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so we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh god, deliver us american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home. the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story, the very 1st week, i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out. and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them. he reported them and they were expelled. and i was really shocked. i had no idea that this was something that was so terrible and i just never spoke of. i didn't go out was a leg, though, hadn't worn hair. i just kept growing years. i didn't cut it for 4 years, but someone as a senior, it was really quite long. i just tried to look more and more feminine. so i could pass. so i was quite frightened by this this, that the son the that was the time when i decided i had heard from a number of people that new york was more open. that things could happen there. and i decided to move to new york. i decided i am going t
so we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh god, deliver us american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home. the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story, the very 1st week, i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out. and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them. he reported them and they were expelled. and i was...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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KQED
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he's a professor of public policy and director of poverty solutions at the university of michigan. you able to look at in the context of the money that the government gave and what kind of impact it had on people? >> wl, after covid hit the federal government, the census bureau started a monthly survey where they'd just ask americans how they're doing with things like putting food on the table and paying their essential expenses. and so, we were curiouafter we had the covid relief bill and the end of december and then the american rescue plan that included the stimulus payments included provisions around food assistance and unemployment insurance. what happened on these hardship numbers? so, when we look at the share of americans reporting that they don't have enough food in the last week between december of 2020 and the end of april 2021 that falls by 40%. were you able to cover your usual household bills? that also fell by 45%. are you behind on your rent? that also fell by about the same amount. and then some of the questions on mental health really improved too, reduced levels o
he's a professor of public policy and director of poverty solutions at the university of michigan. you able to look at in the context of the money that the government gave and what kind of impact it had on people? >> wl, after covid hit the federal government, the census bureau started a monthly survey where they'd just ask americans how they're doing with things like putting food on the table and paying their essential expenses. and so, we were curiouafter we had the covid relief bill...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN2
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the studies from the university of michigan studied the data of the census department. reporting says even given that stimulus aid, a reduction in hardship may seem like a given that there's no clear way to measure whether the benefits or the cost studies is not addressed. critics complain that the spending swelled the deficit and much of the money went to economically stable families did not need and the checks were part of a pattern of aid that left people with less incentive to find jobs. some analysts say hardships: away job growth. safety net, in march massachusetts this is. >> caller: hello. >> host: go ahead. >> caller: i agree that people need stimulus checks. a lot of people in this country are really hurting and like that lady said, line just to get food and some people were very embarrassed about that but they have to do it to feed their children. we got children in this country going hungry my daughter is a single mother she has a daughter and i'm trying to help her and my husband and i can't afford it . we're 80 years old. >> host: have the stimulus payment
the studies from the university of michigan studied the data of the census department. reporting says even given that stimulus aid, a reduction in hardship may seem like a given that there's no clear way to measure whether the benefits or the cost studies is not addressed. critics complain that the spending swelled the deficit and much of the money went to economically stable families did not need and the checks were part of a pattern of aid that left people with less incentive to find jobs....
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Jun 17, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN2
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he is in -- an assistant professor at university of michigan, and discussing the research of covid-19 and hospitalization. we are focusing on the pandemic end of the response, and this week, we are focusing on hospitalization and treatments. we want viewers to call in with questions and comments about that. let's begin -- if you go into the hospital for covid-19, what are the costs associated with being hospitalized? guest: back in 2020, most insurers rid of the cost of hospitalization. host: what is the new policy? guest: it depends on which insurance you have. if you are not insured by a company, you can be stuck with the bill like $3800. host: so that could be a potential average bill under this new price sharing policy, and $1500 for medicare advantage? guest: correct. host: why the new policy? guest: each insurers make that decision. they are still increasing and now is the right time to let their cost-sharing waivers expire. i think the other reason is that , in 2020, the cost of medical care is waiving of cost-sharing. [indiscernible] host: during the height of the pandemic, pe
he is in -- an assistant professor at university of michigan, and discussing the research of covid-19 and hospitalization. we are focusing on the pandemic end of the response, and this week, we are focusing on hospitalization and treatments. we want viewers to call in with questions and comments about that. let's begin -- if you go into the hospital for covid-19, what are the costs associated with being hospitalized? guest: back in 2020, most insurers rid of the cost of hospitalization. host:...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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KPIX
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. >>> so coming up, a legendary university of michigan football coach faces accusations from his son that he ignored claims of abuse by the team doctor. >>> and later, mystery in south africa. a woman claims she gave birth to ten babies. >>> this is the "cbs morning news." ten babies. >>> this is the "cbs morning news." colgate optic white renewal removes ten years of yellow stains. that's like all the way back to 2011. ¡quque tapón! it's gonna tatake me 10 y yearo learn spspanish. ¿cómo me vev? remove t ten years o of yw stainsns with colgate optic white renewal. microboban 24 doesesn't justsl bacteriaia once, thehen stop. it keepsps killing b bacteria f4 hoururs. justst spray andnd let dry to form a a shield thahat's proven toto keep killlling bactera for r 24 hours..... ...t.touch afterer touch. microbanan 24. ♪♪ ♪♪ when youou're chuggigin' through lilife, sosometimes yoyou justst wanna stotop. so stotop. even if itit's not t a good timime. there'e's never a a good tim. let's dodo it anywayay. stopop all the c chuggin' in y your worldd and ststart sippinin' with the p people in i i
. >>> so coming up, a legendary university of michigan football coach faces accusations from his son that he ignored claims of abuse by the team doctor. >>> and later, mystery in south africa. a woman claims she gave birth to ten babies. >>> this is the "cbs morning news." ten babies. >>> this is the "cbs morning news." colgate optic white renewal removes ten years of yellow stains. that's like all the way back to 2011. ¡quque tapón!...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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BLOOMBERG
