36
36
Jul 3, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
between 1900 and 1915, there was brown, university of chicago, wheaton college, university of washington, johns hopkins, ohio state, university of pennsylvania, nyu, annapolis, west point, wisconsin, michigan, kansas, the list rolls on. between 1900 and 1960, the olmsted firm worked on 180 campuses. as the work poured in, they needed help. talented young men joined the firm. elliot was responsible for the boston regional parks system, later referred to as the emerald necklace. olmsted's oldest son, john charles, and enter the firm by then. the columbian exposition of chicago in 1893, in part inspired by the 1889 exposition in parish, was planned and designed by architects, engineers, boosters from chicago as well as the olmsted firm. largely, it was the vision of daniel burnham and it set in motion the city beautiful movement in american city planning and design. here is the lagoon, rooted islands and pavilions olmsted and his crew produced. on the right, you see an island with a japanese tea house that had a profound influence on frank lloyd wright and others. this was astonishing to pe
between 1900 and 1915, there was brown, university of chicago, wheaton college, university of washington, johns hopkins, ohio state, university of pennsylvania, nyu, annapolis, west point, wisconsin, michigan, kansas, the list rolls on. between 1900 and 1960, the olmsted firm worked on 180 campuses. as the work poured in, they needed help. talented young men joined the firm. elliot was responsible for the boston regional parks system, later referred to as the emerald necklace. olmsted's oldest...
33
33
Jul 21, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
university of washington of my home state told my office the amount of emergency aid requests they are receiving is 20 times higher than what it was during the pandemic. a study from the universe of north carolina about first-year students reported significant higher levels of depression and anxiety in the wake of the pandemic. what's more, two and five students report experiencing food insecurity, almost have to report experiencing housing insecurity and one in six report experiencing homelessness. we know this pain is not been felt equally. his been hardest other minority serving institutions been hardest in students of color, feelings with no income, students with disabilities, lb gt cute students, veterans and first-generation college students twice important congress take action and have more work to do we have been able to make student loan forgiveness, tax rate and provide more than $76 billion in higher education emergency relief fund including nearly $40 billion we pass as part of the american rescue plan. i have heard from so many people back in my state what a lifeline those
university of washington of my home state told my office the amount of emergency aid requests they are receiving is 20 times higher than what it was during the pandemic. a study from the universe of north carolina about first-year students reported significant higher levels of depression and anxiety in the wake of the pandemic. what's more, two and five students report experiencing food insecurity, almost have to report experiencing housing insecurity and one in six report experiencing...
52
52
Jul 3, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
and, at the same time he has also brought on board -- he was also brought on board by the university of washington, which is separate from the city. they hired the firm to design a plan for the campus. which was located on a hill in the northeast part of the city. you can see this green arrow here. quite some distance from downtown. campus itself had been cut over once from the lumber industry. but then had sort of been allowed to turn into a scrub area. there was second growth timber, lots of underbrush. the university had just recently moved there in the 1890's. and had just developed a small area at the north end which is known as the fuller oval. that is this oval with the original university buildings and dark black. the university wanted to develop down the hill. this is railroad tracks that goes around the campus. they want to develop that. there is a lot of land that needs to be graded. it is hard land to grade. luckily, the city of seattle decides to host in 1909. they located it at the university of washington campus. therefore, the university, i am sorry, the exposition company hires th
and, at the same time he has also brought on board -- he was also brought on board by the university of washington, which is separate from the city. they hired the firm to design a plan for the campus. which was located on a hill in the northeast part of the city. you can see this green arrow here. quite some distance from downtown. campus itself had been cut over once from the lumber industry. but then had sort of been allowed to turn into a scrub area. there was second growth timber, lots of...
16
16
Jul 31, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
guests. joining us from seattle is crystal raymonds, a climate adaptation specialist at the university of washington in sydney, mark deason dawson honory, associate professor of environmental sciences at the university of new south wales . and in so, paolo prithee, on metro d, a senior forest campaigner and greenpeace, brazil one. welcome to all 3 of you know, crystal, raven, you're a fire. a college is given the that the number of wild, far as receiving world wide. and i've just outlines some of them looking at the global picture. would you say this is normal? well, i think, you know, we're definitely seeing that warmer temperatures dryer summers associated with climate change are speeding up the wildfires that we have globally. and we're seeing a larger area burned by wildfires and more frequent large fires in many places around the world. and, but we also know crystal raymonds that wildfires can be a very natural and normal events. how does that fit in? i think that's what we're seeing because it's difficult for here while towards a common i'm seeing the scale of the wildfires in place that we wo
guests. joining us from seattle is crystal raymonds, a climate adaptation specialist at the university of washington in sydney, mark deason dawson honory, associate professor of environmental sciences at the university of new south wales . and in so, paolo prithee, on metro d, a senior forest campaigner and greenpeace, brazil one. welcome to all 3 of you know, crystal, raven, you're a fire. a college is given the that the number of wild, far as receiving world wide. and i've just outlines some...
18
18
Jul 15, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
let's bring in doctor alley mocked at his chief strategy officer, population health at the university of washington to join us from seattle in washington. dr. marks out thanks your time. so listen, young people in the us. i clearly still reluctant to get the vaccine. what do you think is causing this hesitancy within this age group? and how bad is it? it's bad because there are so many, almost out of there and by empty back to people and there are all the social media . and i like the efforts that you listed before getting out on social media. and for me, they younger generation to go and get the vaccine. that's what the 2nd one young generation by nature they delayed the wing preventative measures when it comes to health and we need that as well. yeah, and experts say the delta variant is most active within the 18 to 25 year old age group. so what impact is this hesitancy likely to have them on the broader pandemic in the us? so that naked, so it's more likely to impact them. second, more likely to be up and about, you know, bar restaurants and then more likely to be infected. and right now, do yo
let's bring in doctor alley mocked at his chief strategy officer, population health at the university of washington to join us from seattle in washington. dr. marks out thanks your time. so listen, young people in the us. i clearly still reluctant to get the vaccine. what do you think is causing this hesitancy within this age group? and how bad is it? it's bad because there are so many, almost out of there and by empty back to people and there are all the social media . and i like the efforts...
