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Aug 30, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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reservoir in thatcham by professor hannah cloke, a climate scientist and hydrologist at the university of readinghe uk. hannah, we of course are shocked by what has happened but there is an element from climate scientists of we told you so. so can we both be shocked but also not surprised at these events? if you see the scale of the recent flooding and the recent heat that we have seen and the fires, i mean, it is impossible not to be shocked by this kind of thing. but you know we do know that these types of rainfall and these types of heat events and fires are possible. we have seen some of this in the historical record as well. but when we look towards the future of climate we know that these things are going to happen more often and we need to be more prepared. of course, the rainfall has been extreme but are we prepared enough for these events? for example, in the little things like this reservoir it is significant in stopping a town getting floods. so are we prepared enough for these extreme rainfall events? it is really frustrating actually as a climate scientist, as a hydrologist, to see p
reservoir in thatcham by professor hannah cloke, a climate scientist and hydrologist at the university of readinghe uk. hannah, we of course are shocked by what has happened but there is an element from climate scientists of we told you so. so can we both be shocked but also not surprised at these events? if you see the scale of the recent flooding and the recent heat that we have seen and the fires, i mean, it is impossible not to be shocked by this kind of thing. but you know we do know that...
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Aug 9, 2021
08/21
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ALJAZ
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that is richard on one of the lead offers of the report said professor climate science at the university of reading. richard, thanks very much indeed. for your time, appreciate now, we came here to see the wall of oz in antalya province, but they've also been extensive elsewhere in turkey. correspondence, russell dine is 7 or 8 hours west of here. he's in budrum, a russell. tell us about your experiences and what you've been saying. well a nick 12 days ago when i arrived in on tale and when i got to be honest, i was thinking that within one or 2 days i'm going to back home because turkey is used to the wildfires. and so far that had been brought under the control in the previous years easily. but when i arrived when i goodman, i got the scale of the wildfires, it was just like a hotter movie. i remember. and my 1st life, when i had been asked what i see and what's happening there at was it was one of the rear moments in my carrier that i had a difficulties to report because simply i was in the middle of a hell and everywhere, whatever i could see just was burning and i could see, but i was one of t
that is richard on one of the lead offers of the report said professor climate science at the university of reading. richard, thanks very much indeed. for your time, appreciate now, we came here to see the wall of oz in antalya province, but they've also been extensive elsewhere in turkey. correspondence, russell dine is 7 or 8 hours west of here. he's in budrum, a russell. tell us about your experiences and what you've been saying. well a nick 12 days ago when i arrived in on tale and when i...
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Aug 27, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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past few months, i'm joined by professor hannah, the climate scientist and hydrologist of the university of reading element of climate science that says i told you so. but i'm not surprised by these events. if so. but i'm not surprised by these events.— so. but i'm not surprised by these events. if you see the scale of the _ these events. if you see the scale of the flooding - these events. if you see the scale of the flooding and - these events. if you see the l scale of the flooding and heed to be seen in the fires, it's impossible not to be shocked by this kind of thing. but we do note that these types of rainfall in these types of heat events are possible and we have seen some of this and the historical record as well. but we looked towards the future climate and we know that the more of this is coming and we have to be prepared. share more of this is coming and we have to be prepared.- have to be prepared. are we prepared _ have to be prepared. are we prepared enough _ have to be prepared. are we prepared enough for- have to be prepared. are we prepared enough for these l prepared enough for t
past few months, i'm joined by professor hannah, the climate scientist and hydrologist of the university of reading element of climate science that says i told you so. but i'm not surprised by these events. if so. but i'm not surprised by these events.— so. but i'm not surprised by these events. if you see the scale of the _ these events. if you see the scale of the flooding - these events. if you see the scale of the flooding and - these events. if you see the l scale of the flooding and...