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talking about a human sicko, and that is the unit -- about a few moments ago, and that is the university of michiganentiment data. richard curtin, university of michigan survey of consumers research director, leads the team that came out with those sentiment numbers. what is the big takeaway? how would you read this data? richard: it is optimistic in the sense that consumers have noticed declining gas prices mainly, and that is why the rate of inflation fell by 0.6 of a point. but there is a negative picture. last month we recorded the largest one-month change in how many people spontaneously mentioned high prices for homes, vehicles, and household durables, and in this month, it has come even higher. now there's 2/3 of all folks who think home prices are too high, and it is not causing them to buy a home sooner than they would like to avoid changes. they are more likely to postpone. in the critical group is those in the top third of the income distribution, and they were more negative about home and vehicle purchases and the rest of the population. so i don't think we are going to see a decline in
talking about a human sicko, and that is the unit -- about a few moments ago, and that is the university of michiganentiment data. richard curtin, university of michigan survey of consumers research director, leads the team that came out with those sentiment numbers. what is the big takeaway? how would you read this data? richard: it is optimistic in the sense that consumers have noticed declining gas prices mainly, and that is why the rate of inflation fell by 0.6 of a point. but there is a...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN
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host: the report is from the university of michigan. ofessor luke shaefer, one of the authors along with his colleague, patrick cooney. we appreciate you joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. thanks for having me. host: we will continue your calls and comments this morning. are more economic checks needed? 202-748-8000 the line to call if you say yes if you say no, it's 202-748-8001. tom's in new york and on the no line. thanks for waiting, tom. go ahead. caller: thank you very much, c-span. i say no. i got my first stimulus check from mr. biden and within a couple of months, my food went up, my gas went up, my rent went up. the $1,400 he gave me got taken right back off me again. so i'm competing against illegal aliens to try to work out east. they give them $15,000 to break our laws, come across our border. they take my work. i got to compete and lower my prices. it's hard enough to live on long island and out east. these people are the richest people in the world. they've got all the money. >> what's your line of work, tom? cal
host: the report is from the university of michigan. ofessor luke shaefer, one of the authors along with his colleague, patrick cooney. we appreciate you joining us this morning. guest: my pleasure. thanks for having me. host: we will continue your calls and comments this morning. are more economic checks needed? 202-748-8000 the line to call if you say yes if you say no, it's 202-748-8001. tom's in new york and on the no line. thanks for waiting, tom. go ahead. caller: thank you very much,...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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KPIX
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memorial in montgomery, alabama and a series of wave field installations like this one at the university of michigan i am making them closer and i want to see what happens. >> reporter: as lin was in the final stages of creating the ghost forest in late january, her husband of nearly 25 years daniel wolf died of a sudden heart attack. >> you the did this in a trying time for the country and yourself. how did you get through it? >> i'm still getting through it. >> reporter: yeah. >> and my kids are getting through it. you know, it's, it's very, it's hard. >> reporter: somehow, she went ahead with the project. did that help you in any way? >> yeah, it did, works is something -- creativity to me is a real gift, maybe it's because my dad was in the arts and my mother was a poet, something that i really have needed and loved. >> reporter: the 49 trees in the ghost forest, will stand until the fall. slowly graying as the park sees the seasons change. >> they are majestic trees. they are beautiful. just as a work of art, they are 50 feet tall, they are 60-80 years old, i'm hoping people are going to do go
memorial in montgomery, alabama and a series of wave field installations like this one at the university of michigan i am making them closer and i want to see what happens. >> reporter: as lin was in the final stages of creating the ghost forest in late january, her husband of nearly 25 years daniel wolf died of a sudden heart attack. >> you the did this in a trying time for the country and yourself. how did you get through it? >> i'm still getting through it. >>...
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Jun 5, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN
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we also talked to academic economists and spread the range of air from well-known universities -- university of michigan, university of chicago -- to smaller schools around the country. we also talk to economists who work for businesses, trade associations who have the industry perspective and we try to reach out to folks who had worked in the trump and bush edmund ration -- bush and trump administration -- worked in the trump and bush administrations. host: we had a couple callers in our first segment who said the jobs that were added or jobs that already existed. they are not new jobs being created. are they correct? guest: we saw that i strongest growth -- the strongest growth in hospitality, tourism. that was the area hit hardest last year. in some respects they are correct that we are still triangle to get back to where we were. there are 7 million fewer jobs today than there were in early 2020. we are still in replacement mode. in general a lot of places are still trying to get back to where we were. host: is that why we are seeing that big jump in leisure and hospitality, companies trying to hire
we also talked to academic economists and spread the range of air from well-known universities -- university of michigan, university of chicago -- to smaller schools around the country. we also talk to economists who work for businesses, trade associations who have the industry perspective and we try to reach out to folks who had worked in the trump and bush edmund ration -- bush and trump administration -- worked in the trump and bush administrations. host: we had a couple callers in our first...
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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KPIX
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>> that this never happens again, and i want the university of michigan to say they're sorry and we all to make sure this doesn't happen again. >> the university of michigan says it expresses sympathy for anderson's victims and condemns his actions and that it's adopted dozens of policies since he left to better protect students. anthony. >> yeah, such a sad story, nancy. thank you very much. >>> ahead, how the republican governor's of two states are fighting with cruise companies that want to require their passengers to be vaccinated. that's coming up on "cbs this morning." ♪ ririch, indulglgent chocololatea luscscious caramamel fillin. withth love fromom san francn. ghirarardelli cararamel squa. mamakes life a a bite bettt. they sayay to bring g only what youou can carryry. and d it looks l like you cacan carry a a couple bis and helmlmets and d a first aiaid kit and evererything you u need out h here. sosome stuff t to get you u to the topop and d stuff to j jump off ththe top withth. the all-nenew bronco s spor. built wiwild. ♪♪ if you feeeel like youou're chuggin'n' all day l long,
>> that this never happens again, and i want the university of michigan to say they're sorry and we all to make sure this doesn't happen again. >> the university of michigan says it expresses sympathy for anderson's victims and condemns his actions and that it's adopted dozens of policies since he left to better protect students. anthony. >> yeah, such a sad story, nancy. thank you very much. >>> ahead, how the republican governor's of two states are fighting with...