24
24
Jul 21, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
nearly 10, 000, and university of washington has awarded aid to over 21,000 students. there are countless stories from heritage universities, and other schools and those are just the ones in my state. millions more from across the country about what this aid is meant to students. how it helped them for tuition, books, food, housing, childcare, technology for remote learning. whatever it was they needed to continue their education. i'm pleased we have a student with us today, anthony harris, from baldwin wallace university in ohio to share his own story. anthony, thank you so much for being here. i hope we all take an important lesson away from this about the difference it makes when someone gives a helping hand during tough times, students like anthony, and students like those i just shared our in many ways our future, and the stories they attend our foundational to local economies nationwide. their success is critical to the success of our country and our communities, but if we truly want to help students succeed, we have to do more than just a return to nor
nearly 10, 000, and university of washington has awarded aid to over 21,000 students. there are countless stories from heritage universities, and other schools and those are just the ones in my state. millions more from across the country about what this aid is meant to students. how it helped them for tuition, books, food, housing, childcare, technology for remote learning. whatever it was they needed to continue their education. i'm pleased we have a student with us today, anthony harris,...
43
43
Jul 19, 2021
07/21
by
KTVU
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
past the age of 110 is becoming more and more likely this, according to researchers at the university of washington, they say there is a 68% probability that someone will reach 120. seven by the year 2100 and a 13% probability that someone reaches the age of 130 years old. the study credits advancements in medicine and aging biology for increasing people's potential lifespans a long time this belong time sports wrap is coming up at 11 30 here is looked at with joe and jason are working on the giants opened the second half of the season with one glaring weakness, whil hits his first bg league homer to help the indian beat the eggs and former cowbird colin morikawa makes history at the british open what he says the secret was to winning his second major championship and it's all coming up at 11 30 on sports wrap. yes, it is, but first after the break chaos in vision in d. c after a triple shooting outside of the national's outside of the national's ballpark beliefs are responding [hippo groans melodically] [iguana belts major 3rd] [gator reverb] [splash] [singing indri sings] [elephant trumpets] [buf
past the age of 110 is becoming more and more likely this, according to researchers at the university of washington, they say there is a 68% probability that someone will reach 120. seven by the year 2100 and a 13% probability that someone reaches the age of 130 years old. the study credits advancements in medicine and aging biology for increasing people's potential lifespans a long time this belong time sports wrap is coming up at 11 30 here is looked at with joe and jason are working on the...
76
76
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
she received her bachelor's degree in historic preservation from the university of washington in fredericksburg. she enjoys drinking craft beer and helping animals of all kinds. we welcome vanessa as she present american revolutionary war from the bottom up. southern theater misconceptions. >> thank you so much. thank you for having me today. i am probably going to be talking to you a little bit about the southern theater and some misconceptions that go along with it. so let me first go over what we consider the southern theater. it seems straightforward enough and it pretty much is. the southern theater includes military engagements that took place in the southern colonies. in the previous presentation, somebody asked about kind of the mid-atlantic colonies. what do we consider the middle of the colonies. and virginia is one of those that was discussed. at least for the course of this presentation, i've focused primarily on the carolinas, georgia and florida. there is a lot of substance to dive into just with those. i figured we can talk about the virginias in a different sense at another poin
she received her bachelor's degree in historic preservation from the university of washington in fredericksburg. she enjoys drinking craft beer and helping animals of all kinds. we welcome vanessa as she present american revolutionary war from the bottom up. southern theater misconceptions. >> thank you so much. thank you for having me today. i am probably going to be talking to you a little bit about the southern theater and some misconceptions that go along with it. so let me first go...
74
74
Jul 24, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
international affairs and director of the center for leadership and the media studies at the university of washington. he is also took courses in political science journalism at georgetown university yale university and george mason university. top their friends worth has an excellence in teaching being the 2017 recipient and the virginia outstanding faculty award from the cal state higher education in virginia. before previous presentations of presidents harry truman and lyndon johnson richard nixon and ronald reagan. he's truly a pleasure to introduce one of washington's most distinguished professors. they are stephen fransworth. >> they are has been anyone like johnny carson and there never will be. from 1962 to 1992 more than 5000 episodes over 30 years johnny carson led politics and culture and has curated list are almost dies interesting. offered a nonstop parade of the key personalities of the 60s in and the 70s and 80s and the 90s. they were the leading likes of film television music books and politics and more than a few amazing animals and their trainers introduced the nation to many comedi
international affairs and director of the center for leadership and the media studies at the university of washington. he is also took courses in political science journalism at georgetown university yale university and george mason university. top their friends worth has an excellence in teaching being the 2017 recipient and the virginia outstanding faculty award from the cal state higher education in virginia. before previous presentations of presidents harry truman and lyndon johnson richard...
