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Jan 7, 2018
01/18
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andrew monte is a toxicologist with the university of colorado hospital emergency department. >> theproblem is that somebody takes it if they're looking to get intoxicated and they don't feel an effect rapidly, then they take more and more and more. and you can see how rapidly they can stack doses and take too much. >> you've got to start low and go slow. >> bob eschino is a founding partner of incredibles, an edibles manufacturer that has doubled in size in the last year. people think edibles are dangerous. do you understand that concern? >> i understand where they're coming from, but from the industry standpoint, the edibles now are safer than they've ever been. >> they buy an edible. they sit down in their hotel room. >> mm-hmm. >> they eat a piece. they wait 45 minutes. nothing's happened. >> that's all part of the problem. >> so then they eat the whole thing. >> [ laughs ] >> and then what happens? >> that is all part of the problem. what we're telling people -- "if you want to get high right now, smoke. get a vape pen." >> so from your perspective, this is all learning curve? >
andrew monte is a toxicologist with the university of colorado hospital emergency department. >> theproblem is that somebody takes it if they're looking to get intoxicated and they don't feel an effect rapidly, then they take more and more and more. and you can see how rapidly they can stack doses and take too much. >> you've got to start low and go slow. >> bob eschino is a founding partner of incredibles, an edibles manufacturer that has doubled in size in the last year....
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Jan 31, 2018
01/18
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. >> reporter: martin lockley, a dinosaur track expert from the university of colorado has spent hundredss analyzing this rock. >> there are at least about 70 clearly identified tracks. >> reporter: he believes all these traction may have been made in a matter of hours, just a typical day, 110 million years ago. >> and there are all these small traction. there's a little one going here-- one, two, three, four, five-- walking around and that's a chicken- or crow-sized carnivorous dinosaur. >> reporter: in fact, there were four of them walking slowly in the same direction, apparently hunting for small mammals whose tracks are also clearly visible. it's one of the densest concentrations of dinosaurs and mammals ever found, and today, the extraordinary findings were publishepublished in "scientific reports." so we've got the two experts. let's go take a look. after our interviews, stanford and lockley decided to check out another rock in the same area, and guess what? >> they think it is. >> here's a toe here, and here and here and here. >> reporter: another ancient footprint. they didn't see
. >> reporter: martin lockley, a dinosaur track expert from the university of colorado has spent hundredss analyzing this rock. >> there are at least about 70 clearly identified tracks. >> reporter: he believes all these traction may have been made in a matter of hours, just a typical day, 110 million years ago. >> and there are all these small traction. there's a little one going here-- one, two, three, four, five-- walking around and that's a chicken- or crow-sized...
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Jan 25, 2018
01/18
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the second piece of data, universities when i talk about this and i won't put all of you on the spot but i would say how many students do you have a university of colorado, the university of montana, south dakota, i could go down the line and i'm willing to bet that every person here with no within a fair amount how many. >> how much money is raised. again, very helpful. ask yourself how many of those students graduate within six years. you know? how many of those students that graduate get a job, do you know? we are in a position that we look at higher education based on input and not output. and this is, does that not mean we don't want to teach lifelong learners? that technology is changing. very rapidly, so we need lifelong learners but we also need accountability. so i'm not aware of any industry that judges itself based on inventory coming in the door.>> they asked how much inventory goes out the door and then you know, is it actually purchased? right? so why are the metrics for higher education based on enrollment rather than graduation? or rather than jobs? and i think if you think about that, that starts, can inform the conversation about some
the second piece of data, universities when i talk about this and i won't put all of you on the spot but i would say how many students do you have a university of colorado, the university of montana, south dakota, i could go down the line and i'm willing to bet that every person here with no within a fair amount how many. >> how much money is raised. again, very helpful. ask yourself how many of those students graduate within six years. you know? how many of those students that graduate...
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thing you've got to be watch out for because it was in one thousand nine hundred seventy university of colorado geosciences brian to his college they predicted this work comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right wing through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. so. that's enough to cause like you know widespread damage and earthquakes and pretty much things that we've seen before you know that we live with you know we're way but all in the same time all the same time but still things that we've kind of we can deal with this we can make it through this however once the collision threshold exceeds the one hundred thousand tons of t.n.t. million tons of t.n.t. then you're looking at a catastrophic you know basically the worst thing to ever happen in human history at that point i think the dinosaurs would beg to differ human history human history we have certainly had that we both existed together we did but right. now
thing you've got to be watch out for because it was in one thousand nine hundred seventy university of colorado geosciences brian to his college they predicted this work comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right wing through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. so. that's enough to cause like you know widespread...