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Aug 11, 2021
08/21
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LINKTV
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for that professor of climate -- climate science at the university of reading. urne, we have grant and associate professor at the institute for global health at the university of melbourne and e author of climate health encourage. in london, todd burke, chairman of the third-generation environmentalism think tank. thank you for joining us. inside story. beginning with you, mr. out, so we lay out what is at stake for the conversation. if the world continues on its trajectory, the report finds the world could warm by two degrees by the year 2060. what would that world look like? mr. a the sciencel is clearlen: intensifying. their hair than that. it will intensify the extremes even more. as has been shown in the report are stated in the report, we can avoid the worst dangers of climate change if we act now. kim: i have we been so unable to change the course of the climate crisis? we have talked about this for years. >> you're right about that. it is not because the scientist haven't told us we should pay attention to. the military has told us since the end of the la
for that professor of climate -- climate science at the university of reading. urne, we have grant and associate professor at the institute for global health at the university of melbourne and e author of climate health encourage. in london, todd burke, chairman of the third-generation environmentalism think tank. thank you for joining us. inside story. beginning with you, mr. out, so we lay out what is at stake for the conversation. if the world continues on its trajectory, the report finds...
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Aug 11, 2021
08/21
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ALJAZ
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reading the u. k. we have richard allen, professor of climate science at the university of reading ad, one of the author of the i p. c. c. report. in melbourne. we have granted laskey and associate professor at the national institute for global health at the university of melbourne and the author of climate health and courage. and in london, tom book, chairman of e 3, g, the generation environmentalism thing. thank everyone. welcome to you all. thanks for joining us here on inside story. i'd like to speak with you, mr. ellen, so that we lay out what's at stake before we get into this conversation. if the world continues on its current trajectory, there are poor fines that the world could warm by 2 degrees by the year 2060. what will or would that, that will look like the sun suggesting this report is pretty clear that we're already seeing extreme rain, extreme heat intensifying. and that's just a one degrees c above pre industrial. so it to decrease the o. a higher, more warm welton, that is going to intensify these extremes even more. and as a b, as already been shown in your report stated in your repo
reading the u. k. we have richard allen, professor of climate science at the university of reading ad, one of the author of the i p. c. c. report. in melbourne. we have granted laskey and associate professor at the national institute for global health at the university of melbourne and the author of climate health and courage. and in london, tom book, chairman of e 3, g, the generation environmentalism thing. thank everyone. welcome to you all. thanks for joining us here on inside story. i'd...
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Aug 9, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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the professor of climate science at the university of reading and a contributor to the report. ay to the legacy of the 2012 games? flan attributed in any way to the legacy of the 2012 games?— of the 2012 games? can i correct ou, the of the 2012 games? can i correct you. the legacy _ of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project - of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project is - of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project is in - you, the legacy project is in stratford, on the queen elizabeth olympic park. i am at home at the moment in berkshire. speaking about legacy, a lot of it was contributed to from the very first plan. so london was fixated at the very beginning on legacy and so the plan that was put in for the bed in 2005 had legacy at his heart. a huge investment for a country and we felt investment for a country and we felt in this country, it was really important to benefit from that over the long term. important to benefit from that over the long term-— important to benefit from that over the long term. what did you have in our mind
the professor of climate science at the university of reading and a contributor to the report. ay to the legacy of the 2012 games? flan attributed in any way to the legacy of the 2012 games?— of the 2012 games? can i correct ou, the of the 2012 games? can i correct you. the legacy _ of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project - of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project is - of the 2012 games? can i correct you, the legacy project is in - you, the legacy project is...
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Aug 19, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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joining me is professor thomas from the university of reading who has been excavating this site. ne of the most important trading arteries in anglo—saxon england. if you gained control of the thames and the thames estuary, that was a real prize. that basically gave you a route way into the wider world, trade connections with the continent and the centre of the political actions in europe, you know, the frankish kingdom, so, it was a very contested political border. the fact is that queen cynethryth was a player, she was a political animal? absolutely, she was a very powerful woman in her own right. she's the only queen to have currency minted in her own name, in her own image. she's addressed in equal terms with her husband, king 0ffa, in diplomatic terms with the continent, with charlemagne. he addresses letters jointly to 0ffa and cynethryth. she's a major player. looking all around, there are plenty of trenches, but you really have only scratched the surface so far, haven't you? that's right, we've excavated a series of small trenches to gain an impression of what's here. what
joining me is professor thomas from the university of reading who has been excavating this site. ne of the most important trading arteries in anglo—saxon england. if you gained control of the thames and the thames estuary, that was a real prize. that basically gave you a route way into the wider world, trade connections with the continent and the centre of the political actions in europe, you know, the frankish kingdom, so, it was a very contested political border. the fact is that queen...