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Jun 6, 2021
06/21
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KRON
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researchers with the university of michigan looked at a number of things, including health records from the university of michigan hospital from 2017 to the present. the use, the records to document pregnancies and births throughout the pandemic along with model perspective births through the end of october of this year. pregnancy steadily increase from 2017 to 2020. but there was a 14% drop after covid-19 started in michigan in march of last year. the modeling shows an expected surge of births in the summer. researchers say their findings suggest a link between the societal changes associated with the pandemic locked lockdowns and reproductive choices research published in the jama network on thursday. >> much more ahead during kron 4 news at 10 o'clock tonight. governor newsom says california will remain in the state of emergency following the june 15th reopening date. why recall supporters say this is just another reason to remove him from office. also tonight, it's been 40 years since the first aids cases were reported here in the united states now, decades later there are new treat
researchers with the university of michigan looked at a number of things, including health records from the university of michigan hospital from 2017 to the present. the use, the records to document pregnancies and births throughout the pandemic along with model perspective births through the end of october of this year. pregnancy steadily increase from 2017 to 2020. but there was a 14% drop after covid-19 started in michigan in march of last year. the modeling shows an expected surge of births...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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BLOOMBERG
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if you look at the university of michigan survey, you will see that we have some of the worst buyingditions related to price that consumers are reporting. there may be some apprehension. given these elevated prices. and especially for my age group and younger, maybe believing that lower prices are coming in the future. joe: how much of this -- some of this pushback is like, look, if i am trying to buy a couch and i keep getting messages that it will be six months and it is super expensive, maybe i will just take a break and revisit the question in a year from now. ben: i think some of that is happening. the thinking of the younger cohort that i can wait it out, that the transitoryness of prices will come down. the inflation fear and a be some of the bigger fear of rising prices that could cause more demand is from the older cohorts. you have almost 50% of those aged 55-plus see this tale to inflation come up five-plus percent. there is some concern. the younger cohort has not gotten as concerned. there is i think this now sitting on your hands, waiting period i think we have all hear
if you look at the university of michigan survey, you will see that we have some of the worst buyingditions related to price that consumers are reporting. there may be some apprehension. given these elevated prices. and especially for my age group and younger, maybe believing that lower prices are coming in the future. joe: how much of this -- some of this pushback is like, look, if i am trying to buy a couch and i keep getting messages that it will be six months and it is super expensive,...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN2
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he is the peter emma wedged professor of sustainable systems the university of michigan andto serves as a director of the center for sustainable systems pretty also holds appointments as a professor in the school for environment and sustainability in engineering part his research focuses on the development of lifecycle models and sustainability metrics to guide the design andd improvement of products and technology. our final witness is mr. joshua baca. he is the vice president of the plastics division at the american chemistry council. he viscerally oversees strategic programs to advance a science -based policy agenda, touched national outreach and sustainability on behalf of america's leading plastic makers. he also leads industry initiatives and fosters multi- stakeholder dialogue around helping and plastic waste by creating a more circular economy. as our witnesses should know, you will each have five minutes for your spoken testimony, your written testimony will be included in the record for the hearing. when you have all completed your spoken testimony we will begin with questio
he is the peter emma wedged professor of sustainable systems the university of michigan andto serves as a director of the center for sustainable systems pretty also holds appointments as a professor in the school for environment and sustainability in engineering part his research focuses on the development of lifecycle models and sustainability metrics to guide the design andd improvement of products and technology. our final witness is mr. joshua baca. he is the vice president of the plastics...
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Jun 16, 2021
06/21
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CNBC
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. >> school officials responded in a statement writing the university of michigan is actively engaged, court-guided mediation process with the survivors of dr. anderson's abuse, and we remain focused on that process >> they stood not far from a statue of bo schembechlers there's a building that wears his name and a number of people have come forward to defend his reputation members of his family released this statement yes, writing in part -- bo had a clear and compelling sense of right and wrong. if bo had known of inappropriate conduct, we are certain he would have stopped it immediately, reported it, and had dr. anderson removed from the university a group of former players and staff also started an online petition, they're calling it in defense of bo. >> david jessie has covered this story for more than a year jetties, the law every time that the university has hired tee look into this, has found the school did not act in spite of the allegations. what sort of investigation is being called for >> these players want the state's attorney general to step in and to do a complete indep
. >> school officials responded in a statement writing the university of michigan is actively engaged, court-guided mediation process with the survivors of dr. anderson's abuse, and we remain focused on that process >> they stood not far from a statue of bo schembechlers there's a building that wears his name and a number of people have come forward to defend his reputation members of his family released this statement yes, writing in part -- bo had a clear and compelling sense of...
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Jun 28, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN2
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at the university of michigan and served as a director of the center for sustainable systems. he also holds appointment as a professor in the school for environment and sustainability. in the department of civil and environmental engineering. his development invite cycle models in his sustainability matrix to guide design and improvement of products and technology, our final witness is mr. joshua baca, he is a vice president of the plastic division of the murky chemistry council in this role he oversees strategic programs to advance a science-based policy agenda, national outreach and sustainability initiative on behalf of america's leading plastic makers he leads industry initiatives and fosters multi-stakeholder dialogue around helping and plastic waste by creating a circular economy. as our witnesses should know, you will each have five minutes for your spoken testimony, your written testimony will be included in the record for the hearing, when you all have completed your spoken testimony, we will begin with questions, each member will have five minutes to question the pan
at the university of michigan and served as a director of the center for sustainable systems. he also holds appointment as a professor in the school for environment and sustainability. in the department of civil and environmental engineering. his development invite cycle models in his sustainability matrix to guide design and improvement of products and technology, our final witness is mr. joshua baca, he is a vice president of the plastic division of the murky chemistry council in this role he...
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Jun 22, 2021
06/21
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KRON
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a new study from the university of michigan says out of pocket spending to have a baby exceeded $5,000tensive care was required. that price could jump up to more than $10,000. researchers analyzed data from more than 12 million people with private health insurance coverage. the average out of pocket spending for the delivery and hospitalization was more than $3,000. its amazon prime day and sales are expected to jump over last year and give a push to help struggling small businesses. 2020's sales rose 45% during coronavirus lockdowns and the volume should be even higher this year. electronics are big ticket item for savings and amazon is making a push for 300,000 small businesses with a special portal and savings deals available for frequenting those businesses prime day ends tomorrow. >> coming up next, a beloved pet cat taken by a local over each driver with the company says about the bizarre incident which was caught on camera. after my car accident, i wondered what my case was worth. so i called the barnes firm. when that car hit my motorcycle, insurance wasn't fair. so i called th
a new study from the university of michigan says out of pocket spending to have a baby exceeded $5,000tensive care was required. that price could jump up to more than $10,000. researchers analyzed data from more than 12 million people with private health insurance coverage. the average out of pocket spending for the delivery and hospitalization was more than $3,000. its amazon prime day and sales are expected to jump over last year and give a push to help struggling small businesses. 2020's...
