17
17
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
at the university of reading for more on this story now britain's starting back saying early next weekhow much of a logistical challenge will that be. yes it will certainly be a logistical challenge not least those you just because the back scene requires soldier cold storage before it sent should be used i don't think so though the romance i think in certainly in developed countries i think the provision that minus 8 some reasons is not such a big deal but it certainly could be something that will affect the rollout more generally in other areas of the work world which don't have access to boat storage and the media has called this vaccine coming from pfizer and biotech the 1st backed by rigorous science is that so and does that mean that the other ones that have come out are not appropriately researched know the 1st part is right and 2nd part is wrong it certainly is backed by very solid science but so on which aren't so you know the other vaccines that are. being used. the difference in this one is that since ponce about historic moments in the sense that this will be the 1st are in
at the university of reading for more on this story now britain's starting back saying early next weekhow much of a logistical challenge will that be. yes it will certainly be a logistical challenge not least those you just because the back scene requires soldier cold storage before it sent should be used i don't think so though the romance i think in certainly in developed countries i think the provision that minus 8 some reasons is not such a big deal but it certainly could be something that...
24
24
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
are there with simon klock who is an associate professor in microbiology at the university of reading and he's joining us by skype from writing in the u.k. thank you very much for being with us simon this quite a lot of distrust toward since russian made coronavirus vaccine among western scientists but also understand russian medics and the general population there what do we know about sputnik and how it works for us. but we know that it works in a manner similar to the bat sea that's being developed by the arch oxford astra zeneca seat in the u.k. where it uses other viruses to deliver molecules from the corona virus whose kind of humanity into our bodies to stimulate an immune response really i think the skepticism around this comes from the fact that it's been worked on very quickly speedy it to be developed very quickly and it appears to be big put into the general population rather earlier than it would if you have been developed say the u.k. but the trials that it has undergone do not appear to have been as extensive as they would have been in this country develop as a noun sat
are there with simon klock who is an associate professor in microbiology at the university of reading and he's joining us by skype from writing in the u.k. thank you very much for being with us simon this quite a lot of distrust toward since russian made coronavirus vaccine among western scientists but also understand russian medics and the general population there what do we know about sputnik and how it works for us. but we know that it works in a manner similar to the bat sea that's being...
33
33
Dec 19, 2020
12/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
joining us now via skype is simon clarke he's the head of the biomedical sciences division at university of reading here in the u.k. and i suppose one of the questions very difficult to want is how it is whether the mutation originated inside the country or whether it came it was whether it was brought in. yeah that's a very difficult question so our answer. we might be able to get there one day it would depend on other countries having that there was surveillance that we have in the u.k. to see if any isolates overseas had the same taisha it was from a date but that's what's it would require if we go to somewhere else but there's every reason of course that it could've just written in the united kingdom has to arise something what does this mean for infection rates in the coming weeks and months are they think it means that there are these upward pressure on our infection rates. but of course the authorities then have to push back against that with their restrictions and they have to design those appropriately they have to be able to keep the numbers of new factions of the some sort of control if
joining us now via skype is simon clarke he's the head of the biomedical sciences division at university of reading here in the u.k. and i suppose one of the questions very difficult to want is how it is whether the mutation originated inside the country or whether it came it was whether it was brought in. yeah that's a very difficult question so our answer. we might be able to get there one day it would depend on other countries having that there was surveillance that we have in the u.k. to...
73
73
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
my colleague spoke to simon clarke he's an associate professor in microbiology of the unit university of reading and he says the approval for the russian vaccine has been rushed out to early. i think the skepticism around this comes from the fact that it's been worked on very quickly it's been it's been developed very quickly and it appears to be being put into the general population rather earlier than it would do if you have been developed say in the u.k. that the trials that it is undergone do not appear to have been as extensive as they would have been in this country well they haven't done is there live injected into people and looks to see whether a control group who didn't have a vaccine they would have had something out of the blue you have a vaccine have different rates of infection and that's how they come up with a 95 percent number but those those study groups are still very small of the smaller they are and i think this is possibly a problem with the russians that it was the small of those groups are less accurate so while it might have some effect it's easy. because they use a smal
my colleague spoke to simon clarke he's an associate professor in microbiology of the unit university of reading and he says the approval for the russian vaccine has been rushed out to early. i think the skepticism around this comes from the fact that it's been worked on very quickly it's been it's been developed very quickly and it appears to be being put into the general population rather earlier than it would do if you have been developed say in the u.k. that the trials that it is undergone...
29
29
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
make their demands in public why is this a sign of insecurity actually actually this year actually this year is quite universal because of the cove read 19 there are some limitations on protests as for the consequences for the people protesting in russia they're not as severe as say in the united states or in germany now let's go back to the laws you passed last year there's been a clear tightening of the space for free expression march last year what us there's been a clear monitoring of the space for free express. and i was saying in march last year 2 bills went through parliament providing for heavy fines for anyone blatantly disrespecting the your thirty's or spreading what the authorities deem to be fake news are you happy with that firm smack of government because a lot of high officials weren't happy were that the prosecutor general had reservations the ministry of justice ministry of communications were you happy that these bills went through. well i don't think that any regulations of demonstrations in russia are tougher than in your country 1st place. we started or all the international regulations all the laws passed on thi
make their demands in public why is this a sign of insecurity actually actually this year actually this year is quite universal because of the cove read 19 there are some limitations on protests as for the consequences for the people protesting in russia they're not as severe as say in the united states or in germany now let's go back to the laws you passed last year there's been a clear tightening of the space for free expression march last year what us there's been a clear monitoring of the...