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Aug 19, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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joining me in professorfrom the university of reading who is excavating the site.ams was a really important strategic frontier - come here? there tams was a really important strategic frontier between | important strategic frontier between the kingdoms of mercy and love sex and it was also one of the most important trading arteries in anglo—saxon england so if you gain control of the times and the estuary, that was a real prize. that gave you basically a way into the wider world and connection and trade connections with the continent and the centre of political action in europe so it's a very contested political border.— europe so it's a very contested political border. and the fact that she was a player _ political border. and the fact that she was a player and _ political border. and the fact that she was a player and a _ political border. and the fact that she was a player and a political i she was a player and a political animal? ~ , , ,, .,, ., , animal? absolutely. she was a very -owerful animal? absolutely. she was a very powerful woman — animal? absolutely.
joining me in professorfrom the university of reading who is excavating the site.ams was a really important strategic frontier - come here? there tams was a really important strategic frontier between | important strategic frontier between the kingdoms of mercy and love sex and it was also one of the most important trading arteries in anglo—saxon england so if you gain control of the times and the estuary, that was a real prize. that gave you basically a way into the wider world and...
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Aug 16, 2021
08/21
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 59
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the university of michigan reading was the weakest since the drop we saw last april and before that,anything this week since the great -- this weak since the great recession. and it was weak across the board. we did see a slip between democrat leaning and republican leaning responses but overall, a very negative response to the onset of the delta variant. i think if you look at the covid case numbers, then it does give you cause for concern rate if you go back a couple of weeks where cases -- and you look at the trajectory for hospitalizations and icu admissions, it is a much worse trajectory than the same time last autumn. francine: is that mainly a problem for emerging markets or does that change your view on what the u.s. or u.k. could do and the other parts of europe? sarah: well, the worry has been over emerging markets. we have seen some really terrible readings and across cases like thailand, we are still seeing a negative impact on activity with the gdp data coming out. and case numbers still very bad there. on the other hand, i think if we look at countries like malaysia whi
the university of michigan reading was the weakest since the drop we saw last april and before that,anything this week since the great -- this weak since the great recession. and it was weak across the board. we did see a slip between democrat leaning and republican leaning responses but overall, a very negative response to the onset of the delta variant. i think if you look at the covid case numbers, then it does give you cause for concern rate if you go back a couple of weeks where cases --...
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Aug 22, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN3
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eye 19
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nations was born in san francisco and by then however, dreams of the world may tranquil, universal law has melted into the culvert of war read and today we know what churchill, the nations are here to stay. nations supranational entities, the prime movers of history in the united states which churchill loved as much as he loved his american mother, is more indispensable than ever. here's one example. with churchill and at florida, they had no tvs but the planet that is covered with water, the oceans the great global common, will be placed in kept orderly by the united states navy or it must be orderly. were 75 years on from landed churchill's urging here, the united states unfurl the flag of world leadership. seventy-five years later, our nation is wiser than it once was but the limits of its strength. the united states is experiencing part of morning on the road from fulton and churchill's appearance there to hear. hard learning began four years after churchill spoke here and when president truman and independence, missouri took that nation into war in korea. hard learning career and trend continued in vietnam and it contin
nations was born in san francisco and by then however, dreams of the world may tranquil, universal law has melted into the culvert of war read and today we know what churchill, the nations are here to stay. nations supranational entities, the prime movers of history in the united states which churchill loved as much as he loved his american mother, is more indispensable than ever. here's one example. with churchill and at florida, they had no tvs but the planet that is covered with water, the...