65
65
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
is a graduate of university of washington and american military university. to close us out welcome michael with general john tomsulain van, battle of brandywine. here in the bioi'm supposed to say go cats because you're a philly fan. as we all know washington capitals are not going anywhere but wizards are washington are playing 76ers so we'll have an nba competition which i think you guys will come out on top of. for those who are watching, i highly recommend michael's german town book which we'll put the link to and brandywine which he's speaking about this afternoon. i appreciate you being here. we'll let you get started. >> when i agreed to do this symposium my book wasn't out yet or else i'd be talking german town today so you will get brandywine not the new book. yes i worked there but when i was hired in 2005 and looked in the files there was really no research filed two books were out. one was not a bad book but it's expensive to find the book. the other is written in the year 2000, written by a local newspaper twrieter and i'll be kind and call the b
is a graduate of university of washington and american military university. to close us out welcome michael with general john tomsulain van, battle of brandywine. here in the bioi'm supposed to say go cats because you're a philly fan. as we all know washington capitals are not going anywhere but wizards are washington are playing 76ers so we'll have an nba competition which i think you guys will come out on top of. for those who are watching, i highly recommend michael's german town book which...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
24
24
Jul 21, 2021
07/21
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
francisco by an immigrant family in wuhan, i am grateful to be in my second year at the university of washington. even after financial aid and scholarships, my family and i are struggling. to pay our debt, my dad was to borrow -- has to borrow money from family members while my mother works at our family restaurant. when i was a youth leader at chinese progressive association, the topic of student debt cancellation and free college for all was part of our ultimate vision with our [inaudible] in our hands. students that struggle are not individual issues but rather intersectional preservations of discrimination. it will eliminate 40 million people from the financial, mental, emotional, and physical stress, especially those of bipoc working class and students of minorities and immigrant communities. please ensure that those people will be one step closer to achieving their dreams. i would like to especially thank the debt collective, s.f. rising students and fellows, claudia, natalie, and president walton to take on student debt cancellation. thank you. >> clerk: thank you for your comments. all r
francisco by an immigrant family in wuhan, i am grateful to be in my second year at the university of washington. even after financial aid and scholarships, my family and i are struggling. to pay our debt, my dad was to borrow -- has to borrow money from family members while my mother works at our family restaurant. when i was a youth leader at chinese progressive association, the topic of student debt cancellation and free college for all was part of our ultimate vision with our [inaudible] in...
133
133
Jul 10, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
vin gupta, a critical care pulmonologist in seattle, also on the faculty of university of washington alth metrics and evaluation. a lot of information coming out. emerging mores how to behave with new information about the delta variant that's hitting a lot of people who have not been vaccinated and it's hitting people in so-called breakthrough cases who have been vaccinated. put it together for us, give us your matrix of concern right now. >> good evening, ali, good to see you. top line, if you're fully vaccinated, with two doses of the vaccine, pfizer or moderna, in the united states, you're protected from the delta variant and severe outcomes like hospitalizations. truly end outcome we want to prevent. two doses is key. talk about the one dose johnson & johnson if you like. but this requiring a third dose is premature. dr. fauci and others pushed back on that appropriately so. cdc got the school thing right, you have to make the decisions bases on local conditions but don't want them to have to enforce the mask mandate. could have recommended indoor masking unless vaccines are full
vin gupta, a critical care pulmonologist in seattle, also on the faculty of university of washington alth metrics and evaluation. a lot of information coming out. emerging mores how to behave with new information about the delta variant that's hitting a lot of people who have not been vaccinated and it's hitting people in so-called breakthrough cases who have been vaccinated. put it together for us, give us your matrix of concern right now. >> good evening, ali, good to see you. top line,...
77
77
Jul 22, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
gupta pulmonologist at the university of washington and tara purcel, and the bloomberg school of publicu, dr. gupta, we are seeing so many more cases now. do you have greater concerns about masking and being more proactive against the spread? >> good afternoon, andrea. good to be here. you know, given the fact that the vaccines, if you're fully vaccinated especially with two doses of the vaccine are so very protective against the delta variant and the emerging threats, i'm not. we need to remain calm and not respond day over day to the rise in cases which is as we see, the rise in cases has decoupled from a rise in hospitalizations and deaths. >> dr. gupta -- with my apologies, we want to just quickly switch back to kevin mccarthy he's being asked what is so wrong about having liz cheney on that commission in january 6th. >> she said no. she just wanted to make it political. >> when we responded back to her she waited ten weeks to say anybody else. i think even your viewers understand what a sham this committee is and how politically driven. for her to pick and choose who can serve on t
gupta pulmonologist at the university of washington and tara purcel, and the bloomberg school of publicu, dr. gupta, we are seeing so many more cases now. do you have greater concerns about masking and being more proactive against the spread? >> good afternoon, andrea. good to be here. you know, given the fact that the vaccines, if you're fully vaccinated especially with two doses of the vaccine are so very protective against the delta variant and the emerging threats, i'm not. we need to...
44
44
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
vin gupta, pulmonologist and assistant professor of health metrics science at the university of washingtons. dr. gupta, let's talk about the big picture here and this is the one study and we do have the delta variant spreading here in the united states. how should people be interpreting what we just heard from raf? >> kasie, good afternoon. what i would say is this is in line with expect eggs and this is what we've been saying from day one. vaccines are keeping you out of the hospital. i'm hearing numbers of 93, 94% real world effectiveness of the pfizer vaccine and the astrazeneca vaccine if you get both dose of astrazeneca. frankly, that's all that should matter, i'll also add the cdc came out recently, kasie, about five days ago with evidence that even if you test positive for coronavirus after you're fully vaccinated and the chances you can transmit the virus to save an unvaccinated child at home is basically zero unless you're in the immunocompromised category, so there are some exceptions to that, and am i at risk of passing on the virus? the chances that you can do that are extremel
vin gupta, pulmonologist and assistant professor of health metrics science at the university of washingtons. dr. gupta, let's talk about the big picture here and this is the one study and we do have the delta variant spreading here in the united states. how should people be interpreting what we just heard from raf? >> kasie, good afternoon. what i would say is this is in line with expect eggs and this is what we've been saying from day one. vaccines are keeping you out of the hospital....