43
43
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
they are all g a professor and jones of britain's reading university it welcomes the addition of new vaccines for the international community and it's very effective 90 percent effective in stopping inspection that is not to say that the other vaccines do not that's almost well they do including long fact that by now the new virus this book next find vaccine and another already seem wrong reduced by much and i would expect that the other trials that are currently ongoing will reports quite soon probably early next year but they reached a very good level of inspection and will certainly be a logistical challenge because the back scene requires ultra cold storage before it's actually used i don't think that's a stop of the arrow and so i think in certainly in developed countries i think the provision of minus 18 reserves is not such a big deal but it certainly could be something that will effect the rollout more generally 'd in other areas of the work world which don't have access to boat storage with just a few weeks to go before christmas eve states are responding to mass anti-lock d
they are all g a professor and jones of britain's reading university it welcomes the addition of new vaccines for the international community and it's very effective 90 percent effective in stopping inspection that is not to say that the other vaccines do not that's almost well they do including long fact that by now the new virus this book next find vaccine and another already seem wrong reduced by much and i would expect that the other trials that are currently ongoing will reports quite soon...
28
28
Dec 4, 2020
12/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
traveljournalist, jill starley—grainger and associate professor in cellular microbiology at the university of readinguch do we know about that? what the government has said is they've put on... they have freed up the timetable. there shouldn't be much in the way of works. so most trains should be running. about 95% will be running toa running. about 95% will be running to a normal schedule. they have put on extra carriages. they've also issued guidelines to train companies for them to adapt to their own services. a lot of train companies are saying they will only operate at about 50% capacity. a lot of train companies are also requiring that you book a seat in advance so they can make sure you are spaced out appropriately. however, like any form of public transport there are no guarantees, and there aren't going to be police going through the carriages checking this. you are required to wear a mask throughout your train journey, required to wear a mask throughout your trainjourney, no matter how long it is, so make sure you have a mask otherwise you won't be allowed to get on board and you might be a
traveljournalist, jill starley—grainger and associate professor in cellular microbiology at the university of readinguch do we know about that? what the government has said is they've put on... they have freed up the timetable. there shouldn't be much in the way of works. so most trains should be running. about 95% will be running toa running. about 95% will be running to a normal schedule. they have put on extra carriages. they've also issued guidelines to train companies for them to adapt...
45
45
Dec 1, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
of those founding principles. we also -- we offer a close reading of the universal declaration of human rights which is really an important foundation of the post-world war ii human rights project. we show that it is -- it deserves to be a foundational document and a careful reading helps guide us in dealing with a variety of the -- the variety of controversies that have risen today about the implementation of human rights and the concluding part of our report we deal with new human rights challenges, predominant among them are the chinese communist party because of its size, its ruthlessness, its reputuation of the norms of freedom and individual dignity and in the field of technology and the new threats wielded by the chinese communist party of artificial intelligence and we close with some final observations and the 12th observation -- i believe it's the 12th and final observation, brings us back to the elements of the china challenge. we speak about the -- we write about the seed beds of human rights. it's good to understand the doctrine of human rights. it's good to understand the history of human rights. but what we
of those founding principles. we also -- we offer a close reading of the universal declaration of human rights which is really an important foundation of the post-world war ii human rights project. we show that it is -- it deserves to be a foundational document and a careful reading helps guide us in dealing with a variety of the -- the variety of controversies that have risen today about the implementation of human rights and the concluding part of our report we deal with new human rights...
32
32
Dec 29, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 32
favorite 0
quote 0
one of the things, again going back to the university of chicago, i spent a lot of time reading the literatureof the totalitarian era and finding myself in awe at the courage of people who were prepared to speak and write against a regime that genuinely could do terrible things to you, send you two men stood to test mental gulags.ions, to think today of alexey navalny and that kind of courage. i moved jobs, but it did not take a lot of courage for me to say that this guy is totally unacceptable as president and i am going to keep saying it, even if i lose a few lunch dates in the process. i don't know -- i wish i could understand why it was so difficult for so many of my former fellow travelers and friends and comrades on the same, in mye to the view, utterly obvious judgment. i think it comes down to this notion that liberals or progressives are the enemy. maybe because i am married to someone who is well to the left guess,so i am, i sleeping with the enemy, if you will. americansto see other who just happen to have a different point of view as my enemy. i might think they are stupid, wrong,
one of the things, again going back to the university of chicago, i spent a lot of time reading the literatureof the totalitarian era and finding myself in awe at the courage of people who were prepared to speak and write against a regime that genuinely could do terrible things to you, send you two men stood to test mental gulags.ions, to think today of alexey navalny and that kind of courage. i moved jobs, but it did not take a lot of courage for me to say that this guy is totally unacceptable...
45
45
Dec 27, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 0
i am joined by tim, who you professor, and jim, of business ethics at the university of notre dame. words.nly 204 it reads like a preamble like the u.s. constitution. that said, it does speak to the importance of organization. mainly they needed to depend on one another to survive. and strangers were going into a new and remote land where success was not inevitable, but the economic system was critical to their survival. mentioned, we are not trying to create a new society, they were bringing tradition with them. how important did each of you think that economic freedom and property rights were to establishing a successful presence in the new world? >> thank you for letting us talk about this. especially as we come up on the 400 anniversary of the mayflower compact. i think your question of how important was economic freedom to what they were able to do is important. the one of the things that is important, when you look back at the mayflower compact, and when you think about it in its time, the very fact that they sat down and wrote an agreement and all voluntarily decided to sign it. it already assumes
i am joined by tim, who you professor, and jim, of business ethics at the university of notre dame. words.nly 204 it reads like a preamble like the u.s. constitution. that said, it does speak to the importance of organization. mainly they needed to depend on one another to survive. and strangers were going into a new and remote land where success was not inevitable, but the economic system was critical to their survival. mentioned, we are not trying to create a new society, they were bringing...