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Aug 23, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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eye 23
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have you read the report from the university of ghent in belgium that went forensically through lists who have been killed — civilians who have been killed in the fighting and it tigray? they have come up with 2,562 civilians who died in 232 incidents, which the university of ghent researchers are calling massacres in tigray, over the last several months. have you read that report and what have you done about it? we take all such allegations, all such reports seriously, and we look into it. we conduct investigations, we are committed to ensuring accountability. the government of ethiopia does not condone any such violations and, as we have tried to communicate to the public previously, we have conducted several investigations. there are additional investigations that are under way — both with the civilian and military tracks — and whenever we identify perpetrators, to the extent we find these kinds of reports credible, we make sure that we take major steps to accountability. amnesty international have released a report this month, again using more than 60 testimonies from eyewitnesses
have you read the report from the university of ghent in belgium that went forensically through lists who have been killed — civilians who have been killed in the fighting and it tigray? they have come up with 2,562 civilians who died in 232 incidents, which the university of ghent researchers are calling massacres in tigray, over the last several months. have you read that report and what have you done about it? we take all such allegations, all such reports seriously, and we look into it....
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Aug 6, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN2
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eye 22
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of malcolm x. i think i spent it. i'll read the power of -- now. >> you grew up in oklahoma, played for baylor and university of michigan and went on to the nba and worldwide, is basketball in china as it is here in the states? >> first i had to say shot out for the championship this year. >> your former teams are in thes playoffs. >> yes, a lot of them. i just check in with former teammates. >> were you able to get your teammates to read books as well with you? >> not necessarily with me and asking me for recommendations and that's where it starts. >> how many books a year do you read? >> club is 15, me personally depending on g my mood, another0 or 35 to 40. if i'm overseas, i knocked out close to 50 books. >> are you able to access physical books or do you read online? >> all of the above.li some i just do audiobooks but not if i can go to stores and order them and get a physical copy but as you can see, i like books. i love physical books. >> the founder of the bookclub. thank you for your time on book tv. ♪♪ >> c-span is your unfiltered view of government funded by these television companies and more including comc
of malcolm x. i think i spent it. i'll read the power of -- now. >> you grew up in oklahoma, played for baylor and university of michigan and went on to the nba and worldwide, is basketball in china as it is here in the states? >> first i had to say shot out for the championship this year. >> your former teams are in thes playoffs. >> yes, a lot of them. i just check in with former teammates. >> were you able to get your teammates to read books as well with you?...
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and probably because of that you missed on reading some of the books that perhaps people off your age had to read. i know that you opened more universities than any other president in brazil despite having no formal education. my last question to you is this by the age of 75. have you had a chance to read all the book that you had to pass on when you were working kid or no problem? the problem is that i began to work when i was 11 years old. there was no time to read it always for a long time. i felt frustrated because i wanted to go to university and become an economist or forget to quote on my choke that i'd like to be an economist because the economists to know a lot when they're in the opposition. whether in government, no very little. i say this to economists because i'd like to have a better education with that. i learned a lot my view up in the mood and i became what i am through my struggles in life. up in the week with an important if i learned a lot at the gates of the plants where i worked, one of the 5 am midnight at 1 am at noon 2 pm, but what i learned a lot traveling all over brazil by you do, i believe nobody knows my cou
and probably because of that you missed on reading some of the books that perhaps people off your age had to read. i know that you opened more universities than any other president in brazil despite having no formal education. my last question to you is this by the age of 75. have you had a chance to read all the book that you had to pass on when you were working kid or no problem? the problem is that i began to work when i was 11 years old. there was no time to read it always for a long time....
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Aug 13, 2021
08/21
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BLOOMBERG
tv
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again, they university of michigan august consumer sentiment preliminary read, 70.2, the lowest since 2011. on the back of that data, we are seen yields moving lower around session lows on the u.s.-tenure in session though on the equity market as well. we are still at a record on the s&p 500. we discuss whether the gains will continue with sarah hunt of alpine woods. that is coming up next. this is bloomberg. ♪ line -- kailey: live from new york, i am kailey leinz with guy johnson. this is bloomberg markets. disney surprise investor with better provident subscriber gains. airbnb's outlook was not a sunny. abigail doolittle is looking at the results pick there are a lot of sides to the reopening narrative. abigail: there certainly is. there is a hedge for both sides. disney shares had been more higher, up more than 4%, not bad right now, up more than 3%. strong quarters there, streaming subscribers of 116 million, beating estimates, but also the parks, the first profitable quarter going back to march, 2020. you had the stay-at-home piece, then the reopening peak with the -- part with t
again, they university of michigan august consumer sentiment preliminary read, 70.2, the lowest since 2011. on the back of that data, we are seen yields moving lower around session lows on the u.s.-tenure in session though on the equity market as well. we are still at a record on the s&p 500. we discuss whether the gains will continue with sarah hunt of alpine woods. that is coming up next. this is bloomberg. ♪ line -- kailey: live from new york, i am kailey leinz with guy johnson. this...