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Jun 5, 2021
06/21
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KRON
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the researchers at the university of michigan also found people's anxiety and depression went down some 20% people benefited the most where families with children and people making less than $25,000 a year. >> coming up, the unexpected way. that vaccines are bringing back the tourism industry. >> plus vaccinate at the plate. what major league baseball is calling its push to get more people vaccinated. their catchy little lingo what teams will give people to get the shot and how you can find out when the a's and giants will hosted their events. >> and the fair is back in san mateo county. what kind of safety precautions you can expect to see this weekend. >> on your marks. get set, go nascar back at the sonoma raceway this weekend. would you believe there are safety protocols in place for what could be the biggest event in northern california since the pandemic started and you don't have to be vaccinated to attend. you do, however need to wear a mask unless you're eating or drinking. for now. the snow raceway can only fill up to 33% capacity. >> everything's cashless. they got to bring y
the researchers at the university of michigan also found people's anxiety and depression went down some 20% people benefited the most where families with children and people making less than $25,000 a year. >> coming up, the unexpected way. that vaccines are bringing back the tourism industry. >> plus vaccinate at the plate. what major league baseball is calling its push to get more people vaccinated. their catchy little lingo what teams will give people to get the shot and how you...
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so we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh god, deliver us american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home on the news. when i was in college, it was more like a going in story coming out story. the very 1st week, i heard a story about 2 women who when the dorm room and they were, they were making out. and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them, he reported them and they were expelled. and i was really shocked. i had no idea that this was something that was so terrible. and i just never spoke of. i didn't go out, was a lake. so hadn't war hair. i just keep growing yet. i didn't cut it for 4 years, but as a senior, it was really quite long. i just tried to look more and more feminine. so i could pass. so i was quite frightened by this, this episode i so that was the time when i decided i heard from a number of people that new york was more open. that things could happen there. and i decided to moved to new york. i decided i am going to be this thing,
so we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh god, deliver us american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home on the news. when i was in college, it was more like a going in story coming out story. the very 1st week, i heard a story about 2 women who when the dorm room and they were, they were making out. and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them, he reported them and they were expelled. and i...
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Jun 4, 2021
06/21
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KNTV
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." >>> the new findings from the university of michigan are accurate, america's most recent federal stimulus worked as planned at least temporarily. researchers looked at real time census pulse data measuring americans' mindsets during the last two rounds of stimulus in december and april. the rate of food shortages fell by more than 40%, financial instability cut nearly in half and anxiety and depression fell 20%, the sharpest drops happened when the months the payments together totalling $2,000 were received. >>> new details in former windsor mayor dominic to pollie facing new fire from a second front. "the press democrat" reports california's campaign finance watchdog opened an investigation after an anonymous complaint which questions how he spent $12,000 in donations, after new publications by a town council member implying he tried to buy her out of the race for mayor in 2020 which she declined to exit, he offered to donate to her choice of charities which experts say is legal. foppoli did not respond to the paper's request for comment. >>> and here's a live look in fremont, where this
." >>> the new findings from the university of michigan are accurate, america's most recent federal stimulus worked as planned at least temporarily. researchers looked at real time census pulse data measuring americans' mindsets during the last two rounds of stimulus in december and april. the rate of food shortages fell by more than 40%, financial instability cut nearly in half and anxiety and depression fell 20%, the sharpest drops happened when the months the payments together...
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the dean's office and asked not to re register is we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh, god, deliver us. american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home on the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story. the very 1st week i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them. he reported them and they were expelled. and i was really shocked, i had no idea that this was something that was so terrible and i just never spoke of. i didn't go out with a lake i hadn't was there. i just keep growing yet. i didn't cut it for 4 years, but some of the senior it was really quite worn. i just tried to look more and more feminine. so i could pass. so i was quite frightened by this. this had the sun the so that was the time when i decided i heard from a number of people that new york was more open. that things could happen there. and i decided to move to new york, i decided i am going to be th
the dean's office and asked not to re register is we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh, god, deliver us. american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home on the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story. the very 1st week i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them....
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Jun 30, 2021
06/21
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CSPAN3
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she graduated from the university of michigan law school. after law school, clerked for judge jeffrey sutton of the u.s. court of appeals for the sixth circuit and for justice anthony kennedy of the u.s. supreme court.tains an active pro bono practice and serves on the academic advisers of american constitution society. finally, nancy zurkin, the executive vice president on the counsel for civil and human rights from 2002 to 2017. she was on task forces for educational reform, hate crimes, affirmative action, and judicial nominations since the '90s. during the mid '70s, she worked at public interest groups, including common cause and women's equity action league, and was the director of public policy and government relations at the american association of university of women. she was a chief lobbyist and managed coordination of the equal rights amendment women's vote project and civil rights act of 1991. let's all give our panelists an awkward round of applause from our computer screens. okay. let's get to this. the primary questions facing t
she graduated from the university of michigan law school. after law school, clerked for judge jeffrey sutton of the u.s. court of appeals for the sixth circuit and for justice anthony kennedy of the u.s. supreme court.tains an active pro bono practice and serves on the academic advisers of american constitution society. finally, nancy zurkin, the executive vice president on the counsel for civil and human rights from 2002 to 2017. she was on task forces for educational reform, hate crimes,...
