while for bull market and it's been a wonderful bull market and i hope the bull market shall continue but i have my doubts but the process is taking place. we saw the high in the russell take place earlier in the spring. we have seen highs take place in narrowly defined indices, dow, nasdaq taking place over the course of the last month and a half or two. volume seems to come on the downside instead of coming on the upside, trend lines have been broken. averages are turning lower and the fed has begun the process of shall be in the process of tapering expansion monetary policies so i t
joining me right now university of investment fund chairman denise and cfra chief strategist sam stovallg things off with you on the major spike in oil, hoovering $81 an hour. 7-year high, brent is also trading above $83. you've been saying that the bull market for equities is over and that we are headed into a bear market started with big tech. tell us about that and about the impact that the price of oil is going to have on stocks. >> two big topics, let's talk about that bear markets...
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Oct 20, 2021
10/21
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KQED
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university is one of many historically black colleges and universities that use federal pandemic really funds to clear the outstanding balances owed directly to them intuitions and fees. >> we are doing whatever we can. reporter: the chiefs the goal is retention. >> how can we ensure that our students are getting everything that we can possibly provide so that they can stay here? reporter: it's a welcome relief to students who are disproportionately low income. 75% get pell grants. many come from black communities which were hit hard by wage and job losses during the pandemic. >> schools are realizing that the fees that are associated with attending their universities and colleges are prohibiting them from completing their degree or delaying their opportunity with completing their degree. reporter: trinity washington university student population is predominantly black and hispanic, most students are women, and the provost says on average, they have few resources. >> the median family income is $25,000 a year. that's family income. at $200 bill can make the difference for them staying in school. reporter: trinity spent more than $2 million in american rescue plan funds to pay off balances for 535 students. >> many of ou
university is one of many historically black colleges and universities that use federal pandemic really funds to clear the outstanding balances owed directly to them intuitions and fees. >> we are doing whatever we can. reporter: the chiefs the goal is retention. >> how can we ensure that our students are getting everything that we can possibly provide so that they can stay here? reporter: it's a welcome relief to students who are disproportionately low income. 75% get pell grants....
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Oct 25, 2021
10/21
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BBCNEWS
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i'm joined now by kate nicholls, chief executive of uk hospitality and kenjacobs, chair of the universitythink the impact will be unemployment in the impact will be unemployment in the uk? ., , the impact will be unemployment in theuk? ., , the uk? clearly, people in heapitality _ the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are _ the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are the - the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are the main i the uk? clearly, people in l hospitality are the main part the uk? clearly, people in - hospitality are the main part of our business. it is the main cost that the business has. we are nothing without our people, so this is an area where businesses have already been investing. and then you have wage rate inflation in hospitality running at 11—13%. this is that the upper end of what employers were expecting, but it is in line with the low pay recommendation. from that point of view, businesses have known this was coming and it was able to plan for this. however, it will see significant increases in cost, hitting at the same time we see tax increases for hospitality bu
i'm joined now by kate nicholls, chief executive of uk hospitality and kenjacobs, chair of the universitythink the impact will be unemployment in the impact will be unemployment in the uk? ., , the impact will be unemployment in theuk? ., , the uk? clearly, people in heapitality _ the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are _ the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are the - the uk? clearly, people in hospitality are the main i the uk? clearly, people in l hospitality are the main part the uk?...
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Oct 19, 2021
10/21
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KQED
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university is one of many historically black colleges and universities that used federal pandemic relief funds to clear the outstanding balances owed directly to them in tuitions and fees. >> we're doing whatever we can. >> alcindor: the school's chiefcial officer akua johnson matherson ys the goal is retention. >> how can we ensure that our students are getting everything that we can possibly provide, so that they can stay here? >> alcindor: it's a welcome relief to students at h.b.c.u.s, who are disproportionately low-income. more than 75% receive pell grants, and many come from black communities which were hit hard by wage and job losses during the pandemic. fenaba addo studies student debt. >> schools are realizing that the fees that are associated with attending their universities and their colleges are prohibiting them from completing their degree, or maybe delaying their opportunity with completing their degree. >> alcindor: trinity washington university's student population is predominantly black and hispanic. most students are women. and provost carlotta ocampo says, on average, they have few resources. >> the median family income is $25,000. that's family income. a $200 bill can make a difference for them staying in school
university is one of many historically black colleges and universities that used federal pandemic relief funds to clear the outstanding balances owed directly to them in tuitions and fees. >> we're doing whatever we can. >> alcindor: the school's chiefcial officer akua johnson matherson ys the goal is retention. >> how can we ensure that our students are getting everything that we can possibly provide, so that they can stay here? >> alcindor: it's a welcome relief to...