67
67
Dec 23, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
on behalf of harvard bookstore harvard university division of science all here in cambridge massachusetts have a good night and keep reading and please be well. good night. >> thank you everybody
on behalf of harvard bookstore harvard university division of science all here in cambridge massachusetts have a good night and keep reading and please be well. good night. >> thank you everybody
129
129
Dec 23, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
university of the free state south africa. he offers seminars in early american and early modern religious history as well as reading courses in all periods of religious history. he has contributed several articles into the new england quarterly and the massachusetts historical review among others. he has also edited or co-edited several works, too many to name here on the sermons of jonathan edwards and other colonial preachers. so please join me in welcoming dr. minkema. >> thank you very much, geneva, and it is my pleasure to introduce frank bremer who i've known for quite some time. i think i first met you when you did one of your wonderful conferences in 1991, if you can remember that far away. i was a young graduate student and these conferences offered the opportunity for up and coming people like myself to rub shoulders with the giants on the earthlike yourself and others and to get the proper introduction to the field of puritan studies. i remember one session in particular where we tried to define puritanism, and while we calm up with thing in the end, we couldn't do it. we knew a puritan when we saw one and that was
university of the free state south africa. he offers seminars in early american and early modern religious history as well as reading courses in all periods of religious history. he has contributed several articles into the new england quarterly and the massachusetts historical review among others. he has also edited or co-edited several works, too many to name here on the sermons of jonathan edwards and other colonial preachers. so please join me in welcoming dr. minkema. >> thank you...
98
98
Dec 23, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
university. doctor is a member of the research faculty at yale school and research associate at the university of free state south africa. he offers seminars in early american and early modern religious history, as well as reading courses in all periods of american religious history. he has contributed several articles to the journal of american history, the william and mary quarterlies and new england quarterly and massachusetts historical review, among others. he has also edited or coed digited several works on jon edwards and colonial preachers. >> thank you very much, ginevra. it is my pleasure to introduce frank bremer, who i have known for quite some time. i think i first met you, frank, when you did one of your wonderful conferences back in millersville back in 1991, if you can remember that far. i was a young graduate student, and these conferences offered the opportunity for up and coming people like myself to rub shoulders with the giants on the earth like yourself and others and to get a proper introduction to field of puritan studies. i know one session in particular where we tried to define puritanism and we just couldn't do it. but we decided that -- we knew a puritan when we saw one. that was abo
university. doctor is a member of the research faculty at yale school and research associate at the university of free state south africa. he offers seminars in early american and early modern religious history, as well as reading courses in all periods of american religious history. he has contributed several articles to the journal of american history, the william and mary quarterlies and new england quarterly and massachusetts historical review, among others. he has also edited or coed...
138
138
Dec 2, 2020
12/20
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
payne was one of only 60 african american students at the university of connecticut out of enrolled 10,000 students. this is les payne readingy "the night i stopped being a negro," about his experience hearing malcolm x speak. >> by the end of the lecture, i in me knew that something had changed. this time irreversibly. blacks, mosterior, important i, myself, would no longer be inferr. this cardinal message powerfully delivered to millions would make malcolm x a treasure for black liberation and a serious threat to white america. previously, my own condition since of self-loathing had proved is difficult to remove as tattoo and here it was finally washed away by malcolm's acid bath, primer on racial conditioning, and tough love logic. until this june night, i had been imprisoned. ,ut malcolm x shook my dungeons and as a poet said, my chains fell off. i had entered bushnell hall as a ando with a capital"n" wandered out into the parking lot as a black man. amy: that was the late journalist phyllis are prize-winning reporter from editor at newsday in new york, les payne, author of "the dead are arising: the life of malcolm x."
payne was one of only 60 african american students at the university of connecticut out of enrolled 10,000 students. this is les payne readingy "the night i stopped being a negro," about his experience hearing malcolm x speak. >> by the end of the lecture, i in me knew that something had changed. this time irreversibly. blacks, mosterior, important i, myself, would no longer be inferr. this cardinal message powerfully delivered to millions would make malcolm x a treasure for...
46
46
Dec 20, 2020
12/20
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
speak to dr sam dyson on iraq and he's an associate professor of infectious diseases at a strain in national university he joins us now from can read dr great to speak to you again in the premier of new south wales sounds pretty confident that this outbreak hasn't gets spread to great us of need to do you share that same confidence i mean that says you are i think it's it's too early to say but the signs are good at the moment so we've got about 68 cases but all the cases in this northern beaches are great seem to be linked to the law the beaches i'm. a clock in the northern beaches where we think a super spreading event may have occurred the only thing is some of those people infected at that event live in other parts of sydney and sooty is a very big city about the 43rd biggest world 2034 square kilometers and people could have spread it so the next few days would be very important and it's really a lot of the people get to have the modesty. dogs and by my understanding this is the us strain of the virus right and they still don't know how it actually got into the community when we saw the melbourne outbreak from travellers to is
speak to dr sam dyson on iraq and he's an associate professor of infectious diseases at a strain in national university he joins us now from can read dr great to speak to you again in the premier of new south wales sounds pretty confident that this outbreak hasn't gets spread to great us of need to do you share that same confidence i mean that says you are i think it's it's too early to say but the signs are good at the moment so we've got about 68 cases but all the cases in this northern...
13
13
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
of the. ebola deadly ebola happy demick in. west africa. to deal with a pandemic which was universally agree. with any needs read the united states some other countries i mean the warnings about this since. the beginning of the millennium have been constant the planet. has been kind of their reports have been gone since it but it's suddenly united states it's in your country and. most countries of western europe are always planning came to not resolved we. ignored and now in my country. president tribe has who he says are all on which is a medical spokesman name scott apple as he's a parks news commentator who exactly parrots the line that the tribe in ministration expresses that mass probably useless schoolchildren don't transmit the earth and to make the testing should be limited to only people in critically endangered groups trump obvious he says things that he says off of the united states doing better and he certainly is doing better than that the united kingdom on deaths per capita well in the case of britain i mean i think. it is now obvious that a deliberate strategy of herd immunity. was followed that t
of the. ebola deadly ebola happy demick in. west africa. to deal with a pandemic which was universally agree. with any needs read the united states some other countries i mean the warnings about this since. the beginning of the millennium have been constant the planet. has been kind of their reports have been gone since it but it's suddenly united states it's in your country and. most countries of western europe are always planning came to not resolved we. ignored and now in my country....