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Jun 21, 2021
06/21
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through the university of michigan and an m.a. room arizona state university. the city of tempe has a multilevel approach to transit helping to improve the quality of the residence. like many city centers on and across the country they face challenges seeking ideas and bringing them to life. the federal government needs to be a reliable capable partner to help cities and towns across arizona thrived. i'm committed to ensuring the infrastructure needs of local areas are needed now and into the future. thank you mr. chairman and will welcome mayor woods. >> thank you senators sinema. >> he's service pic county commission since 2015 previous is serving as the clerk of courts and prosecutor in the district attorney's office and officer in the army. brian riedl focuses on budget tax and economic technology and served as chief economist to one of our colleagues and my colleague senator rob portman and as a lead research fellow in spending policy from 2001 to 2011. welcome commissioner parsons and mr. riedl. you are now recognized for five minutes. >> good morning and
through the university of michigan and an m.a. room arizona state university. the city of tempe has a multilevel approach to transit helping to improve the quality of the residence. like many city centers on and across the country they face challenges seeking ideas and bringing them to life. the federal government needs to be a reliable capable partner to help cities and towns across arizona thrived. i'm committed to ensuring the infrastructure needs of local areas are needed now and into the...
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Jun 18, 2021
06/21
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hate signed by president biden born in elmhurst queens to graduate from the high school and university of michiganarning her law degree from the school of our prior to serving in congress congresswoman was part of the state assembly and is a public interest lawyer talk about what led you to sponsor your recent hate crime legislation and what this issue means to you but also you personally. >> first of all thank you to acs it's an honor to be here in's this discussion and for convening this important discussion i apologize for being delayed. i feel similarly too many around the country but the community has been living in fear for just such a long time and we knew that use the language like the chinese virus and count flu word lead to the many incidents we have seen happen around the country and what happened in atlanta because this bill signed into law but it was proposed last may there wasn't not manage attention that didn't seem that interested and then to see theer very violent attack ol the elderly and most vulnerable and the murders that happened in atlanta and then after that mainstream soci
hate signed by president biden born in elmhurst queens to graduate from the high school and university of michiganarning her law degree from the school of our prior to serving in congress congresswoman was part of the state assembly and is a public interest lawyer talk about what led you to sponsor your recent hate crime legislation and what this issue means to you but also you personally. >> first of all thank you to acs it's an honor to be here in's this discussion and for convening...
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the dean's office and asked not to re register if we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh, god, deliver us, american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home. the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story. the very 1st week i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them. he reported them and they were expelled. and i was really shocked, i had no idea that this was something that was so terrible, and i just never spoke of it. i didn't go out with a lake, so hadn't wor hair. i just keep growing yet. i didn't cut it for 4 years, but some of the senior, it was really quite long. i just tried to look more and more feminine. so i could pass. so i was quite frightened by this, this at the the so that was the time when i decided i heard from a number of people that new york was more open. that things could happen there. and i decided to move to new york, i decided i am going to be thi
the dean's office and asked not to re register if we don't need your kind of people at the university of michigan. oh, god, deliver us, american from evil. we must make our land the land of the free a safe home. the when i was in college, it was more like a going in story. coming out story. the very 1st week i heard a story about 2 women who were in the dorm room and they were, they were making out and the guy columbia, across the street with binoculars looked in the dorm room and saw them. he...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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lisa: the university of michigan sentiment survey friday was one of the most underplayed surveys outhere. it showed people had the expectation for five to 10 years of 3% inflation. not necessarily runaway dynamics that we saw in the 1970's, but still, justify a 1.61% 10 year yield with the expectation of 3% inflation over the next five to 10 years. tom: the dynamic here on real yields, most of our guests are focused on the real yield. you can see that on friday, friday afternoon. but seriously, we simply haven't seen the real yield coming in without inflation picking down -- inflation pushing down. jonathan: i agree, we haven't had the lift that many expected. we had inflation expectations reprice. but even that story started to stall a bit more recently. even that has come in a little bit more as well. so what is the catalyst to change this? it could be a long time. tom: let's go to the data and sit on it for a while. i am going to do foreign exchange right now. weaker dollar, but dxy not breaking through to new weakness. renminbi with some yuan strength. over the memorial day weeke
lisa: the university of michigan sentiment survey friday was one of the most underplayed surveys outhere. it showed people had the expectation for five to 10 years of 3% inflation. not necessarily runaway dynamics that we saw in the 1970's, but still, justify a 1.61% 10 year yield with the expectation of 3% inflation over the next five to 10 years. tom: the dynamic here on real yields, most of our guests are focused on the real yield. you can see that on friday, friday afternoon. but seriously,...
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Jun 13, 2021
06/21
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i will preface it to say here we are at the university of michigan with a complicated relationship notonly the city of ann arbor but even more so with detroit with a large development projects in detroit to what we present with civic engagement. engageme. . . . . so the professor at community college at hartford, connecticut and there's a chapter but trinity's relationship to harvard. trinitycomes founded in 1823 as a elite liberal arts colleges, what is called of the little ivies and one school people go to when they can't get into yale and both dynamics and it's the middle of what has become an increasingly poor, brown, latinx city, capitol city, and for decades, the university found different ways to fortify itself in the stories we have been telling all along. in fact the gothic quadrangle style of the university of chicago that we are familiar with was modeled on a trinity campus. the fortification, and we get to the 1990s, there's that same kind of story but interest of enlightened self-interest that for years the elite nature of trinity college was able to rise above the existen
i will preface it to say here we are at the university of michigan with a complicated relationship notonly the city of ann arbor but even more so with detroit with a large development projects in detroit to what we present with civic engagement. engageme. . . . . so the professor at community college at hartford, connecticut and there's a chapter but trinity's relationship to harvard. trinitycomes founded in 1823 as a elite liberal arts colleges, what is called of the little ivies and one...