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Aug 5, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN3
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some of the great universities were founded upon biblical principle. this one is harvard. 1636. you can read some of the declarations at the time. >> as cary was talking, the establishment of harvard and yale, they were universities developed to produce pastors and ministers, to evangelize. this book here comes from cotton mathers, known as mag nelia kristy americana. we have it opened to the story of why harvard was established. so he is talking about that. the broadside is a graduation broadside from 1748, but it is in latin. obviously latin, hebrew, greek which cary was talking about, the valedictorian, even today, give the speech in latin. this is why that is in latin dialect as well. this is a couple hundred years old. it is newspaper. not with cotton rag paper. it was important to whoever the owner was at the time, and then the collector who now has this has preserved it and allowed us to use it as an exhibition artifact to tell the story. the other things you may want to peek at, these small books here, it is a long forgotten textbook known as new england primer. this is an actual tex
some of the great universities were founded upon biblical principle. this one is harvard. 1636. you can read some of the declarations at the time. >> as cary was talking, the establishment of harvard and yale, they were universities developed to produce pastors and ministers, to evangelize. this book here comes from cotton mathers, known as mag nelia kristy americana. we have it opened to the story of why harvard was established. so he is talking about that. the broadside is a graduation...
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Aug 25, 2021
08/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 65
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joining me now is dr simon clarke, associate professor in cellular microbiology at the university of reading�*s really not that much of a surprise. showing so it's really not that much of a surprise-— showing so it's really not that much of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments _ of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments are _ of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments are making i of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally | add to the arguments are making that boosterjabs are important and where does it take us on that topic? it does it take us on that topic? ft tells us they will have a place. there is a lot to be discussed about who gets what and when they get it. they get the full dose, have a dose? do we really need to give it to only the very elderly? i�*ve seen some suggestion that in israel they might be giving it to people as low as 30 or offering it, buti be giving it to people as low as 30 or offering it, but i have not followed that up was that there is a lot to be discussed around the but i think we�*ll see vaccine booster is in some fo
joining me now is dr simon clarke, associate professor in cellular microbiology at the university of reading�*s really not that much of a surprise. showing so it's really not that much of a surprise-— showing so it's really not that much of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments _ of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments are _ of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally add to the arguments are making i of a surprise. doesn't fundamentally | add to the arguments...
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55
Aug 9, 2021
08/21
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BBCNEWS
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i�*m joined now by ella gilbert, a climate scientist at university of reading. good morning. he headlines of the wildfires and flooding and heat waves that are happening all over the world, to get a taste of what it could be like. it is only going to get worse if we don�*t start mitigating our own impact now, preferably yesterday, but now it is also good. the consequences _ but now it is also good. the consequences of _ but now it is also good. the consequences of climate change are happening faster than we thought, aren�*t they? happening faster than we thought, aren't they?— aren't they? some ways, yes. the heat dome — aren't they? some ways, yes. the heat dome happened _ aren't they? some ways, yes. the heat dome happened a _ aren't they? some ways, yes. the heat dome happened a few- aren't they? some ways, yes. the | heat dome happened a few months aren't they? some ways, yes. the - heat dome happened a few months ago, record shattering. we are seeing changes in our climate system that are unexpected. ultimately, the storyline as as we expected, we have known that extreme
i�*m joined now by ella gilbert, a climate scientist at university of reading. good morning. he headlines of the wildfires and flooding and heat waves that are happening all over the world, to get a taste of what it could be like. it is only going to get worse if we don�*t start mitigating our own impact now, preferably yesterday, but now it is also good. the consequences _ but now it is also good. the consequences of _ but now it is also good. the consequences of climate change are...