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use the thing you got to be watch over because it was in one thousand nine hundred seven university of colorado geosciences brian to his colleagues they predicted this word comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right erling through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. though. that's enough to cause like you know widespread damage and earthquakes and pretty much things that we've seen before you know that we live with you know her way but all and i think in time. same time but still things that we've kind of we can deal with this we can make it through this however once the collision threshold exceeds the one hundred thousand tons of t.n.t. million tons of t.n.t. then you're looking at a catastrophic you know basically the worst thing that ever happened in human history at that point i think the dinosaurs would beg to differ human history human history we have certainly had that we both existed together we did but rig
use the thing you got to be watch over because it was in one thousand nine hundred seven university of colorado geosciences brian to his colleagues they predicted this word comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right erling through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. though. that's enough to cause like you know...
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well joining us now also as you professor dr at the american university of colorado thanks for joining us good to have you on the program today these are very large scale protests incentives there are they we've seen some violence they're not perhaps on the scale of iraq but there have been violent incidents i mean why do you think they're getting so little media attention. well two main reasons one is a certain chick importance of your own compared to tunisia is located. in the persian gulf or gulf if you will where most of the oil is coming from. tunisia is on the mediterranean it's a small country not many people know about the american. society of on too many in america have been an enemy and mean a major enemy and a major obstacle for american policy debate that is since its evolution one hundred seventy nine also remember america intervened in the year to promote democracy destroyed iraq to destroy syria they destroyed libya so to them the success of tunisia is very important so that the arab spring would produce a model that everybody should meet a look that not all western inte
well joining us now also as you professor dr at the american university of colorado thanks for joining us good to have you on the program today these are very large scale protests incentives there are they we've seen some violence they're not perhaps on the scale of iraq but there have been violent incidents i mean why do you think they're getting so little media attention. well two main reasons one is a certain chick importance of your own compared to tunisia is located. in the persian gulf or...
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Jan 1, 2018
01/18
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i was called to the university of colorado 10 years ago to speak on diversity. this is one of those topics that has been on my radar and i have addressed it. i went out there and give a discussion which i said, you have to refocus. you're speaking of diversity and you have good intentions in mind. the you're not paying attention to the fact that you were spreading difference with the emphasis on diversity. you are putting the focus on the difference and now what brings us together. the very name of university means we should identify ourselves with a common mission. so let's embrace inclusiveness is a way to bring people together as a way -- instead of difference. i was pleased to see that not long after inclusiveness became the byword. it spread throughout the country. but my point is, they say diversity and inclusivity. they did not fully refocus and make the switch. it is not case that i am the only one who said we should talk about inclusivity. we should pray for -- we should prefer it to diversity. we need to calibrate the mission and vocabulary and our unde
i was called to the university of colorado 10 years ago to speak on diversity. this is one of those topics that has been on my radar and i have addressed it. i went out there and give a discussion which i said, you have to refocus. you're speaking of diversity and you have good intentions in mind. the you're not paying attention to the fact that you were spreading difference with the emphasis on diversity. you are putting the focus on the difference and now what brings us together. the very...