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Jun 22, 2021
06/21
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i am the collegiate professor at the university of michigan law school. i am honored by your request to participate in these proceedings . chairman peters is my senator, and -- [indiscernible] the constitutionality is straightforward. the admissions clause of article four section three empowers congress to admit new states subject only to the limitation that congress cannot -- reconfigure existing states. this would not reconfigure any condition to -- >> some say that this admission would require a constitutional amendment, but the constitution does not say that. the constitution gives power to admit new states the congress. still, some americans have the intuition that something would be constitutionally remiss about making washington, d.c. into a state. that intuition, which people do on a good-faith basis, is based on our knowledge that the founding generation did not intend washington, d.c. to be a state. which is true, they didn't -- but that generation also did not intend to create a situation in which 700,000 americans would not have representation
i am the collegiate professor at the university of michigan law school. i am honored by your request to participate in these proceedings . chairman peters is my senator, and -- [indiscernible] the constitutionality is straightforward. the admissions clause of article four section three empowers congress to admit new states subject only to the limitation that congress cannot -- reconfigure existing states. this would not reconfigure any condition to -- >> some say that this admission would...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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i look at inflation expectations from the university of michigan and i worry. do you? i think we are on a dangerous path. the fed, the ecb beginning to realize that their policies have led to a grand valuation in asset markets. i thing assess how much liquidity do we still need and whether that affects liquidity on asset markets. at what point in time do we reduce this liquidity? the benchmark, you have real wage versus nominal wage. i think the asset markets will respond to nominal versus real wage. manus: the real wage is lowest since the 1970's. everyone tells me that is what i should be focused on and i should not get carried away with nominal rates. >> obviously, the forward guidance that we have been given , 2024, 2022. the idea is they are willing to raise funds once inflation picks up considerably. this is perhaps -- the real test is going to be in q4. and q1 of 2022. these base effect. if we do have elevated inflation , also central banks will find some kind of curb, having to raise. with covid, beginning to gradually open up slowly. i think we are normalizing
i look at inflation expectations from the university of michigan and i worry. do you? i think we are on a dangerous path. the fed, the ecb beginning to realize that their policies have led to a grand valuation in asset markets. i thing assess how much liquidity do we still need and whether that affects liquidity on asset markets. at what point in time do we reduce this liquidity? the benchmark, you have real wage versus nominal wage. i think the asset markets will respond to nominal versus real...
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Jun 2, 2021
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he went to the university of michigan and lost his scholarship because we got married.into that. we had a small child, he was working going to school full-time, driving an hour each way every day, i was working with the child. we did this for years. we didn't own a home until after he graduated. we had government loans. we were in debt. then we paid off, we paid those off and ten years later, i went to school. we did the same thing and you can do this and today i give workshops, mental health field, i give workshops going to help people, about owning responsibility in your life because when you own responsibly, you take you tell everybody they do this they can do this and all i want to say. >> thank you for that, it's important for all responsibly, plenty of workshops on how to buy a home and strengthen financial literacy, that's important only where we are today is in just people feeling present responsibly, it's government policy, government structures that create an unequaled system so government policies that create a place the last 40 years as the national gdp rise
he went to the university of michigan and lost his scholarship because we got married.into that. we had a small child, he was working going to school full-time, driving an hour each way every day, i was working with the child. we did this for years. we didn't own a home until after he graduated. we had government loans. we were in debt. then we paid off, we paid those off and ten years later, i went to school. we did the same thing and you can do this and today i give workshops, mental health...
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Jun 2, 2021
06/21
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he was going for a scholarship on university of michigan and he lost it because we got married. i won't go into that. we had a small child. he was working and going to school full-time, driving an hour each way, every day. i was working with a child. we did this for six years. we did not own a home until after he graduated. we had government loans. we were in debt. then, we paid off -- we pay those off, 10 years later, i went to school. we did the same thing, and you can do this. today, i give workshops trying to -- i'm in the mental health field, i give workshops trying to help people, saying about owning response ability and their -- in your life. if you own your responsibility, you take power. i just want to tell people you can do this. guest: thank you for that. i think it is important to own responsibility. and crc does 20 workshops on how to buy a home and strengthen your financial literacy. those are important but the way we got today is not people failing in personal responsibility, it was government policies, government structures that created an unequal system. it is g
he was going for a scholarship on university of michigan and he lost it because we got married. i won't go into that. we had a small child. he was working and going to school full-time, driving an hour each way, every day. i was working with a child. we did this for six years. we did not own a home until after he graduated. we had government loans. we were in debt. then, we paid off -- we pay those off, 10 years later, i went to school. we did the same thing, and you can do this. today, i give...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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ucla, university of michigan. engaging with scholars across the board. . . . . the more i see a radical parts of ethics you have carver who is known to be content and addition of immanuel kant and more consequentialist and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting engineering before he decided to embrace the philosophy as your discipline and you know you do offer relative optimism about the state of the hard scientist yet as you know there is a perception particularly on scientific questions that are increasingly leather sized or also it goes beyond what its position and i'm pleading guilty about something i was talking about earlier on. when you think about the amount of public funding that goes into some domain it does seem as though it might shape the incentive than it might shape scientific discourse as well. when you're talking about th
ucla, university of michigan. engaging with scholars across the board. . . . . the more i see a radical parts of ethics you have carver who is known to be content and addition of immanuel kant and more consequentialist and they engage with each other and one worry i have is that it's not true when it comes to political he polarized topics and they are harvard yale ucla university of florida they all lean one way so that's really the problem. >> earlier in your career you were resetting...
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Jun 24, 2021
06/21
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i should note your professorship at the university of michigan is named for peter weggy, the son of wes michigan, directed much of his energy and philanthropy into environmental causes. he joined the term economy-ecology. very much a believer of that. care for the environment but doing so which is economically beneficial. i believe conservationism, but also conservatism, are using that lens. how should congress be approaching that lifecycle of plastic materials to have maximum benefit for the economy? dr. hillmyer: we also look at lifecycle costs. one example we did a study -- for the state of oregon and bottled water versus eusable systems. dr. keoleian: and clearly there's -- using tap water and filling a container is going to be much more economical than using a disposable bottle. and the energy savings and the waste is significantly different. we need to be smart and really look -- when we look at solutions we do need to look at the economics. i believe we also need to look at certain regulations and standards because it's not just going to be innovation. i think it's critical that
i should note your professorship at the university of michigan is named for peter weggy, the son of wes michigan, directed much of his energy and philanthropy into environmental causes. he joined the term economy-ecology. very much a believer of that. care for the environment but doing so which is economically beneficial. i believe conservationism, but also conservatism, are using that lens. how should congress be approaching that lifecycle of plastic materials to have maximum benefit for the...