37
37
Dec 28, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 37
favorite 0
quote 0
we have grants that are given from university of -- universal entertainment, but we are also giving big mentor readingspeter farley has really been a mentor and supporter of the easterseals disability film challenge since the beginning. and so, two years ago, he approached us and said, nic, we have an amazing role. it is a recurring role in a tv show and it is for a little person actors. actress. person do you know anybody that would be good for this? we were able to take over 10 ands with video people starting roles, -- and he was able to watch all these films and see that an action. ultimately, a major recurring role went to sophia cheyenne, a little person from new york city who has been a theater actress who has not had the opportunity to really showcase herself up until she randomly makes the film for the easterseals disability film challenge and then cut to her being now in her second year recurring on the tv show shot in canada. a major career defining role. that's one example. we also have so many examples of people -- another is a deaf filmmaker, he used his film and ultimately he used it to s
we have grants that are given from university of -- universal entertainment, but we are also giving big mentor readingspeter farley has really been a mentor and supporter of the easterseals disability film challenge since the beginning. and so, two years ago, he approached us and said, nic, we have an amazing role. it is a recurring role in a tv show and it is for a little person actors. actress. person do you know anybody that would be good for this? we were able to take over 10 ands with...
147
147
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 147
favorite 0
quote 0
university. i follow and read a lot of macroeconomic commentators, reporters and economists.cross the spectrum, some finance and wall street people, some republican, some democrat, liberal. everybody was freaked out by the jobs report today. why? >> because it's just furtherer evidence of what we've all recognized has been taking place for a period of time. this economy is in the midst of a slow motion train wreck. this recovery, which was uneven and bifurcated to begin with, why people like president-elect biden have been referring to it as k-shaped recovery. already had problems with recovery, wasn't bringing everyone along. now the recovery, bifurcated and uneven as it was, is beginning to slow down. what lies ahead is renewed carnage in the economy and we all saw it coming. point is interesting to me, whole year is weird, almost examine question, what happens if you shut down the economy and try to restart it. you know, you can get into a situation, whether local/federal budgets or businesses closing, cascading effect where things get worse and snowball starts rolling dow
university. i follow and read a lot of macroeconomic commentators, reporters and economists.cross the spectrum, some finance and wall street people, some republican, some democrat, liberal. everybody was freaked out by the jobs report today. why? >> because it's just furtherer evidence of what we've all recognized has been taking place for a period of time. this economy is in the midst of a slow motion train wreck. this recovery, which was uneven and bifurcated to begin with, why people...
38
38
tv
eye 38
favorite 0
quote 0
of attention from all the good editors are. they really receive visitors music is a universal language. i learned that if you. read an article or a d.v.d. about god where it hurts you know it is all of you that. were in the chukotka autonomous home to the indigenous people double the size of germany it has just 50000 residents. joining the night our drivers get hungry. in the early morning hours we reach our destination. than carry him. only 190 people live here but every year you know and date his with visitors several for. 1000 will recess. spend the next few days with surrogate caffrey a member of the indigenous people he belongs to a family of marine hunters he wants to pass on his knowledge to his nephew yuri as soon as the weather improves they plan to go hunting together the. surrogate tells us that the chook to live from was says he takes this to see their colony so gay has noticed changes in the marine mammals rhythm of life. he says the walrus is which can weigh several tons and spending long periods on land lounging around on the ice is no longer an option. on the hoarded belak or the ice disappears ear
of attention from all the good editors are. they really receive visitors music is a universal language. i learned that if you. read an article or a d.v.d. about god where it hurts you know it is all of you that. were in the chukotka autonomous home to the indigenous people double the size of germany it has just 50000 residents. joining the night our drivers get hungry. in the early morning hours we reach our destination. than carry him. only 190 people live here but every year you know and date...
178
178
Dec 24, 2020
12/20
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 178
favorite 0
quote 0
professional and to the doctors at harvard university, oxford university, the doctors of the great barrington declaration, you should read educational and they basically tell us that the lockdowns are causing far more harm than the virus itself, there is immunity in the community, there is devastation in isolation. everyone came to this caroling event by choice, they did a risk/reward analysis and they said we are coming to an event, we aren't afraid of a virus that has over 99% survival rate. >> tucker: i'm doing this in my house tomorrow night because there is no church and the singing where i am but we are singing at my house, i believe in this, what kind of response did you get? >> we've had an amazing response, it's been underreported to. we haven't just had 75 or 100, we fed upwards of a thousand people come to sing carols because they are launching hope and community but i want to give you one big warning disclaimer. if you come caroling under a starry night sky and a candlelit lyric sheets and you have the u.s. constitution limited by those candles like we do, you might catch the hope virus and is very contagious
professional and to the doctors at harvard university, oxford university, the doctors of the great barrington declaration, you should read educational and they basically tell us that the lockdowns are causing far more harm than the virus itself, there is immunity in the community, there is devastation in isolation. everyone came to this caroling event by choice, they did a risk/reward analysis and they said we are coming to an event, we aren't afraid of a virus that has over 99% survival rate....
156
156
Dec 26, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 156
favorite 0
quote 0
one case i recall reading about professorguayan seeking a post at the university of maryland. he was denied entry to the u.s. allegedly because of communist party membership there. another example i recall also from the reagan years was a nominated to be nicaragua's ambassador to the u.n., but under pressure from the reagan administration, i not to she was asked assume her post at the u.n. do you know anything about those two instances? thank you. you very much.k i'm not familiar with those instances, but i'm not surprised. that is what you will find in chapter seven, the reagan administration use of the walter act to exclude. intricacies of how they are using these statutes. which statutes and provisions they turned to because what they are trying to do is circumvent the protections i mentioned of 1977 in the mcgovern amendment which prevents denial of waivers, so provisionsing another under the mccarran walter act to exclude. justified as is part of american foreign policy and the entry to these individuals would somehow interfere with american for a pet -- foreign policy. t
one case i recall reading about professorguayan seeking a post at the university of maryland. he was denied entry to the u.s. allegedly because of communist party membership there. another example i recall also from the reagan years was a nominated to be nicaragua's ambassador to the u.n., but under pressure from the reagan administration, i not to she was asked assume her post at the u.n. do you know anything about those two instances? thank you. you very much.k i'm not familiar with those...