138
138
Jul 17, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 1
he's also of the faculty at the university of washington institute for health metrics and evaluation. notably good doctor gupta finish moderating a seminar at the aspen -- and securing the public's trust. that is why i would like to begin with you, doc. what did you share with the people there. and what did you tell them was your number one concern right now? >> brian, good evening. thank you as always for having me. the main thesis out here is we can diagnose, technique companies, or bad actors out there putting bad information. but how do we actually train armies of future health care professionals? young public health professionals to actually communicate simply and effectively to the people. that has been a big focus at the aspen institute and elsewhere. i'll say, the reason i have to be here, is because academic medical centers and medical schools are not doing. it we have a fundamental imbalance between what the public is demanding, clear, concise, not confusing public health information. and what our trainees in medicine and public health are actually getting in training. they
he's also of the faculty at the university of washington institute for health metrics and evaluation. notably good doctor gupta finish moderating a seminar at the aspen -- and securing the public's trust. that is why i would like to begin with you, doc. what did you share with the people there. and what did you tell them was your number one concern right now? >> brian, good evening. thank you as always for having me. the main thesis out here is we can diagnose, technique companies, or bad...
103
103
Jul 14, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
vin gupta, pulmonologist and assistant professor of health metric sciences at university of washingtong health officials because they're trying to tell teenagers to take care of themselves, where do you go? >> good afternoon, andrea. this is a root cause of a rising problem with people with m.d.s behind their name, scott atlas, jay butter, dr. connelly, donald trump's former white house doctor, they have stopped being doctors. they've turned into politicians in white coats. so we need some way to account for this now. this has been happening now for 19 months. this will continue and there will be people with m.d.s behind their names that are not doctors and not clinically caring for patients and many of these that i mentioned and yet they'll provide shelter for politics. so we need national boards to actually certify these physicians to practice medicine and take away licenses and letters of censure and accountability and none of the docs i mentioned have the respect of their peers and that's the big currency here. if you're in medicine and healthcare, you want to have the respect of y
vin gupta, pulmonologist and assistant professor of health metric sciences at university of washingtong health officials because they're trying to tell teenagers to take care of themselves, where do you go? >> good afternoon, andrea. this is a root cause of a rising problem with people with m.d.s behind their name, scott atlas, jay butter, dr. connelly, donald trump's former white house doctor, they have stopped being doctors. they've turned into politicians in white coats. so we need...
110
110
Jul 9, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 110
favorite 0
quote 0
me now and an adjunct professor at the university of british columbia also with me, emily carrington, a professor of marine biology at the university of washingtonld "the washington post" that this is the first time you've ever seen anything with this magnitude of mortality. tell us what you saw. >> yeah, it actually started with a smell. i went down to the beach to cool off because it was incredibly hot and it just smelled like cooking shellfish, sort of rotten putrid cooking shellfish smell and that triggered alarms for me and went and looked closer. you can see in these images mussels during low tide should be closed. they should be completely closed and holding water in to withstand the high temperatures and these had just all of them that i was looking at had died and you're seeing at the top of these rocks all of the mussels that were there died because -- >> were you just completely shocked? looking at these pictures, i can't believe what i'm seeing? >> yeah, i had been worried about the high temperatures because of the coincidence with the low tides but hadn't expected anything like this. these animals do experience high temperatures reg
me now and an adjunct professor at the university of british columbia also with me, emily carrington, a professor of marine biology at the university of washingtonld "the washington post" that this is the first time you've ever seen anything with this magnitude of mortality. tell us what you saw. >> yeah, it actually started with a smell. i went down to the beach to cool off because it was incredibly hot and it just smelled like cooking shellfish, sort of rotten putrid cooking...
77
77
Jul 27, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
>> chuck, i can say from university of washington forecast, we expect worst case scenario if that occurs, fully vaccinated rates less than 60%, especially with cold, dry air. with the delta variant, we are expecting upwards of a thousand deaths a day. that's potentially the peak daily death toll come end of october. that's a possibility. i am optimistic that we can reach people that are currently not vaccinated. we need to do it in a nonjudgmental way, direct engagement. and last, authentic messengers. as a member of the military, we need people former uniformed service members talking to members of the military, not op-eds saying the military needs to mandate the vaccine wholesale, we need to build trust. if we think we can mandate our way out of way out of this, we're going to one day down the road have a reckoning because we didn't build trust. we need to build trust now. >> well, i fear that the reckoning is here. this is the reckoning. the trust, the campaign of mistrust that was waged against those of us in mainstream journalism by what's happened in the right wing for the last dec
>> chuck, i can say from university of washington forecast, we expect worst case scenario if that occurs, fully vaccinated rates less than 60%, especially with cold, dry air. with the delta variant, we are expecting upwards of a thousand deaths a day. that's potentially the peak daily death toll come end of october. that's a possibility. i am optimistic that we can reach people that are currently not vaccinated. we need to do it in a nonjudgmental way, direct engagement. and last,...