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26
Aug 6, 2021
08/21
by
CSPAN2
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eye 26
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of them -- is another one. i think that's been it. i will read power of the moment. >> host: mr. udoh growth in oklahoma and played for baylor in the university michigan and went on to the nba and worldwide basketball. it's basketball is big in china that is the united states? >> guest: i think it's probably bigger. they really enjoy basketball but i have to say they won the national championship this year. last week i went there to support my former teammates and to check-in. >> host: were you able to get your teammates to read books as well with you? >> guest: not necessarily with me but some would start asking me for book recommendations. once i get them there it's up to them. >> host: how many books a year do you read? >> guest: the book club is 15 and me personally depending on my mood i had 35 to 40. if i'm overseas i'm knocking out more books. >> host: are you b able to access physical books are the read them on line? >> in some countries i use audio books and others i can go to stores or order them and get a copy. as you can see i like books. i love hardcover books. >> host: ekpe udoh donder of ekpe's book club @ekpe udoh in kc like t
of them -- is another one. i think that's been it. i will read power of the moment. >> host: mr. udoh growth in oklahoma and played for baylor in the university michigan and went on to the nba and worldwide basketball. it's basketball is big in china that is the united states? >> guest: i think it's probably bigger. they really enjoy basketball but i have to say they won the national championship this year. last week i went there to support my former teammates and to check-in....
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Aug 1, 2021
08/21
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CSPAN3
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of malcolm x is another one. what else. i think that may be it. i will read the power of moment. >> host: mr. udoh grew up in oklahoma and played for baylor and university of michigan and went to the nba and worldwide basketball. his basketball as big in china as it is here in the states? >> guest: i mean,, probably bigger. they really enjoy their basketball. but as far as i have to say, shout out there on the national championship. >> host: and a little of your former teams are in the playoffs here. >> guest: yes, a lot of them. i went out to support some of my former teammates, just checking in with them to support them. >> host: were you able to get your teammates to read books as well with you? >> guest: not necessarily with me, but they would start asking me for book recommendations, and that's where it starts. it's uphill from then. >> host: how many books a year do you read? >> guest: bookclub is 15. me personally, depending on my mood, i could add another 20 to that. thirty-five to 40. if i'm overseas, i will knock things out, close to 50 books. >> host: are you able to access physical books or do you read them online? >> guest: all of the above
of malcolm x is another one. what else. i think that may be it. i will read the power of moment. >> host: mr. udoh grew up in oklahoma and played for baylor and university of michigan and went to the nba and worldwide basketball. his basketball as big in china as it is here in the states? >> guest: i mean,, probably bigger. they really enjoy their basketball. but as far as i have to say, shout out there on the national championship. >> host: and a little of your former teams...
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89
Aug 25, 2021
08/21
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 89
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joining me now is dr alexander edwards, associate professor in biomedical technology at the university of readingthis is about protection from infection. ithink of course this is about protection from infection. i think i wouldn't worry so much because i wouldn't expect it to carry on declining quite as quickly. you would expect after a vaccine that it would decline fastest at the beginning but absolutely we need to be looking at this and following this. that absolutely we need to be looking at this and following this.— this and following this. that is interesting — this and following this. that is interesting how _ this and following this. that is interesting how you _ this and following this. that is interesting how you cite - this and following this. that is interesting how you cite the i interesting how you cite the immunity can fire up if something, if the body encounters something so what does that say then about if somebody does come across an infection, orwe somebody does come across an infection, or we worrying too much about the level of antibodies at this point?— about the level of ant
joining me now is dr alexander edwards, associate professor in biomedical technology at the university of readingthis is about protection from infection. ithink of course this is about protection from infection. i think i wouldn't worry so much because i wouldn't expect it to carry on declining quite as quickly. you would expect after a vaccine that it would decline fastest at the beginning but absolutely we need to be looking at this and following this. that absolutely we need to be looking at...