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
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i was called to the university of colorado system to speak about diversity. i was happy to do so, it is one of those topics that has been on my radar, which i have addressed there and i gave a very warm discussion in which i said, look, you have to refocus area and you are speaking about diversity and you have certain notntions but you are paying attention to the fact that you are spreading differences on the emphasis of diversity. call it identity politics or whatever you want, you are putting the focus on the difference, but not what brings together, at least in the context of the university. we should be identifying ourselves as a common mission. inclusive ince a is a way of bringing people together? i was very pleased to see not long after that, inclusiveness became quite a byword. it spread throughout the entire country. [commentary in unison] that they my point is refocuswe did not fully wherever it began. that i am thecase only one who said that we should talk about inclusivity. we need toid calibrate the mission. we need to calibrate the vocabulary, ca
i was called to the university of colorado system to speak about diversity. i was happy to do so, it is one of those topics that has been on my radar, which i have addressed there and i gave a very warm discussion in which i said, look, you have to refocus area and you are speaking about diversity and you have certain notntions but you are paying attention to the fact that you are spreading differences on the emphasis of diversity. call it identity politics or whatever you want, you are putting...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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one is we have a lot of electrical engineers coming out of university of colorado, colorado state universitylorado school of mines, university of denver, maybe a couple other cities that produce more, but certainly in migration of millennials who have those kinds of degrees, denver's one of top cities in america it's also we're a can-do that kind of western attitude that's exemplified amazon since day one you look at how denver and colorado have recreated ourselves in the last 10, 15 years as the most pro-business state in america but with the highest environmental standards, highest ethical standards. kind of what amazon's trying to reinvent a lot of economic structures in this country but with high standards. i think that's an important connection plus on a metro region wide basis we collaborate. when we passed our what we call fast tracks in 2003 but it was 122 new mile of track largest transition in the country 4 cent sales tax over the entire metropolitan denver area almost an area the size of connecticut, we had 34 out of 34 mayor unanimously every mayor in the metro area two-thirds of
one is we have a lot of electrical engineers coming out of university of colorado, colorado state universitylorado school of mines, university of denver, maybe a couple other cities that produce more, but certainly in migration of millennials who have those kinds of degrees, denver's one of top cities in america it's also we're a can-do that kind of western attitude that's exemplified amazon since day one you look at how denver and colorado have recreated ourselves in the last 10, 15 years as...
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Jan 11, 2018
01/18
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researcher at the university of colorado and your time to get a grant from the national institutes ofealth, how can they know what grants to give out if you are only funding the government in three-week increments? frankly, i think the republican majority has a duty to do an omnibus health care bill through the rest of the year. they need to keep the government open, but in the meantime they need to do something for these dreamers. it keeps drifting along. host: all those things you outlined would become worse if the government were to shut down. democrats would be saying we're going to shut down the government to protect these people. guest: first of all, i don't have the ability to shut down the government. we only have 194 democrats in the house. the republicans, as the ruling party, have the ability to keep the government open. what i am saying is number one, give the dreamers legal status. we can do it if the political will was there. and number two, stopped funding the government in -- stop funding the government in three-week increments. it is political malpractice. host: frida
researcher at the university of colorado and your time to get a grant from the national institutes ofealth, how can they know what grants to give out if you are only funding the government in three-week increments? frankly, i think the republican majority has a duty to do an omnibus health care bill through the rest of the year. they need to keep the government open, but in the meantime they need to do something for these dreamers. it keeps drifting along. host: all those things you outlined...
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Jan 27, 2018
01/18
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applause] >> she has explored each of these issues, as a scholar and educator, chancellor of the university of colorado at boulder, currently the geraldine professor of american social thought, professor of history at the university of pennsylvania, done so as a lawyer, policymaker and advocate, chairman of the us mission on civil rights, advocating for her cause through four presidencies and receives the nelson mandela award fighting apartheid. as a writer and social commentator she is the author of dozens of books, more than a dozen books but who is counting? history teaches us to resist, forthcoming in margin beacon press, please come. we care about local here. and a graduate of howard university. next up, we have someone local also. next up, if you don't know who he is you have been in deep slumber for a long time. virtually every aspect of american life, touched millions of men, women and children across the country, here's how he does it, through sermons, music, plays, movies, conferences, festivals and more. as senior pastor of the potter's house and global humanitarian organization, 30,000 memb
applause] >> she has explored each of these issues, as a scholar and educator, chancellor of the university of colorado at boulder, currently the geraldine professor of american social thought, professor of history at the university of pennsylvania, done so as a lawyer, policymaker and advocate, chairman of the us mission on civil rights, advocating for her cause through four presidencies and receives the nelson mandela award fighting apartheid. as a writer and social commentator she is...