50
50
Jul 23, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
washington bureau chief, assistant managing editor for the associated press. and dr. ven gupta, critical care pulmonologist in seattle who's advised us on public health throughout this panemic. also on the faculty of university of washington institute for health metrics and evaluation, which is exactly why i'd like to begin with you, doctor. only i'd like to change your role a bit in this question and answer from physician more to sociologist. this anti-vaccine movement, the attitude is a lot of things. it's social. it's in some cases socioeconomic and it's political. but so far the siloing of our country, blue and red, rich and poor, liberal-curve has not worked. the kind of shaming and lecturing has not worked. how would you go about changing public attitudes when lives are at stake? >> good evening, brian. great to see you. this is what i'll say. first and foremost i think the cdc can recommend whatever it wants, indoor masking if they want to pivot. they can recommend that. and i would encourage people to do what they feel comfortable doing. ultimately state occupation state and safety boards to enact policy, local officials to enforce it. so we need to be clear-eyed here where we're putting our attentio
washington bureau chief, assistant managing editor for the associated press. and dr. ven gupta, critical care pulmonologist in seattle who's advised us on public health throughout this panemic. also on the faculty of university of washington institute for health metrics and evaluation, which is exactly why i'd like to begin with you, doctor. only i'd like to change your role a bit in this question and answer from physician more to sociologist. this anti-vaccine movement, the attitude is a lot...
55
55
Jul 9, 2021
07/21
by
KTVU
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
covid-19 virus in california may reduce the effectiveness of vaccines, researchers at the university of washingtonsay the epsilon variant can weaken current vaccines by as much as 70% researchers say the strains mutations break down the antibodies, which are produced by vaccines, such as those made by pfizer and moderna and protect against infection. the study did not look at the effect of the johnson and johnson vaccine hospitals in sonoma county say they are seeing a surgeon covid-19 cases in their intensive care units, according to the press democrat as of tuesday, 72% of the county's icu beds were occupied. there were 44 patients with the coronavirus being treated. in the county, six hospitals that day and 13 of those patients were in intensive care all of the current icu cases involved unvaccinated people today in santa rosa family, friends and colleagues remember the first california law enforcement officer to die from covid 19 motorcycle officers led a line of vehicles down mendocino avenue this morning to honor 43 year old mary lou armor over her 20 year career armor rose in the ranks, wor
covid-19 virus in california may reduce the effectiveness of vaccines, researchers at the university of washingtonsay the epsilon variant can weaken current vaccines by as much as 70% researchers say the strains mutations break down the antibodies, which are produced by vaccines, such as those made by pfizer and moderna and protect against infection. the study did not look at the effect of the johnson and johnson vaccine hospitals in sonoma county say they are seeing a surgeon covid-19 cases in...
43
43
Jul 8, 2021
07/21
by
KTVU
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
researchers at the university of washington say the epsilon variant can weaken current vaccines by asstrange mutations break down the antibodies that are produced by vaccines such as those made by pfizer and moderna and protect against infection. this study did not look at the effect on the johnson and johnson vaccine. hospitals up in sonoma county say they're seeing a surgeon covid-19 cases in their intensive care units, according to the press democrat as of tuesday, 72% of the county's icu beds were occupied. there were 44 patients with the coronavirus being treated in the county six hospitals on that day 13 of those patients were in intensive care all of the current icu cases involved people who were not vaccinated against covid-19. governor. newsom spoke about the recall for the first time since the date for the election was announced. he said he's confident the effort to remove him from office will fall short. i look forward to doing everything in our power, we're going to defeat this effort votes start next month and we'll continue to focus on that, but i'm not taking my eye off
researchers at the university of washington say the epsilon variant can weaken current vaccines by asstrange mutations break down the antibodies that are produced by vaccines such as those made by pfizer and moderna and protect against infection. this study did not look at the effect on the johnson and johnson vaccine. hospitals up in sonoma county say they're seeing a surgeon covid-19 cases in their intensive care units, according to the press democrat as of tuesday, 72% of the county's icu...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
william leah grant of american university in washington tc, speaking to us, a little earlier with of africa has deployed its military to don't violence. sponsored by the jailing. a former president jacob zoom up at least 6 people have died and hundreds more have been arrested. south africa, the highest court has begun. hearing zoom is appeal against his 15 month prison sentence, sick attempt president 0 ram oppose has called for com. warning the unrest could lead to shortages of food and medicine. soldiers gone the streets of south africa, then to protect police after protests, month by looting and destruction of property became more violent. looters planted, a large shopping mall in durban overnight is one of many businesses in the port city that will ransacked over the weekend. another shopping mall lies in ruins, in peter maddox book, some 80 kilometers from durban. the unrest has been mainly concentrated in the south eastern province. of course, you're in a town doing this harm region, many of his supporters, they are angered by him. it's 15 months. dow term in points of failing
william leah grant of american university in washington tc, speaking to us, a little earlier with of africa has deployed its military to don't violence. sponsored by the jailing. a former president jacob zoom up at least 6 people have died and hundreds more have been arrested. south africa, the highest court has begun. hearing zoom is appeal against his 15 month prison sentence, sick attempt president 0 ram oppose has called for com. warning the unrest could lead to shortages of food and...
26
26
Jul 31, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
it wasn't widely available early in the pandemic we reached out to the university of washington thateen applying for emergency use authorization, even though the united states didn't have that, we could test within our borders. we secured widespread testing and established a baseline and propped up hotels for an isolation quarantine center and every component of the world health organization strategy with little to no resources, we were able to be creative to reach out to partners like the university of washington to make sure we met the needs. even though we were critically challenged, we were aggressive in securing dollars to the cares act in the american rescue plan and effectively tell our story to ways -- to raise awareness and tell our story and support those tribes that stood up on sovereign powers to be creative. we enlisted them to share that knowledge to protect every native american citizen in this country during a global pandemic. host: this is danny and ohio, an native american. caller: there is the name of a tribe called contho in texas and my grandfather was the leader
it wasn't widely available early in the pandemic we reached out to the university of washington thateen applying for emergency use authorization, even though the united states didn't have that, we could test within our borders. we secured widespread testing and established a baseline and propped up hotels for an isolation quarantine center and every component of the world health organization strategy with little to no resources, we were able to be creative to reach out to partners like the...