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Oct 14, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN2
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university of baltimore at law kimberly wailing on continued election fraud from the right for the generate six investigation and what she perceives to be threats against democracy in the u.s. then washington examiner editor-in-chief hugo talks about the publication's new website america which seeks to unify americans by promoting patriotic values. watch "washington journal" live at southern eastern thursday morning. on c-span or c-span now from the discussion with your phone calls, text messages and tweets. >> thursday at house subcommittee examines the impact of a cashless economy on disadvantaged communities. watch live at noon eastern on cspan2 online@c-span.org c-span now. >> now president biden explains how his administration is addressing supply chain issues. the port of los angeles will begin operating 24 hours a day to ease shipping container bottlenecks. from the white house this is just over ten minutes.
university of baltimore at law kimberly wailing on continued election fraud from the right for the generate six investigation and what she perceives to be threats against democracy in the u.s. then washington examiner editor-in-chief hugo talks about the publication's new website america which seeks to unify americans by promoting patriotic values. watch "washington journal" live at southern eastern thursday morning. on c-span or c-span now from the discussion with your phone calls,...
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Oct 23, 2021
10/21
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CSPAN
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chief. he was also in paris, and later as a china correspondence. he had his time in afghanistan and iraq. keith richburg is currently the director of the universityhong kong journalism and media studies center. we asked him to talk about his work. >> on this week's episode. you can look -- listen to book notes plus on our new c-span now app. >> you can be a part of the national conversation by participating in studentcam competition. middle and high school students, create a five to six net documentary that answers the question, how does the federal government affect your life? it must have supporting and opposing views. use c-span video clips that are easy to find at c-span.org. studentcam competition awards $1000 and you have a chance at $5,000. entries must be received before january 20, 2022 four competition rules, visit our website at studentcam.org. >> >> c-span is your unfiltered view of government, funded by these television stations and more, including cox. >> cox is committed to allowing people to have internet. budgeting -- bridging the digital divide one student at a time. cox, bringing us closer. >> cox supports c-span as a public se
chief. he was also in paris, and later as a china correspondence. he had his time in afghanistan and iraq. keith richburg is currently the director of the universityhong kong journalism and media studies center. we asked him to talk about his work. >> on this week's episode. you can look -- listen to book notes plus on our new c-span now app. >> you can be a part of the national conversation by participating in studentcam competition. middle and high school students, create a five...
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Oct 11, 2021
10/21
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ALJAZ
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university, and she's joining us via skype from may. i thank you very much for being with us. first of all, are you surprised by any of the revelations from the pentagon swimmer chief, a software operator about china's dominance of artificial intelligence? what is the fate of play right now? so those are some very interesting development sir, but i am not surprised in the slightest. let's have a look at some fact. so if we look at one of the greatest top tier conferences in artificial intelligence, your i p s. we look at some data from 2019 and we see that researchers coming from china have of most papers around 25 percent compared to 20 percent of for both u. s. and the you have, you actually had 18 percent. but we also see that top tier ai researchers have been predominantly working from the united states. so perhaps the battle is not that last yet. what is behind the fact that the u. s. is lagging behind. so they had the entire idea of a leading and a i think that right now we see that there is this geopolitical id geopolitical move to try to to call dibs on this field of a i. however, if we look at the pentagon chief's chief softer officer officers move, we see
university, and she's joining us via skype from may. i thank you very much for being with us. first of all, are you surprised by any of the revelations from the pentagon swimmer chief, a software operator about china's dominance of artificial intelligence? what is the fate of play right now? so those are some very interesting development sir, but i am not surprised in the slightest. let's have a look at some fact. so if we look at one of the greatest top tier conferences in artificial...
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Oct 26, 2021
10/21
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KRON
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of chicago's universal income program that's on balance. here's dan abrams live. >> officers confuse brian laundrie with his mother now an ex police chief breaksve happened. that's tonight on dan abrams live on news nation. >> that's all coming up tonight on the fastest-growing cable news network in america. news nation develop on the channels listed here. we also have the details available on our website. kron 4 dot com. now before we go, we do have a we have time for a final check on weather with dave. hey, dave. >> sanaa's, a pretty uneventful going on for this week as we recover from all the business we had over a sunday which is kind of good news because we need some quiet here before we get to more upstream as we get into the weekend kind of holiday here. the timing also works in our favor to with any hit we get happening on saturday, saturday night. but another breather. there's another system make note of as we get early into the following week. the timing of this may actually be somewhat more oct nocturnal being more of an impact for your tuesday morning commute. another break and then a juice. your system by thursday. now, this is wh
of chicago's universal income program that's on balance. here's dan abrams live. >> officers confuse brian laundrie with his mother now an ex police chief breaksve happened. that's tonight on dan abrams live on news nation. >> that's all coming up tonight on the fastest-growing cable news network in america. news nation develop on the channels listed here. we also have the details available on our website. kron 4 dot com. now before we go, we do have a we have time for a final check...