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Jan 11, 2018
01/18
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university. brian: ted, you were an army ranger. went to colorado university, university ofh maturity process. what needed to be done for you to be successful in your academic career? >> i hadn't been in classroom for four years, or written a academic book or written an academic paper. it gave me the opportunity to in a place that it was safe to fail. brian: safe to fail, what respect? >> warrior scholarship projects i'm here with my own accord with people helping me. i am not graded yet. i was able to cut my teeth in safe environment. brian: was this to go to yale, or a project to transition back to the classroom. >> this was started by yale, undergraduates at yale, and now expanded to a national program. we run one week boot camps on 15 campuses now. this summer it will be 18. we're looking to expand nationally in the future. brian: so i woke up from the battlefield. take the face paint off, get the camouflage, what is the first thing i do when i come in. >> warrior scholar.org, apply to the program. one week. very intense sieve. we're recreating the most intensive experie
university. brian: ted, you were an army ranger. went to colorado university, university ofh maturity process. what needed to be done for you to be successful in your academic career? >> i hadn't been in classroom for four years, or written a academic book or written an academic paper. it gave me the opportunity to in a place that it was safe to fail. brian: safe to fail, what respect? >> warrior scholarship projects i'm here with my own accord with people helping me. i am not...
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use the thing you got to be watching over because it was in one thousand nine hundred seven university of coloradogeosciences brian to his colleagues they predicted this word comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right wing through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. though. that's enough to cause like you know widespread damage and earthquakes and pretty much things that we've seen before you know that we live with you know her way but all and i think i'm told the same time but still things that we've kind of we can deal with this we can make it through this. however once the collision threshold exceeds the one hundred thousand tons of t.n.t. million tons of t.n.t. then you're looking at a catastrophic you know the basically the worst thing that ever happened in human history at that point i think the dinosaurs would beg to differ human history human history we have certain ways that we both existed together we did bu
use the thing you got to be watching over because it was in one thousand nine hundred seven university of coloradogeosciences brian to his colleagues they predicted this word comes of this is where they've suddenly said we need to pay attention to these rocks right wing through the galaxy is that a space rock just half a mile wide would produce an explosion that's equal to the release of one hundred million tons of t.n.t. on the planet as a lot. though. that's enough to cause like you know...
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while the demand keeps growing university tuition fees skyrocket the world over the cost of education is high increasing. here for colorado's more. mainstream i don't understand how can a school be a scam. in the name of so-called economic pragmatism and as a result of international competition universities attending into huge money making machine it's. none of my family members went to university i think i wanted to be i wanted to be got one. from shanghai to. new york paris to berlin countries around the world reflect trying different moves each remodelling its system in its own way but at what price and who profits from it. was. at the starting point of us dorie which begins at the end of the ninety's. at that time europe is the financial izing itself all the while expanding many intellectuals european university presidents and expert groups engage in a vast reflection on how to build a more complete more ambitious europe. how to strengthen its intellectual scientific and technological influence. what is the secret of the united states and its economic power. the answer lies in higher.
while the demand keeps growing university tuition fees skyrocket the world over the cost of education is high increasing. here for colorado's more. mainstream i don't understand how can a school be a scam. in the name of so-called economic pragmatism and as a result of international competition universities attending into huge money making machine it's. none of my family members went to university i think i wanted to be i wanted to be got one. from shanghai to. new york paris to berlin...
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Jan 6, 2018
01/18
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from the university of chicago, that they are perfectly capable of making these decisions -- these distinctions. i wonder what you think of the bills proposed by a handful of tennessee,inois, colorado, and arizona, that would require universities to remain neutral on issues and impose penalties for students and others who interfere with speakers. i am fettig lee agree with eric about the responsive agree withically eric about the responsibility of the university to teach civility. that is part of what a university should do with students. ,hat is part of the mission unimportant part of the mission, but i don't think you do it by censorship. you do it by education and by example. with respect to the question about diversity among i agree that notre dame and byu, private institutions, can define for themselves what they want to be. but i don't think in a sedition that, for example -- and i don't know that byu or notre dame does this -- but any student the defends roe v. wade, you are out of here, i don't think that is university. i think they should be able to say that and should argue about it and that is what universities about. but that is my definition. that is not the legal defi
from the university of chicago, that they are perfectly capable of making these decisions -- these distinctions. i wonder what you think of the bills proposed by a handful of tennessee,inois, colorado, and arizona, that would require universities to remain neutral on issues and impose penalties for students and others who interfere with speakers. i am fettig lee agree with eric about the responsive agree withically eric about the responsibility of the university to teach civility. that is part...