48
48
Jul 25, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
washington university. gym is no stranger to the washington history seminar. is a cofounder of the national history center, one of its sponsors and is a regular and engaged participant in the seminar. today you won't be able to ask questions, jen. we get to ask them of your. he's a founder of the american association for the advancement
washington university. gym is no stranger to the washington history seminar. is a cofounder of the national history center, one of its sponsors and is a regular and engaged participant in the seminar. today you won't be able to ask questions, jen. we get to ask them of your. he's a founder of the american association for the advancement
29
29
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
arrived in january 1973 for the last couple of of the war and i was in graduate studies at the university of washington thinking i knew a lot because i was in graduate school after getting my undergraduate degree in south asia and southeast asia and then i had a master's, my master's thesis, adviser turned down my thesis at the same time i turned down invitation to go to bed with him and being youngish, 25, i-i did the obvious thing and took fellowship money and bought one-way ticket to cambodia as one does. the thing here is that i had a friend who i met during my studies and travel in india who had gone onto -- to become the freelancer in vietnam and cambodia, a woman named savannah and she trying to get me to join her, no, no, i don't want to close to b-52 raids. but then when i was in the bind, i said why not and i flew to cambodia. and like everybody else, hay no idea what i was getting into. [laughter] >> every single one of the women bought tickets without a job and without any idea how they were going to survive and had to make it up. >> i don't think any of us had any idea, because we survived
arrived in january 1973 for the last couple of of the war and i was in graduate studies at the university of washington thinking i knew a lot because i was in graduate school after getting my undergraduate degree in south asia and southeast asia and then i had a master's, my master's thesis, adviser turned down my thesis at the same time i turned down invitation to go to bed with him and being youngish, 25, i-i did the obvious thing and took fellowship money and bought one-way ticket to...
15
15
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
william lear, ground of american university in washington, d. c. speaking to us, a little earlier south africa has deployed its military. hist don't violence, sparked by the jailing of former president jacob zoom up at least 6 people have so far died and hundreds more have been arrested. south africa, the highest court has begun hearing him as appeal against his 15 month prison sentence to contempt, president cyril rub, oppose his call for com, wanting the unrest could lead to shortages of food and medicine. soldiers gone the streets of south africa, then to protect police after protests, month by looting and destruction, of property became more violent. lewters, plundered a large shopping mall in durban. overnight is one of many businesses in the port city that will ransacked over the weekend. another shopping mall lies in ruins. in peter mounted book, some 80 kilometers from durban, the unrest has been mainly concentrated in the south eastern province of quasi, in a town during this whole region. many of his supporters, they were angered by zoom,
william lear, ground of american university in washington, d. c. speaking to us, a little earlier south africa has deployed its military. hist don't violence, sparked by the jailing of former president jacob zoom up at least 6 people have so far died and hundreds more have been arrested. south africa, the highest court has begun hearing him as appeal against his 15 month prison sentence to contempt, president cyril rub, oppose his call for com, wanting the unrest could lead to shortages of food...
27
27
Jul 12, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
he received his bachelor of arts degree from quitman college and his jd from the university of washington school of law. welcome. the honorable ab cruise the third is the president of the board of governors for the national asian pacific american bar association and he serves on the board of an acquisition corporation and is a senior advisor at barker gilmore llc, providing coaching and search services to legal leaders and corporate boards. he has served and currently serves on many charitable boards. he has helped lead several prominent companies to diverse industries -- excuse me, he has helped lead several prominent companies in diverse industries including usaa, emergent and scripps network in a variety of senior and executive roles. he is a former navy admiral who led numerous operational teams and represented the united states internationally in multiple high-level engagements with foreign military. over the course of his career he served as deputy director of maritime operations for u.s. fleet forces command and as deputy commander, among other responsibilities. he holds a jd from
he received his bachelor of arts degree from quitman college and his jd from the university of washington school of law. welcome. the honorable ab cruise the third is the president of the board of governors for the national asian pacific american bar association and he serves on the board of an acquisition corporation and is a senior advisor at barker gilmore llc, providing coaching and search services to legal leaders and corporate boards. he has served and currently serves on many charitable...
14
14
Jul 3, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
she received their bachelor's degree in historic preservation from the university of mary, washington in fredericksburg, virginia, and our master's degree and resources interpretation from stephen f austin state university in texas. she enjoys researching family histories drinking craft beer and helping animals of all kinds we welcome vanessa as she presents american revolutionary war from the bottom up southern theater misconceptions. thank you so much phil. alright everyone. hi. thank you so much for having me today. i am hopefully gonna be talking to you guys a little bit about the southern theater and some misconceptions that go along with it. so let me first kind of go over what we consider the southern theater seems pretty straightforward enough and it pretty much is so the southern and southern theater includes military engagements that took place in the southern colonies, and i know in the previous presentation somebody asked about kind of the mid-atlantic colonies. what do we consider kind of the middle of the colonies? and virginia is one of those that was discussed and at l
she received their bachelor's degree in historic preservation from the university of mary, washington in fredericksburg, virginia, and our master's degree and resources interpretation from stephen f austin state university in texas. she enjoys researching family histories drinking craft beer and helping animals of all kinds we welcome vanessa as she presents american revolutionary war from the bottom up southern theater misconceptions. thank you so much phil. alright everyone. hi. thank you so...