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Aug 16, 2021
08/21
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CNBC
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growing consensus in the fed, but is the recovery losing momentum take the university of michigan's consumer sentiment index. the reading posted one of the biggest falls on record, lowest record since 2011. worse than during the pandemic this morning, the new york manufacturing index, the empire state, posted its third biggest monthly drop on record my next guest says the fed is playing a dangerous game with its hawkish turn when the economic data reflects a scarred and fragile consumer joining me is chief market strategist for jeffreys. i like having you on because it feels like a contrarian voice. wouldn't you agree you must be pushback people can say, how can you possibly think the economy isn't super strong right now >> well, i mean, i'm looking at that survey like everybody else did, and the chief economist for the university of michigan's center for consumer -- that does the survey, center for the consumer, he wrote a really bleak, you know, assessment of what we saw in that survey you know, i'm just taking it for what it is i'm watching the cpi data last week, as well. you have a 0.3 on the core after a 0.9, 0.7,
growing consensus in the fed, but is the recovery losing momentum take the university of michigan's consumer sentiment index. the reading posted one of the biggest falls on record, lowest record since 2011. worse than during the pandemic this morning, the new york manufacturing index, the empire state, posted its third biggest monthly drop on record my next guest says the fed is playing a dangerous game with its hawkish turn when the economic data reflects a scarred and fragile consumer joining...
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Aug 26, 2021
08/21
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seen this before, to politicize something of great importance to the standing of college universities and undermines this read the indication is that a person should receive tenure, the greatest academic honor in a way, the university can offer its professors in there to receive that honor for political reasons freighted for what they have done to advance in ideology. this the case that clearly signals that and i don't know her qualifications be other important offensive qualifications that i would actually let the extremely notable establishments going to criticize it, the 1619 project to have the last word but beyond that i don't know who qualifies or not. and to apply that one should or anyone, or anybody else who are someone on the right who is conservative should receive tenure because of ideological whitespace in thehe moment of a time in which they are debating, that strikes me as not only absurd but insulting for the whole academic project which broadly speaking here for hundreds of thousands of years trying to develop in terms of education and enlightenment. i'm just befuddled by the whole thing pret
seen this before, to politicize something of great importance to the standing of college universities and undermines this read the indication is that a person should receive tenure, the greatest academic honor in a way, the university can offer its professors in there to receive that honor for political reasons freighted for what they have done to advance in ideology. this the case that clearly signals that and i don't know her qualifications be other important offensive qualifications that i...
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Aug 4, 2021
08/21
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measures and detectors in outer space to try to unravel the secret of the universe itself in other words the god equation that will allow us to read the mind of god. i first heard about this theory when i was 8-years-old. when i was 8-years-old, somethingg happened that changed my life completely. when i was 8-years-old everyone was talking about the fact that a great scientist had just died, but on the evening news all we published was a picture of his desk and on the desk was an unfinished book and the caption said the greatest scientist of our time could not finish this book. i was mesmerized and said to myself what could be so hard that he couldn't finish it, could we ask his mother, i mean, it's a homework problem, right. i was consumed with trying to find out t who was this man and what was so hard that he couldn't finish it. i found out that his name was albert einstein and what he couldn't finish was the theory of everything that would allow him in his own words too, quote, read the mind of god. i decided when i was around 17 to be part of this great revolution so i asked my mom one day do i have your permission to build a
measures and detectors in outer space to try to unravel the secret of the universe itself in other words the god equation that will allow us to read the mind of god. i first heard about this theory when i was 8-years-old. when i was 8-years-old, somethingg happened that changed my life completely. when i was 8-years-old everyone was talking about the fact that a great scientist had just died, but on the evening news all we published was a picture of his desk and on the desk was an unfinished...
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Aug 6, 2021
08/21
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and, you know, many know this, some of the great universities had it upon a biblical principle, under dirty. and this one is harvard. and and 16 36, you can read some of their declarations at the time. >> as carey was talking, the establishment of harvard and yale they're actually universities that would often produce pastures are ministers to evangelize. and this book right here it comes from cotton and others. it's known as the magnolia christy america. and we have it opened up to this oh page in the book to the development and story of why harvard was established. so, he is talking about that. and the broadside they carry pointed out as well as he graduated was from the 16 hundreds. 1748, i apologize. and it is in line. one of the things that is interesting is that latin, hebrew, greek which carrie was talking about, you valedictorian when the graduated from harvard even today, they give their valedictorian speech in london. this is why that broadside was in the land dialect as well. i mean, this is a couple of hundred years, old its newspaper it is not worth the cotton rag paper. it is important to whoever the owner was at the time, and th
and, you know, many know this, some of the great universities had it upon a biblical principle, under dirty. and this one is harvard. and and 16 36, you can read some of their declarations at the time. >> as carey was talking, the establishment of harvard and yale they're actually universities that would often produce pastures are ministers to evangelize. and this book right here it comes from cotton and others. it's known as the magnolia christy america. and we have it opened up to this...