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Jan 2, 2018
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in november police at the university of wyoming where he went to law school warned colorado authoritiesagainst some professors on-line. >> he had prior military experience. he had access to firearms. he was certainly making statements that were very indicative of having major mental health concerns. >> colorado police checked on him, but they found no threat. now a explain officer's family is in mourning. his heartbroken widow paying tribute with her young children at an emotional vigil overnight. >> i will do everything in my power, zach parish, to honor you. and i will raise these girls to love you. rirjts the community is left wondering if more could have been done to prevent this tragedy. >> now three of the four officers who were wounded in that attack have been treated and released from a local hospital. investigators, meanwhile, still digging for answers as to why he would open fire without warning. savannah, hoda. >> just awful. steve, thank you very much. >>> also this morning, we are learning more about a tragic plane killed 12 people. ten of the victims, americans on a holida
in november police at the university of wyoming where he went to law school warned colorado authoritiesagainst some professors on-line. >> he had prior military experience. he had access to firearms. he was certainly making statements that were very indicative of having major mental health concerns. >> colorado police checked on him, but they found no threat. now a explain officer's family is in mourning. his heartbroken widow paying tribute with her young children at an emotional...
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Jan 17, 2018
01/18
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colorado without being relicensed. if your lawyer, cpa, teacher, nurse, lpn, and your husband or why gets moved you should be able to continue to get a job. so universal recognition of licensure. the quality of the schools your basis. there is nothing that makes you basic choice more than have been exceptional schools. american airmen is four times more likely to have a college degree in the population as a whole. they care a lot about the education of their children. >> i have a question about human trafficking. we live in iowa. >> i grew up in pella. >> wow. great. a few years ago islands were definitely do not think human trafficking happen. but for et cetera at the intersection of 80 and 35 running across the country. a lot of times at the local level is high because they come from all over don't stand a place too long. to have ideas of how at the state local level we can work with you? i'm happy to hear the priority at the federal level. >> will love to talk to about the issues you're seeing in iowa. we have law-enforcement around the country, whenever i'm in a field office attend to meet with the prosecutors and state local law enforcement. ice in cincinnati a
colorado without being relicensed. if your lawyer, cpa, teacher, nurse, lpn, and your husband or why gets moved you should be able to continue to get a job. so universal recognition of licensure. the quality of the schools your basis. there is nothing that makes you basic choice more than have been exceptional schools. american airmen is four times more likely to have a college degree in the population as a whole. they care a lot about the education of their children. >> i have a question...
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Jan 3, 2018
01/18
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CNBC
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the city's lifestyle and affordable, coupled with the supply of tech talent from nearby universities. that settles it, or does it? coloradove the most educated work force in the country, according to the census bureau the state's economy is pretty solid. taxes are competitive. 70% of the state's roads are in poor or mediocre condition >> with a bit of a grain of salt remember, now, our report card looks at amazon's four main criteria as measured by our america's top states for business data and data from the census bureau. here's how denver does in our book now, remember, amazon has looked for a metro area with a million plus in population denver has almost three times that, so that's an easy a-plus it is a business friendly state. the economy has cooled a bit they have a big pension problem in the state we're giving the state a b-minus for stability. we have a b minus for talent here's where crumbling roads and those minimum state incentivists bring in they bring it down to an f for location you put it all together, and overall gpa of c-plus for denver not so mile high after all now, we have record report cards for some
the city's lifestyle and affordable, coupled with the supply of tech talent from nearby universities. that settles it, or does it? coloradove the most educated work force in the country, according to the census bureau the state's economy is pretty solid. taxes are competitive. 70% of the state's roads are in poor or mediocre condition >> with a bit of a grain of salt remember, now, our report card looks at amazon's four main criteria as measured by our america's top states for business...
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Jan 17, 2018
01/18
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have gotten to know from colorado, the family who stayed in colorado to take their of their grandfather. a triple major at colorado state university. studying political science, ethnic studies, international relations. she's built a life in colorado, the only life she knows and continues to build a bright future in the us fuss we can give her the certainty with regard to her legal ability to work and of course take her place alongside other american citizens. what makes america so great is we're a country of immigrants made up of people from all backgrounds, all corners of the world. we embrace people from different cultures and countries. we value the contributions based on the individual. the values of individual responsibility and hard work. that's what makes our country and our communities vibrant and our economy successful. mr. speaker, a group of bipartisan house and senate members are working together to find a solution to protect dreamers and improve border security. i'm proud to co-sponsor the usa act which we dropped yesterday with mr. hurd and mr. aguilar which will provide dreamers long-term protections and improves ou
have gotten to know from colorado, the family who stayed in colorado to take their of their grandfather. a triple major at colorado state university. studying political science, ethnic studies, international relations. she's built a life in colorado, the only life she knows and continues to build a bright future in the us fuss we can give her the certainty with regard to her legal ability to work and of course take her place alongside other american citizens. what makes america so great is...