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Jun 14, 2021
06/21
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also, a look at the cost of covid hospitalization and treatment with the university of michigan assistantrofessor dr. kao-ping chua. before to join your -- with your phone calls and weeds. washington journal is next. ♪ host: good morning. that is president biden arriving in belgium yesterday ahead of the 31st nato summit. the gathering follows the g7 summit in england over the weekend. this morning, we want to know what is your confidence level in president biden? handling -- president biden's handling of foreign affairs? republicans, call in at (202) 748-8000. democrats, (202) 748-8001. independents, (202) 748-8002. you can also tell us what you think if you text at the
also, a look at the cost of covid hospitalization and treatment with the university of michigan assistantrofessor dr. kao-ping chua. before to join your -- with your phone calls and weeds. washington journal is next. ♪ host: good morning. that is president biden arriving in belgium yesterday ahead of the 31st nato summit. the gathering follows the g7 summit in england over the weekend. this morning, we want to know what is your confidence level in president biden? handling -- president...
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Jun 25, 2021
06/21
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born in elm hurst, queens, she attended local schools and graduated and university of michigan and earned her law degree from ysheba university. prior to serving in congress, congresswoman meng was a member of the new york state assembly and worked as a public interest lawyer. congresswoman meng, will you talk some about what led you to sponsor your recent hate crimes legislation, what it's seeking to do, and what this issue means to you. not only as a congressperson buts are to you personally. ms. meng: sure. first of all thank you to a.c.s. for having me today. it's an honor to be here in this discussion with such esteemed here's like justice liu and attorney general tong. thank you, a.c.s., for convening this important discussion. i apologize for being delayed. i think that i probably feel similarly to many a.p.a.'s around the country in saying that this past year, past year and a half has been a really tough year. and our community has just been living in fear for such a long time. and we knew that using language, i know a.g. tong mentioned earlier, using language by kung flu and chin
born in elm hurst, queens, she attended local schools and graduated and university of michigan and earned her law degree from ysheba university. prior to serving in congress, congresswoman meng was a member of the new york state assembly and worked as a public interest lawyer. congresswoman meng, will you talk some about what led you to sponsor your recent hate crimes legislation, what it's seeking to do, and what this issue means to you. not only as a congressperson buts are to you personally....
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Jun 18, 2021
06/21
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the personal expectations like what you captured in the university of michigan -- for me that is the y. matt: in your career, from johns hopkins to georgetown to the university of alabama, you have been the entire time inside this reaganomics bubble. we have had the supply-side economics narrative for the last 40 years. that seems to have changed with this pandemic and -- i guess the last administrator -- the last administration was a big spender as well. all of a sudden modern monetary theory seems to have won the day. how difficult is that make your job? jay: this clearly is a paradigm shift. where are we in terms -- the closest analogue you could look at would be the late 1960's. we did get some inflation out of that. it was the shocks of the 1970's that got inflation starting to head higher. it is a political decision going forward. are we going to get all this infrastructure spending, are we going to get the plan passed or not? we still have a very split congress. even among the 50 senators, there is not unanimity there. the politics is complicated what we are trying to figure ou
the personal expectations like what you captured in the university of michigan -- for me that is the y. matt: in your career, from johns hopkins to georgetown to the university of alabama, you have been the entire time inside this reaganomics bubble. we have had the supply-side economics narrative for the last 40 years. that seems to have changed with this pandemic and -- i guess the last administrator -- the last administration was a big spender as well. all of a sudden modern monetary theory...
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Jun 27, 2021
06/21
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he has taught at the university of michigan, princeton and georgetown. he's going to speak to us this evening for a little bit about his book and will answer questions later in the program. i do want to alert you to the fact this coming thursday we have a another author, robert kyle who is written a book when truth matters about the may 4 incident at kent state. and on monday, june 7, we have the book kindred. and on june 10 we have tony who is the author of the book in the wee small hours. his conversations with frank sinatra. but, i want to return to tonight's program into author michael dobbs who is going to talk to us about his book, king richard. richard nixon the 37th president in the incident of a watergate. so michael what can you tell us about king richard? >> thank you very much. for those of you who have not seen it, this is a copy of my book which came out last week. it's full title is king richard, nixon and watergate and american tragedy. it has as you can see a rather dark picture of richard nixon on the front cover. going to explain in th
he has taught at the university of michigan, princeton and georgetown. he's going to speak to us this evening for a little bit about his book and will answer questions later in the program. i do want to alert you to the fact this coming thursday we have a another author, robert kyle who is written a book when truth matters about the may 4 incident at kent state. and on monday, june 7, we have the book kindred. and on june 10 we have tony who is the author of the book in the wee small hours. his...
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Jun 19, 2021
06/21
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creative writing english, from university of michigan.reative nonfiction from columbia university. has published short stories, personal essays journalistic
creative writing english, from university of michigan.reative nonfiction from columbia university. has published short stories, personal essays journalistic
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Jun 11, 2021
06/21
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rick >> hi, kelly been a big week for treasuries here's a 3-year chart of university of michigan sentimentwe were pre-covid many metrics have regained pre-covid. this one has not see the 10s. we are up dropping so much in the session yesterday. and down 10 basis points on the week as you look toward early march see yesterday that's the last time we closed at these levels one month of bunds after yesterday's ecb meeting and the dovish tone the currency is hitting the skids and the dollar index looking to close at a one-month high back to you. >> thank you >>> we have breaking news. democrats officially introducing bipartisan bills aimed at big tech julia boorstin with the latest. >> that's right. anti-trust bills of what house lawmakers call an anti-monopoly agenda led by subcommittee chairman sis linney. all five are bipartisan with a republican cosponsor and improves the chance of the passing. they range widely and face hurdles but could have long lasting implications on apple, amazon, alphabet and facebook by first the companies attacking the prioritizing of products and services one mak
rick >> hi, kelly been a big week for treasuries here's a 3-year chart of university of michigan sentimentwe were pre-covid many metrics have regained pre-covid. this one has not see the 10s. we are up dropping so much in the session yesterday. and down 10 basis points on the week as you look toward early march see yesterday that's the last time we closed at these levels one month of bunds after yesterday's ecb meeting and the dovish tone the currency is hitting the skids and the dollar...