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Aug 24, 2021
08/21
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john j found it in lincoln's desk codrawer and paid a graduate of brown university, that's read it there gave it the o title meditation on the divine will but it's a good time. lincoln's thinking out loud what is the will of god in the civil war? >> you and i are not reading many of these fragments and notes. that's up to the reader and you especially do that in the appendix. and you have a co-author of this book. i hope you get in royalties because in the appendix, he wrote pages 166 to 279 . they get a little context to each one. and you have read through them and ourselves be interactive and try to understand the question, to conceptualize what weare reading of lincoln because there are a lot of them there . and you only go through 12, 13 in the main part of the book but it asks us to be interactive and analyze. it's so very. the items there. you know, he goes over the nature of labor. and there it is. however he may be with his farewell to his troops rivals it's late. this is an autographed request and it's just fabulous. and of course my favorite fragment is when you can't find itan
john j found it in lincoln's desk codrawer and paid a graduate of brown university, that's read it there gave it the o title meditation on the divine will but it's a good time. lincoln's thinking out loud what is the will of god in the civil war? >> you and i are not reading many of these fragments and notes. that's up to the reader and you especially do that in the appendix. and you have a co-author of this book. i hope you get in royalties because in the appendix, he wrote pages 166 to...
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it them, it's our, our way of organizing then a lot to memory in 20 anticipation that we read the, the full of happening of the universe as a single sequence of things happening. that's a mistake, but there is no there is no unique when i say this some doesn't move. right. so we look at school, i mean to the motion that we see the sun going up and down up and down every day. and then we're kids. we go to school and the teacher or father mother, tell us, you know, it's an illusion. the son doesn't move. does that mean that the, some in the sky ball blocks and he's not going to move any sound, keep going around is, this is not the sun has got more is just more complicated story. i want to also use the example of music. if i'm a right, it's a thing that doesn't really exist, but only does because it is happening in time, right? like instruments play together and rhythm or a pulse that brings time alive. and we only feel something when music changes in time. and on changing node becomes a drone and stops having meaning, like, you know, my refrigerator making a noise. so if an elementary physics level time doesn't matter or
it them, it's our, our way of organizing then a lot to memory in 20 anticipation that we read the, the full of happening of the universe as a single sequence of things happening. that's a mistake, but there is no there is no unique when i say this some doesn't move. right. so we look at school, i mean to the motion that we see the sun going up and down up and down every day. and then we're kids. we go to school and the teacher or father mother, tell us, you know, it's an illusion. the son...
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it's our way of organizing, then a lot to memory in 2017 to be shown that we read the, the fool of hopping of the universe, a single sequence of things happening. that's a mistake. but there's no there's no uni when i say the sum doesn't move right. we live at school, i mean to the motion. we see the sun going up and down up and down every day. and then we're kids. we go to school and the teacher or father mother, tell us, you know, it's an illusion. the son doesn't move. does that help mean that the some in the sky ball blocks and he's not going to move any sound, keep going around is, this is not the sun has got more is just more complicated story. i want to also use the example of music. if i'm a right, it's a thing that doesn't really exist, but only does because it is happening in time, right? like instruments play together in a rhythm or a pulse that brinks time alive. and we only feel something when music changes in time. and on changing node becomes a drone and stops having meaning, like, you know, my refrigerator making a noise. so if an elementary physics level time doesn't matter or doesn't exi
it's our way of organizing, then a lot to memory in 2017 to be shown that we read the, the fool of hopping of the universe, a single sequence of things happening. that's a mistake. but there's no there's no uni when i say the sum doesn't move right. we live at school, i mean to the motion. we see the sun going up and down up and down every day. and then we're kids. we go to school and the teacher or father mother, tell us, you know, it's an illusion. the son doesn't move. does that help mean...