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Jan 2, 2018
01/18
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of cedar rapids, iowa, my home state. david koppel is a research director at the independence institute in colorado. an associate policy analyst for kato and constitutional law denver university sterms college of law. author of several books on second amendment, one entitled "truth about gun contr" and no s and also been featured on national media programs and work published in several legal journals and we're going to go in the same way that i introduced you. so ms. guz, that how you pronounce your name? >> members of the committee, thank you so much for inviting me to speak here today. my name is heather gooze, on october 1st, 2017 i was in vegas, nevada. also there were christine carrier and heather salen. here sitting behind me today. before i tell my story, i feel i need to disclose something to the committee. i am not someone who is anti-gun. i'm very pro second amendment. but i support the bill to ban bump stocks. they are for hurting people. and they have no place in our general society i hope my story will make you understand why. the three-day country music festival going on for four years. this was my second year landing a highly coveted bartending job. one of the
of cedar rapids, iowa, my home state. david koppel is a research director at the independence institute in colorado. an associate policy analyst for kato and constitutional law denver university sterms college of law. author of several books on second amendment, one entitled "truth about gun contr" and no s and also been featured on national media programs and work published in several legal journals and we're going to go in the same way that i introduced you. so ms. guz, that how you...
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Jan 17, 2018
01/18
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KRON
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and other universities 2:42:27 you don't resort to violence and you certainly don't resort to the level of violence that occurred here redelsheimer said she fears for her life and moved to coloradoecause of what happened on campus3:06:31 we weren't even the speakers we were just going to listen to the speaker so that's how little these people value freedom of speech and free expressionthe university, city and mayor said they could not comment on pending litigation but in the past, the mayor defended the police saying the officers put safety first in berkeley, camila bernal kron 4 news (( áá v.o. / pam áá )) the silence is broken in the u.s. gymnastics sexual abuse sentencing .... as victim impact statements rain down on the doctor who families trusted with their daughters. (( áá v.o. / steve áá )) the broken immigration system on full display today as a father of twowho was a model citizen and never broke a law is deported back to mexico30 years after he came her as a child. (( áá v.o. / pam áá )) tragedy in the east bay... after a teen
and other universities 2:42:27 you don't resort to violence and you certainly don't resort to the level of violence that occurred here redelsheimer said she fears for her life and moved to coloradoecause of what happened on campus3:06:31 we weren't even the speakers we were just going to listen to the speaker so that's how little these people value freedom of speech and free expressionthe university, city and mayor said they could not comment on pending litigation but in the past, the mayor...
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Jan 16, 2018
01/18
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one is universal reciprocity and thelicense sure for the spouses of those who are on active service . if you can cut hair in new mexico, my guess is you could do it well in colorado. if you are a lawyer or an engineer or a cpa or a teacher or a nurse or an lpn and your husband or wife gets moved to the neighboring states, you should be able to continue to get a job so universal recognition of licensure and the second is the quality of the schools on airbases. there's nothing that makes a base more than having exceptional schools on airbases. an american airmen is four times more likely to have a college degree than the population as a whole. they care a lot about the education of their children. and that would make a difference. >> good afternoon. i have a question about human trafficking. we live in iowa which is in the middle of the capital. >> i grew up in there. >> but a few years ago we were, iowans were definitely like a lot of people didn't think human trafficking happened but once again, folks there think an intersection of 80 and 35, cutting across the country, the whole idea of that but a lot of times at the local level it's hard because they come from
one is universal reciprocity and thelicense sure for the spouses of those who are on active service . if you can cut hair in new mexico, my guess is you could do it well in colorado. if you are a lawyer or an engineer or a cpa or a teacher or a nurse or an lpn and your husband or wife gets moved to the neighboring states, you should be able to continue to get a job so universal recognition of licensure and the second is the quality of the schools on airbases. there's nothing that makes a base...