219
219
Dec 23, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 219
favorite 0
quote 1
so on behalf of harvard book store, the university division of science and the science library all her in cambridge, massachusetts, have a good night, keep reading and please be well. good night everyone. >> thank you, kate, and thank everybody. >> weeknights this month we feature booktv programs as a preview of what's available and you weekend on c-span2. tonight as part of our 2020 year in review with focus on books about business and economics. >> that starts at 8 p.m. eastern. enjoy booktv this week and of you weekend on c-span2. >> 61 million americans have some form of disability but yet we are in less than 3% of film and ev shows and of that the majority of those roles are portrayed by nondisabled actors. so ultimately as somebody with a disability we want to see ourselves represented. because oldman not only are we seeing ourselves represented but it's going to help destigmatize disability and representation in general gets society used to everybody and ultimately it makes the work and more inclusive place. >> actor nic novicki founded easter seals disability film challenge in response to seeing disabilities underrepresented in front of
so on behalf of harvard book store, the university division of science and the science library all her in cambridge, massachusetts, have a good night, keep reading and please be well. good night everyone. >> thank you, kate, and thank everybody. >> weeknights this month we feature booktv programs as a preview of what's available and you weekend on c-span2. tonight as part of our 2020 year in review with focus on books about business and economics. >> that starts at 8 p.m....
17
17
Dec 7, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
read if through carefully. what it had to say, there's was a study for university of california nine neighborhoods in which negroest homes since 1940s. >> i suppose you'll tell us property values went up? >> exactly. studies made and prices go up not down if anything over a period of time. >> now i've heard everything. >> all right. i'm a banker by profession. no heart, very limited kind of head, man's wallet is his castle, that kind of imagination. all right? let me tell you this -- a man's a desirable neighbor if financially all right and doesn't throw beer cans all over his front lawn. has nothing whatever to do with the color of his skin, religion or where his parents come from. it has to do with the worth of a person. that's sound economics. >> mr. candy, you're a man of good judgment. would you say that these people were nice people? >> you're the first person that asked me that. yes. they were nice people. >> candy, what are you trying to do to us? what grudge have you got against us, anyway? >> anybody against the community, it's not ed candy. >> i'm leaving. been at this two hours and all i know we're not
read if through carefully. what it had to say, there's was a study for university of california nine neighborhoods in which negroest homes since 1940s. >> i suppose you'll tell us property values went up? >> exactly. studies made and prices go up not down if anything over a period of time. >> now i've heard everything. >> all right. i'm a banker by profession. no heart, very limited kind of head, man's wallet is his castle, that kind of imagination. all right? let me...
45
45
Dec 15, 2020
12/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 45
favorite 0
quote 1
professor at the university of waikato in new zealand with a special interest in human rights and the "right to health". she joins us now from there. thank you forjoining us. i was reading people in new zealand are sceptical about having the vaccine. do you understand that? yes, i do. but i think we need to be careful about how we interpret that and how we understand scepticism. i think some people might rush to interpret that as new zealanders may not want to ta ke as new zealanders may not want to take the vaccine. but i think we need to take a step back and understand that new zealanders like many people it might be just a little bit concerned about what is involved and the process by which the vaccine came to be so quickly. so concern, but then we will have it. is that what you were saying? hesitancy rather than anti—vaccine? yes, i think you could look at it as a spectrum. and where there might be some hesitancy, and i think that's natural and normal, people will want to know a little bit more about it andi to know a little bit more about it and i think within that spectrum, there will be some people who will find out a little bit more about it and then feel comfor
professor at the university of waikato in new zealand with a special interest in human rights and the "right to health". she joins us now from there. thank you forjoining us. i was reading people in new zealand are sceptical about having the vaccine. do you understand that? yes, i do. but i think we need to be careful about how we interpret that and how we understand scepticism. i think some people might rush to interpret that as new zealanders may not want to ta ke as new zealanders...
95
95
Dec 15, 2020
12/20
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
of the coronavirus vaccine. but dr simon clarke, an associate professor in cellular microbiology at reading university, told the avel. there's a good service on the tubes this morning. and for the rest of the travel news, tune in to bbc radio london who have updates every 15 minutes. now the weather with elizabeth. hello, it's a touch cooler than it was this time yesterday, but still another frost—free start to the day. most of us will agree it's a more pleasant day of weather than we saw yesterday. it won't be quite as wet or as windy. but there are still showers blowing in on a still fairly noticeable south—westerly wind. mostly up towards western home counties, but plenty of dry weather throughout the day. the showers won't line up as they did yesterday, and there will be some sunny spells about, as well. top temperatures again well above seasonal average, peaking at 11—12c, 5a fahrenheit. through this evening and overnight, the showers should have faded away, so it should look largely dry. there will be plenty of cloud around, and, again, it's a frost—free start to the day with overnight lows of around 6—7 c
of the coronavirus vaccine. but dr simon clarke, an associate professor in cellular microbiology at reading university, told the avel. there's a good service on the tubes this morning. and for the rest of the travel news, tune in to bbc radio london who have updates every 15 minutes. now the weather with elizabeth. hello, it's a touch cooler than it was this time yesterday, but still another frost—free start to the day. most of us will agree it's a more pleasant day of weather than we saw...
26
26
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
of course the dates there is positive then it could only. quell any public fears that people might have about actually. we've been speaking with simon clark microbiologist at reading university thank you very time and your comments you're welcome. and lastly some more breaking news this time from london where a car has reportedly rammed into a number of pedestrians and no information about the extent or nature of any injuries and the incident is currently not mitri being treated as a terrorist attack on may bring you more on that as it comes in as well. that's been our breakdown of the day's top news for this hour thanks for tuning. in january there may be a new american president but what won't change is washington stance towards iran is military conflict inevitable what is the value of diplomacy if one side fails phoner agreements and what are iran's off. as it is a dead that is gone you know that mr soros is bringing. those weapons of mass communication is spreading. using a. bad way to see her. again and of m.t.v. is contagious and maybe older but is this. going to little billy i'm going to have an agent come to interviews on you tube effect to your mother to. take to al
of course the dates there is positive then it could only. quell any public fears that people might have about actually. we've been speaking with simon clark microbiologist at reading university thank you very time and your comments you're welcome. and lastly some more breaking news this time from london where a car has reportedly rammed into a number of pedestrians and no information about the extent or nature of any injuries and the incident is currently not mitri being treated as a terrorist...