96
96
Jul 5, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 96
favorite 0
quote 0
michael is a graduate of the university of mary washington and the american military university. to close this out, welcome, michael, with general john sullivan, the battle of brandywine. now, here michael has put in the bio. i'm supposed to say, go, caps, because you're a washington phillies man. our wizards here are playing the 76ers, so we'll have an nba competition. but for those who are going to watch michael, i highly recommend both his germantown book, which we will put the link to, and brandywine, which he's speaking about this afternoon. so i appreciate you being here. and we'll let you get started. >> all right. when i agreed to do this symposium, my germantown book wasn't out. and then covid hit and everything got pushed back. otherwise i would be probably talking about germantown today. but you're going to get some brandywine stuff today. so that's why i'm doing brandywine, and not the new book. but why did i write brandywine? yes, i did work there, but that's not the only reason. when i got hired at brandywine back in 2005, and i went down there and looked through the
michael is a graduate of the university of mary washington and the american military university. to close this out, welcome, michael, with general john sullivan, the battle of brandywine. now, here michael has put in the bio. i'm supposed to say, go, caps, because you're a washington phillies man. our wizards here are playing the 76ers, so we'll have an nba competition. but for those who are going to watch michael, i highly recommend both his germantown book, which we will put the link to, and...
221
221
Jul 7, 2021
07/21
by
KQED
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
washington post. journalist nicole hannah jones will join the faculty of howard university in washington, d.c., after ghly publicized tenure fight at the university of north carolina at chapel hill. she said conservative critics on her work on slavery's legacy pushed university trustees to hold her tenure approval initially. they then voted to grant it after weeks of protests. she won a pulitzer prize for her work. still to come, express search for clues to the structural failure of the surfside, florida condo. u.s. military veterans reflect on 20 years of war in afghanistan. why the boy scouts of america reached a legal settlement, with tens of thousands of sexual abuse survivors. plus much more. ♪ >> this is the "pbs newshour," from weta studios in washington and, the west from walter cronkite school of journalism at arizona state university. judy: today marks six months since a pro-trump mob attacked the u.s. capitol on january 6 in an attempt to stop the certification of president biden's election results. i am joined by lisa desjardins. tell us now, where does it stand in terms of finding out and
washington post. journalist nicole hannah jones will join the faculty of howard university in washington, d.c., after ghly publicized tenure fight at the university of north carolina at chapel hill. she said conservative critics on her work on slavery's legacy pushed university trustees to hold her tenure approval initially. they then voted to grant it after weeks of protests. she won a pulitzer prize for her work. still to come, express search for clues to the structural failure of the...
105
105
Jul 17, 2021
07/21
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 105
favorite 0
quote 0
let's go to professor of medford science ises, the imhe chief strategist at the university of washingtonve you bark as always. back, as always. as a doctor, obviously, your priority is for people to get vaccinated. you want them to be vaccinated. can you force the issue? can you force masks? should you force any of this? >> you need to because we have a rise in hospitalization in the united states, and we have a rise in mortality. so we have to do something to contain this virus, and wearing a mask would prevent us from shutting down our economy. this is the best thing we have to save lives and save our economy. neil: what's the benefit for those who have already been vaccinated and they've been waiting for this and all of a sudden now they're told put the mask back on if you're indoors? they're not in harm's way, are they in. >> no, they're not. because with, basically, the vaccine saves you from getting to the hospital and -- [inaudible] but people can still be infected, and you could still be passing the virus to others who are not vaccinated. the problem right now if you go to any st
let's go to professor of medford science ises, the imhe chief strategist at the university of washingtonve you bark as always. back, as always. as a doctor, obviously, your priority is for people to get vaccinated. you want them to be vaccinated. can you force the issue? can you force masks? should you force any of this? >> you need to because we have a rise in hospitalization in the united states, and we have a rise in mortality. so we have to do something to contain this virus, and...
29
29
Jul 7, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
or mohammed a shirt cow, he is a professor of conflict resolution at george mason university in washington. he joins me now via sky. but these are the details that we have so far. what do you make of this explosion? one i would say get on to school of thought or 2 scores of analysis, one as we have just heard from the official narrative that when a natural accident, however, the sound of this blood was heard. 25 can make there is a way that means it is a very significant explosion and it could have matched what happened in but you don't last year, which is a good on yours explosion. and it's not just some stuff that was in the cargo the ship. my 2nd thought is that, is there a way we can understand this within the rift that took place of the oh pick plus meeting last week. and it, you know, there was supposed to be another meeting on monday. however, it was the spend because of the rift between him and the other 22 members of pick plus, as there a way we can think of this possibility. it could be a signal, it could be a letter or a message to the model, is that the need to concert of some
or mohammed a shirt cow, he is a professor of conflict resolution at george mason university in washington. he joins me now via sky. but these are the details that we have so far. what do you make of this explosion? one i would say get on to school of thought or 2 scores of analysis, one as we have just heard from the official narrative that when a natural accident, however, the sound of this blood was heard. 25 can make there is a way that means it is a very significant explosion and it could...