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Jun 25, 2021
06/21
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guy: university of michigan indicator out -- these are final numbers. 85.5, putting much in line with expectations. current conditions number dipping. expectations could emerge was. the number to draw your attention to is this transitory debate. this one-year inflation number, consumers have a tendency to overestimate this -- 4.2. that is up from 4. five-year number still 2.8. alix: transitory, that is the key word. you thought we were over that word. we are not, we are deep in that. peter coy is looking at the latest u.s. transitory inflation numbers. personal spending and consumer numbers. reorder and is in washington for updates on the investiture plan. abigail doolittle is looking at the movers for today like nike and fedex. peter coy of bloomberg businessweek is here. we got downside inflation risk for the first time in a very long time. walk us through what we got. peter: 0.4% month over month on the personal consumption expenditures, which is the inflation measure that the fed pays attention to. year-over-year came in at 3.9. that is a change in the personal consumption expendi
guy: university of michigan indicator out -- these are final numbers. 85.5, putting much in line with expectations. current conditions number dipping. expectations could emerge was. the number to draw your attention to is this transitory debate. this one-year inflation number, consumers have a tendency to overestimate this -- 4.2. that is up from 4. five-year number still 2.8. alix: transitory, that is the key word. you thought we were over that word. we are not, we are deep in that. peter coy...
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Jun 1, 2021
06/21
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at the bottom panel, you are seeing the university of michigan expect a change in prices. that inflation outlook is rising. this coming at a time when global manufacturing is showing the fastest growth in 11 years according to jp morgan pmi numbers from the month of may. our next guest says she sees a pullback as the fed comes closer to taper talks. great to have you with us. how do you position ahead of the start of starting of tapered talks from the fed? >> i think we've got to assume that they are going to talk up interest rates, beginning with some taper talk, probably at jackson hole. we have to invest in a rising interest rate environment, which we have been attempting to do for the past six months or better. we are looking for probably year end 10 year treasuries in the 1.7% to 2% range, from 1.58% at friday's close. what we are tenting to work around is inflation because we do think it is recovery field inflation and we think it will peak probably by november. it is proving to be transitory. haidi: could we see gold making a comeback? mariann: absolutely. gold and
at the bottom panel, you are seeing the university of michigan expect a change in prices. that inflation outlook is rising. this coming at a time when global manufacturing is showing the fastest growth in 11 years according to jp morgan pmi numbers from the month of may. our next guest says she sees a pullback as the fed comes closer to taper talks. great to have you with us. how do you position ahead of the start of starting of tapered talks from the fed? >> i think we've got to assume...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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former veteran processor for the eastern district of michigan worked with the doj during the transition happens to be a professor at her alma mater university of michigan law school. cohost of the posh cast sisters in law, along with three other friends of ours. good evening, welcome to you all. counselor, indeed, i need to begin with you. what's kind of thing would happen inside of that meeting between trump's lawyers, and the new york district attorney? what do we think, what do you think, barbara, maybe coming? >> i think that kind of meeting is what we sometimes referred to as dog and pony show. the prosecutor shows its card, these documents in this testimony and the crimes were committed. what are we missing? what they want to hear areas poking holes in the evidence. with the wall street journal report says it's definitely not with the chunky organization later said. instead they tried to say it's a witch hunt, when they never push anyone else for these types of crimes. they have to deny and. they think prosecutors when they threaten -- they mean it. not an idle threat. i think it's quite likely we will see each other in the coming wee
former veteran processor for the eastern district of michigan worked with the doj during the transition happens to be a professor at her alma mater university of michigan law school. cohost of the posh cast sisters in law, along with three other friends of ours. good evening, welcome to you all. counselor, indeed, i need to begin with you. what's kind of thing would happen inside of that meeting between trump's lawyers, and the new york district attorney? what do we think, what do you think,...
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Jun 29, 2021
06/21
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yale, you're not just talking to people at yale, you are citing people from f elsewhere, university of michigan, ucla, whatnot so you are kind of engaging with scholars across the board so in one way the diversity could be achieved yale sociology department, harvard, one is this way, one is that way. ucla is up there somewhere. that could be a healthy situation where there's not diversity within institutions but there is a crux. you find that in my own field of philosophy and fields that i think are working well so things like the more theoretical parts of ethics. you have harvard whose very known kind of in the traditional imanuel and then you have other places in princeton and they kind of engage with each other. but you know, one worry i have is that that's not true when it comes to politically polarized topics and their uc harvard, yale, ucla, berkeley, university of florida. they all lead in one way. so, that is really the problem in my view. a. >> earlier in your career, you c were pursuing a phd in engineering before you decided to embrace philosophy as your discipline. and you know, you
yale, you're not just talking to people at yale, you are citing people from f elsewhere, university of michigan, ucla, whatnot so you are kind of engaging with scholars across the board so in one way the diversity could be achieved yale sociology department, harvard, one is this way, one is that way. ucla is up there somewhere. that could be a healthy situation where there's not diversity within institutions but there is a crux. you find that in my own field of philosophy and fields that i...
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Jun 9, 2021
06/21
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the fed looks at survey based inflation, so things like university of michigan long-term inflation starto move, if the inflation term structure starts being inverted from five year to 30 year. it is a high inflation print, and to components of that print that looked less transitory than maybe the fed and the markets are currently expecting. lisa: are we overplaying the inflation story, which we are not going to have an answer to until the end of the year, and perhaps underplaying some of these factors like earnings disappointments, especially given how high expectations are? stuart: it is hard to ignore the inflation -- the cadence of the inflation data. an investor can't ignore that stuff as it is happening. i think people are responding rationally to the data they are seeing. in terms of earnings, expectations i think are high at the single stock level, but if you look collectively, s&p 500 eps for next quarter i think still shows sequential decline versus last quarter. we do think there is the potential, post fomc, as people start to look at earnings and sharpen their pencils, i think
the fed looks at survey based inflation, so things like university of michigan long-term inflation starto move, if the inflation term structure starts being inverted from five year to 30 year. it is a high inflation print, and to components of that print that looked less transitory than maybe the fed and the markets are currently expecting. lisa: are we overplaying the inflation story, which we are not going to have an answer to until the end of the year, and perhaps underplaying some of these...