69
69
Dec 30, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
for some of the most prestigious publications in the country including the atlantic, the new republic, long read as well as the owl. is a graduate of middlebury college and columbia university of the best journalism schools out there. he reports on criminal justice, teaches at the college for creative studies and works as an assistant director for shakespeare in prison. we have a lot to talk about tonight including the foundations of this book which i think really is an untold story of the civil rights era that a lot of people should know about. matthew, i'm going to headed over to you, and thank you for being a part of this tonight. >> thanks so much, jeremy. quickly, i went to the school of the arts at columbia which no less prestigious but a little us journalistic. anyway, thank you so much for the introduction. that's really a pleasure. so tonight i want to situate us in a place. i would introduce you some people at a want to talk about why that place unless people are relevant today. and i kind of want to turn your understanding of the civil rights movement upside down a little bit, shake it and see what's in the pockets because that's what history is about to me. i pr
for some of the most prestigious publications in the country including the atlantic, the new republic, long read as well as the owl. is a graduate of middlebury college and columbia university of the best journalism schools out there. he reports on criminal justice, teaches at the college for creative studies and works as an assistant director for shakespeare in prison. we have a lot to talk about tonight including the foundations of this book which i think really is an untold story of the...
28
28
Dec 31, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
what i got out of reading through this, very good briefing. java's people divided the universe of tasks in a certain way. although things that tell the computer to do one thing will do. that which tells the computer which to do, that is the declaration. here is what it is like. it is like as the judge said, the qwerty keyboard. you didn't have to have that on typewriters at the beginning, but my god, if you let someone have a copyright on that now they would control all typewriters. which really has nothing to do with copyright. or it is like switchboards on old-fashioned telephone systems. you could have done it in 1000 ways. once you did it, all the operators across the world learned that system and you don't want to give a copyright holder a monopoly. to use the chief justice's example, a chef that figures out a brilliant way of mixing spices and putting the spices in a certain order. then you write something that tells you which shelf to go to and which shelf to pick out and which spice to pick out. all of those things are someone ordinary programs, but they are also doing
what i got out of reading through this, very good briefing. java's people divided the universe of tasks in a certain way. although things that tell the computer to do one thing will do. that which tells the computer which to do, that is the declaration. here is what it is like. it is like as the judge said, the qwerty keyboard. you didn't have to have that on typewriters at the beginning, but my god, if you let someone have a copyright on that now they would control all typewriters. which...
26
26
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
read through it carefully. this is what it had to say. it was a study from the university ofn francisco neighborhoods in which negroes had bought homes since 1940. >> i suppose you are going to tell us property values went up? >> exactly. property values go up, not down come over time. >> now i have heard everything. >> i am a banker by profession. i am a banker by profession. no hard, very limited had, a , a man's home is his castle, that kind of imagination. a man is a desirable neighbor if he is financially all right and doesn't throw beer cans all over his front lawn. it has nothing whatever to do with the color of his skin or religion or where his parents come from. it has to do with the worth of a person. that is sound economics. >> mr. candy, you are a man of good judgment. would you say these people are nice people? >> you are the first person that asked me that. yes, they were nice people. >> candy, what are you trying to do to us? what grudge got you going against this place anyway? >> if anybody is damaging this community, it is not ed candy. >> i'm leaving. we hav
read through it carefully. this is what it had to say. it was a study from the university ofn francisco neighborhoods in which negroes had bought homes since 1940. >> i suppose you are going to tell us property values went up? >> exactly. property values go up, not down come over time. >> now i have heard everything. >> i am a banker by profession. i am a banker by profession. no hard, very limited had, a , a man's home is his castle, that kind of imagination. a man is a...
318
318
Dec 24, 2020
12/20
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 318
favorite 0
quote 0
university of pennsylvania and founder of the character lab. she is the author of "grit: the power of performance." if you haven't read this is the year to do it. professor duckworth, thank you for being with us. there are times when someone with your level of education comes on the show and people say, this is not the experience most people have. except in this particular case, in terms of dealing with the grief and the pressures of coronavirus, it has been your experience kind of from the beginning. your father passed in april. >> yeah, i think my father was one of the early victims passing in early april. although i should say at the age of 87, there has certainly been more tragic cases during the pandemic. my 85-year-old mother is still with us. but, yeah, i've had my story. i will tell you, i hope 2020 is the year of empathy because if anything, this teaches us that each of us really does carry our own burden. >> let's talk about dealing with these things. your mother is dealing with the loss of your father. you wrote there was no funeral, but she could paint and she could plant a tree. the dedication reads babyl
university of pennsylvania and founder of the character lab. she is the author of "grit: the power of performance." if you haven't read this is the year to do it. professor duckworth, thank you for being with us. there are times when someone with your level of education comes on the show and people say, this is not the experience most people have. except in this particular case, in terms of dealing with the grief and the pressures of coronavirus, it has been your experience kind of...
59
59
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
now the university of washington's key covid model predicts the death toll will reach well over -- it's hard to even readnumber -- 538,800 by april. with a rapid vaccine rollout more than 11,000 lives could be saved. but with universal masking they say more than 66,000 lives could be saved. i know one of the concerns that we've been hearing is that one state started administering vaccine even with people who have been pretty good they'll let their guard down. what's your message tonight about that, and are you worried about it? >> for sure because i think that's our inclination, right, to get the vaccine we wait to start and everything goes back to normal. we get to hug and kiss our family. but this is going to be months and people really need to batten down the hatches for this because just because the individual human gets a vaccine and their individual risk is decreased for your local stores to open back up, for your restaurants to open up we're going to have to reach a crit criminal mass vaccination for the country. the other part is actually convincing enough of us to take it because there's a lot o
now the university of washington's key covid model predicts the death toll will reach well over -- it's hard to even readnumber -- 538,800 by april. with a rapid vaccine rollout more than 11,000 lives could be saved. but with universal masking they say more than 66,000 lives could be saved. i know one of the concerns that we've been hearing is that one state started administering vaccine even with people who have been pretty good they'll let their guard down. what's your message tonight about...