24
24
Jul 12, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
he received his bachelor of arts degree from whitman college and his jd from the university of washington school of law. welcome. the honorable ab cruz iii is the president of the board of governors for the national asian pacific american bar association and he serves on the board of an acquisition corporation and is a senior advisor at barker gilmore llc, providing coaching and search services to legal leaders , ceos and corporate boards. he also has served and currently serves on many nonprofit and charitable boards. admiral cruz has helped lead several prominent companies to diverse industries -- excuse me, he has helped lead several prominent companies in diverse industries, including usaa, emergent and scripps network in a variety of senior legal and executive roles. he is a former navy admiral who led to numerous high-performing operational teams and represented the united states internationally in multiple high-level engagements with foreign military. over the course of his naval career, he served as deputy director of maritime operations for u.s. fleet forces command and as deputy
he received his bachelor of arts degree from whitman college and his jd from the university of washington school of law. welcome. the honorable ab cruz iii is the president of the board of governors for the national asian pacific american bar association and he serves on the board of an acquisition corporation and is a senior advisor at barker gilmore llc, providing coaching and search services to legal leaders , ceos and corporate boards. he also has served and currently serves on many...
220
220
Jul 31, 2021
07/21
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 220
favorite 0
quote 0
pulmonologist and faculty member for the institute for health metrics and evaluation at the university of washington. dr. gupta, thank you very much for being here. just from everything that you've raid so far, just your interpretation, your perspective of this new cdc finding. >> good morning, jonathan, thanks for having me. there certainly is greater urgency to the unvaccinated. and if 2020, jonathan, was the year in which grandma and grandpa were most likely to see someone like me in intenive care, 2021 is approving to be the year, any adult 18 years of age up and is vulnerable. so that threat perception was brought into stark relief with these findings this week from the cdc. and yet i'll say, just having been a part of the education efforts at on-site clinics across the country, that people are confused by this, to some degree. and we feed to still provide context that up to 25 states at the kaiser family foundation said are following what's happening with vaccine breakthrough cases, both asymptomatic and symptomatic, jonathan, that it looks like only less than 1% of the total cases are vaccine
pulmonologist and faculty member for the institute for health metrics and evaluation at the university of washington. dr. gupta, thank you very much for being here. just from everything that you've raid so far, just your interpretation, your perspective of this new cdc finding. >> good morning, jonathan, thanks for having me. there certainly is greater urgency to the unvaccinated. and if 2020, jonathan, was the year in which grandma and grandpa were most likely to see someone like me in...
36
36
Jul 24, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 36
favorite 0
quote 0
you are the founder and longtime director of the gw space policy institute, george washington universitypace policy institute. what is the significant of jeff bezos and richard branson conducting private flights into space. >> the reality is, the significance is not that great. these were not journeys into orbit, just up and down, quick, suborbital flights. but symbolically, i think there were significant. look at all the attention. because these are private citizens going into space on systems developed by private citizens. it is announcing the arrival of opening the access to space to paying private citizens. jesse: what is the impact of those private flights, not only on tourism, but on the commercial spaceflight industry? does this mean we are now going to see several companies touting themselves as intergalactic companies, where they can take people who can afford it away from the planet earth, is that a new industry we are going to see? john: well, perhaps. we have to put into the mix the company called spacex owned by elon musk, which has a system that can carry people into orbit.
you are the founder and longtime director of the gw space policy institute, george washington universitypace policy institute. what is the significant of jeff bezos and richard branson conducting private flights into space. >> the reality is, the significance is not that great. these were not journeys into orbit, just up and down, quick, suborbital flights. but symbolically, i think there were significant. look at all the attention. because these are private citizens going into space on...
21
21
Jul 26, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
burlingame, holder of the distinguished chair in lincoln studies at the university of illinois-springfield, was born in washington, d.c. and raised in nearby arlington. his first book, the inner world of abraham lincoln, was written in 1994. he's written over a dozen books including one of the five best books of the year by the atlantic. this october pegasus books will release his study, "the black man's president: abraham lin on the, frederick douglass and the quest for racial justice." now let's hear from michael burlingame. thank you for joining us today. >> before i begin my remarks, i would like to thank the archives for letting me participate in this series. over the years i've spent many ours in the archives conducting lincoln research, and this is relevant for the book i'm talking about today within the records of the committee on -- [inaudible] there's a great deal of information about how -- was done at the white house indicating that it was not always above board, and it was was -- see official documents about what was really going on. so i'm very grateful to the archives for superbing these records an
burlingame, holder of the distinguished chair in lincoln studies at the university of illinois-springfield, was born in washington, d.c. and raised in nearby arlington. his first book, the inner world of abraham lincoln, was written in 1994. he's written over a dozen books including one of the five best books of the year by the atlantic. this october pegasus books will release his study, "the black man's president: abraham lin on the, frederick douglass and the quest for racial...
29
29
Jul 18, 2021
07/21
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
mati hlatshwayo davis is a clinical instructor of infectious diseases at washington university schoolis, missouri. thank you so much forjoining us. i wonder, thank you so much forjoining us. iwonder, this thank you so much forjoining us. i wonder, this uptick in cases that la is seeing, is it because of younger people not wearing masks or is the delta variant actually making people more sick than perhaps other variants? , , more sick than perhaps other variants?— variants? this is absolutely beinu variants? this is absolutely being driven _ variants? this is absolutely being driven by _ variants? this is absolutely being driven by the - variants? this is absolutely being driven by the delta i being driven by the delta variant. now it counts for 58% of new cases. this is up from 43% last month. in this region. and we know that that is where this is coming from. we know also that over 99% of new cases— of new cases are in those who are unvaccinated, over 98% of hospitalisations and again over 99% of deaths so this tells us that the delta variant is incredibly more transmissible, 50% mor
mati hlatshwayo davis is a clinical instructor of infectious diseases at washington university schoolis, missouri. thank you so much forjoining us. i wonder, thank you so much forjoining us. iwonder, this thank you so much forjoining us. i wonder, this uptick in cases that la is seeing, is it because of younger people not wearing masks or is the delta variant actually making people more sick than perhaps other variants? , , more sick than perhaps other variants?— variants? this is absolutely...