506
506
Dec 26, 2020
12/20
by
CNNW
tv
eye 506
favorite 0
quote 0
of a prophetic call. >> the scientific quest to date the kansas finger bone attributed to john the baptist is reaching its climax. successful in retrieving enough material for an accurate reading at oxford university's, they prepare the sample for the accelerator mass spectrometer. the machine will analyze the amount of radiocarbon in the sample and through that determine the relic's age. >> using scientific techniques now, for the first time it's really possible to build up a template of scientific similarities between different individuals to understand more about the movements and the passage of relics across this part of the world during the first mel enyum a.d. >> now, the scientists' work is done. they can only wait for a final answer. could this bone belong to john the baptist? ♪ [yawn] you. look. stunning. want the truth to why i wake up feeling... [growls softly] ...so darn awesome? [makes playful sound] i take care of my skin. not this skin. that skin. and when you've got incontinence, you sure need to. tena intimates pads lock liquid in, and are now 100% breathable to care for your intimate skin. are you still here? kind to skin. protects like tena. get their dishes as clean as possible.o
of a prophetic call. >> the scientific quest to date the kansas finger bone attributed to john the baptist is reaching its climax. successful in retrieving enough material for an accurate reading at oxford university's, they prepare the sample for the accelerator mass spectrometer. the machine will analyze the amount of radiocarbon in the sample and through that determine the relic's age. >> using scientific techniques now, for the first time it's really possible to build up a...
207
207
Dec 29, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 207
favorite 0
quote 0
read it and let's talk. the london times headline - i guess the shorter of the two names, talking:god did not create the universe. it is not what he said, that is what they say he said. a lot of people, england and all different quarters, different countries but on the other hand, people know about the book, it was very provocative and if you read the book, you weren't saying that but it was a compelling, interesting book. it was a very stiff stressful time, can you call to burbank for 10 minutes, on cnn, was on fox news for an interview and some of them are attacking you and i was saying this is a physics book. what my mother would say, what could be so upsetting in a physics book? >> host: i wake up in the morning and find out i could piss off god. >> guest: on espn talking about the book, someone sent me a copy of men's health magazine. i don't know what that was about. >> host: you expanded your readership. >> guest: many people heard about the book but it was all based on a misconstrued. >> host: before we move on to the questions, what did stephen teach you about your self, what did you learn about your se
read it and let's talk. the london times headline - i guess the shorter of the two names, talking:god did not create the universe. it is not what he said, that is what they say he said. a lot of people, england and all different quarters, different countries but on the other hand, people know about the book, it was very provocative and if you read the book, you weren't saying that but it was a compelling, interesting book. it was a very stiff stressful time, can you call to burbank for 10...
18
18
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
of sputnik the month. earlier i spoke with simon clarke i microbiologist the u.k.'s at reading university who says global cooperation is vital during the pandemic. that it could know what they're doing and wouldn't accept it unless they thought it was a real deal something that they should do the more data that is produced on any vaccine does about so where it's produced or by whom it's a good thing and i you know provided of course the data there is positive then it could only. quell any public fears that people might have about actually people need to come together and find a way of getting those things that work maybe to work better or to be able to produce them more quickly or in greater amounts that's what's important now meanwhile the president of argentina has given a thumbs up to russia's coronavirus vaccine about our fernando's said that once the drug is approved by the country's medical regulator he would be the 1st person to receive this but think of the jab at him that he had no doubts about its quality and when a similar in argentina some raise doubts about the quality of rus
of sputnik the month. earlier i spoke with simon clarke i microbiologist the u.k.'s at reading university who says global cooperation is vital during the pandemic. that it could know what they're doing and wouldn't accept it unless they thought it was a real deal something that they should do the more data that is produced on any vaccine does about so where it's produced or by whom it's a good thing and i you know provided of course the data there is positive then it could only. quell any...
12
12
Dec 9, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
regardless of how the core votes the world continually to prohibit verbal calls the fact in 1991 definition has universal devices no longer in use that has the court to adopt other than the most natural reading of the tex text. >> you began by saying this case because is the statutory text is a the plain meaning case? >> we think the interpretation offered here is by far the most natural reading of the text and the other case we haven't gone so far as to pay in on the contrary approach would be possible we are reticent to foreclose to see the they had to say that i agree there's a real or contrary interpretation. >> that was a question. not a statement. how do you react to the notion this will have disastrous consequences given in technology that has developed since congress passed the senate they should into on - - enter into consideration? >> i agree with my friend that should not be drive the course analysis. so as someone has suggested that narrow role they play in the statutory scheme that it only implicates the automated call restriction. >> thank you mr. ellis. justice thomas. >> thank you so to the point of the statute from 1991 and current technology with the cell phones 1991 they w
regardless of how the core votes the world continually to prohibit verbal calls the fact in 1991 definition has universal devices no longer in use that has the court to adopt other than the most natural reading of the tex text. >> you began by saying this case because is the statutory text is a the plain meaning case? >> we think the interpretation offered here is by far the most natural reading of the text and the other case we haven't gone so far as to pay in on the contrary...
112
112
Dec 25, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
of subcultures unwritten rules. it's a culture because there are common themes to how it plays out every university and every place literally internationally. among those rules is this kind of -- if you're not doing physics, reading, calculating every waking minute of your life which nobody's actually doing but that's the summit. then you're somehow stepping out of the monetary. your not devout. and as a young scientist who is coming out of graduate school, to expose that i was not devout, was a deathknell. to my career as a scientist. and so to my verywell-meaning , very loving wonderful mentors, who wanted only the bestfor me , told me in no uncertain terms do not do this at this stage in your career.but i think for me it was a little different because i remember never 100 percent felt that i could fit in to the monastery anyway. farted part of me felt freer than some of my colleagues. it was like the world never going to see that well anyway. why not take the chance, kind of thing. and i'm not going to say it was a smooth path, it was pretty rocky. it was pretty rocky. i wouldn't have had it any other way and i think that brian, i'm sure you have this experience. it was a time in our lives when writing a book
of subcultures unwritten rules. it's a culture because there are common themes to how it plays out every university and every place literally internationally. among those rules is this kind of -- if you're not doing physics, reading, calculating every waking minute of your life which nobody's actually doing but that's the summit. then you're somehow stepping out of the monetary. your not devout. and as a young scientist who is coming out of graduate school, to expose that i was not devout, was...
221
221
Dec 26, 2020
12/20
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 1
research at the library at the university of virginia, but wasntially all of it written in that room. host: macrina dated you write. caller: i'm not writing all day reading or correcting what i wrote the day before or i'm going over notes, there is no telephone. host: is there music? caller: no, there is a nice view but i had my back to the view so i will not be tempted by it. it is far enough from the house, enough to see b general washingn and with his soldiers marching along, i hope they show the end of it because there's a guy at the end identify and is always a little slow catching up, he is not quite -- you're going to see him and they look at him and he's my example -- there he is, that is the one, he's always a little behind. host: david mccullough is published by simon & schuster and the president is on your screen now, jonathan karp, what has david, mccullough met. >> david mccullough is a franchise, percival happy anniversary and i've been hearing his voice, he fills me with such admiration if david is watching, we hear you, we love you and we will be reading forever. he has been with us for over 50 years and he's one of the great writers at w
research at the library at the university of virginia, but wasntially all of it written in that room. host: macrina dated you write. caller: i'm not writing all day reading or correcting what i wrote the day before or i'm going over notes, there is no telephone. host: is there music? caller: no, there is a nice view but i had my back to the view so i will not be tempted by it. it is far enough from the house, enough to see b general washingn and with his soldiers marching along, i hope they...
21
21
Dec 16, 2020
12/20
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
columbiator of university's mba program and policy management. you can read more about the u.s. economic outlook, limbic survivors -- the mobile in the blooper anywhere app. you are watching daybreak: asia. let's get you the first word headlines with karina mitchell. karina: thank you so much. last-ditch budget talks may be headed to a conclusion, with brussels saying the final middle hurdle to be cleared. optimism growing after the two sides agreed to extend negotiations. downing street says a no deal remains the most likely outcome, and boris johnson insists that u.k. has a natural right to control its own waters. the eu says it is possible the gap can be bridged. brexit uncertainty is worsening holdups at channel ports, with more than 60,000 trucks reported to be waiting to cross. wednesday was already a red day in terms of disruption at the ports. authorities say it became the most difficult day so far this month as talks right on in brussels. police have set up marking areas as far as 40 kilometers to ease the pressure. iran has entered the nuclear debate adding his support
columbiator of university's mba program and policy management. you can read more about the u.s. economic outlook, limbic survivors -- the mobile in the blooper anywhere app. you are watching daybreak: asia. let's get you the first word headlines with karina mitchell. karina: thank you so much. last-ditch budget talks may be headed to a conclusion, with brussels saying the final middle hurdle to be cleared. optimism growing after the two sides agreed to extend negotiations. downing street says a...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
214
214
Dec 6, 2020
12/20
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 214
favorite 0
quote 0
this is probably one of our longer meetings, but i wanted to read a statement that i had prepared. [inaudible] 1948 universal declaration of human rights and the 1966 international covenant on civil and political rights, as well as the 1948 geneva convention. in the 1950s, our redevelopment agency was headed by a few racist leaders who decided to use racist enforcement policies to demolish numerous buildings and displace thousands of families and overwhelming the majority of them were black. the redevelopment agency in san francisco at the time, after displacing these families, they officially implemented the federally funded urban renewal program and placed displaced residents in the western addition neighborhood and bayview-hunters point. that's the premise that we sit on today, is that the redevelopment agency create this had to ensure the right of return, and since this government sanctioned return of the black san franciscans, we have seen a steady decline of the black population to its current rate of less than 7%. only 83 of the 1,283 lottery units were actually secured by c.o.p. holders. that represe
this is probably one of our longer meetings, but i wanted to read a statement that i had prepared. [inaudible] 1948 universal declaration of human rights and the 1966 international covenant on civil and political rights, as well as the 1948 geneva convention. in the 1950s, our redevelopment agency was headed by a few racist leaders who decided to use racist enforcement policies to demolish numerous buildings and displace thousands of families and overwhelming the majority of them were black....
167
167
Dec 5, 2020
12/20
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 167
favorite 0
quote 0
university of chicago, she's an intern at the federalist, we're happy to have her on tonight. some of your argument or your plea to atlantic readers for us if you would. >> when i first read thele, i immediately thought about how dangerous it is. she essentially tries to normalize eugenics and the of some of the least powerful people in the world, people with down syndrome. she does it by creating this no judgment narrative. i think what was most interesting -- one of the most interesting things, after the article came out it was a perfect example of selective leftist outrage. the liberals, they have no problem taking a moral stance when it's the covington catholic school boy, but when you were faced with the real world dilemma, the extermination of people with down syndrome, they say no judgment, great article from the atlantic. >> tucker: eugenic testing is reaching a place even now, and it certainly will the future, where there are all kinds of qualities that can be detected in utero. it's not just about children with down syndrome, it's about all kinds of different people who could be eliminated using the same methods. you have personally experienced a sibling with down s
university of chicago, she's an intern at the federalist, we're happy to have her on tonight. some of your argument or your plea to atlantic readers for us if you would. >> when i first read thele, i immediately thought about how dangerous it is. she essentially tries to normalize eugenics and the of some of the least powerful people in the world, people with down syndrome. she does it by creating this no judgment narrative. i think what was most interesting -- one of the most interesting...