SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 21, 2011
11/11
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SFGTV2
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demonstrated by the success of those being recognized before us, we see that hard work does not go unrecognized. to both potential entrepreneurs and existing restaurant tours, -- existing restauranteurs, we are here to help you. i think the supervisors for these recognitions. i join our fellow small business commissioners in thinking these business persons for their contributions to the vitality of san francisco. thank you for allowing us to speak today. thank you. [applause] president chiu: thank you all for participating. given that this is the day after national food day, i hope everyone goes to all the restaurants and eats as much as you can. with that, why don't we go to our 4:00 p.m. special order? madam clerk, could you call items 16 through 19? >> a hearing of persons interested in the decision of the planning commission conditional use authorization to install a nine panel in cannot wireless tel commission facility and related equipment on the roof of a five-story publicly used structure known as kaiser hospital. item 17 is the motion approving the decision of the planning commission,
demonstrated by the success of those being recognized before us, we see that hard work does not go unrecognized. to both potential entrepreneurs and existing restaurant tours, -- existing restauranteurs, we are here to help you. i think the supervisors for these recognitions. i join our fellow small business commissioners in thinking these business persons for their contributions to the vitality of san francisco. thank you for allowing us to speak today. thank you. [applause] president chiu:...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Nov 7, 2011
11/11
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SFGTV2
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occurring within minutes of the injury and bleeding to death or having their air way blocked or some unrecognized medical problem and this is the group we're going to help, and the third is die afterwards from infectionsoir things that go wrong with the recovery process. we can help by delivering prope first aid and keeping things clean but this isn't the target group and these are the people to be aware of, in the middle and people are talking about blood and this brings up the concept of res curer protection. gloves, eye protection, and masks and sanitation and hand washing and who among us don't have a nick or a cut on their hand and are you going to touch someone's blood and your in tac skin will protect you from most ilknows. however, if you have a cut on your hand you have a path for infection to get inside of you and you want a pair of latex gloves -- several pairs of glo gloves that you can put on and change as you go from patient t patient hopefully and at least wash your hands and disinfect your hands between patient contacts and the eyes are like an open wound and path to get into your
occurring within minutes of the injury and bleeding to death or having their air way blocked or some unrecognized medical problem and this is the group we're going to help, and the third is die afterwards from infectionsoir things that go wrong with the recovery process. we can help by delivering prope first aid and keeping things clean but this isn't the target group and these are the people to be aware of, in the middle and people are talking about blood and this brings up the concept of res...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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287
Nov 8, 2011
11/11
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WHUT
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also in treuhand coordination and unrecognized voices. you cannot buy it yet, unfortunately. honda says there is no plan to build a commercial version. no special friends for george just yet. let us look at what is happening on the market. still focused on italy. and at the moment, any move on from berlusconi would be a good thing, would increase stability in the markets and will fully bring the 10-year borrowing rate down and that would reduce the cost for italy. as you can see, the ftse index -- it had some fairly influential corporate results at the moment. >> it will be long before the boxes try those robots here. the australian parliament passed a law that into this is a carbon tax on the top 500 polluting companies in the country. it has proven controversial. it was broadly backed by environmental groups but opposition and business leaders warn it would hurt the economy. duncan kennedy reports from sydney. >> the australian senate where this landmark law was passed, the five stages of debate as devices -- divisive as the years of discussion that preceded it. they claim
also in treuhand coordination and unrecognized voices. you cannot buy it yet, unfortunately. honda says there is no plan to build a commercial version. no special friends for george just yet. let us look at what is happening on the market. still focused on italy. and at the moment, any move on from berlusconi would be a good thing, would increase stability in the markets and will fully bring the 10-year borrowing rate down and that would reduce the cost for italy. as you can see, the ftse index...
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Nov 10, 2011
11/11
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KGO
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most can go out in public and remain unrecognized. and sisz tims may soon allow strangers to snap a picture and instantly learn your name, date of birth, where you're born, and maybe even your social security number. >> i think it's probably here to stay. >> facebook and fwoogel are using some forms of facial recognition. facebook's tag suggestion uz identify people in photos as they're uploaded. and this video demonstrates how owners of galaxy nexus can unlock phones by pointing it at their face. this professor at carney melon university in pittsburgh. >> we're getting closer to the ends, of anonymity. >> he and fellow researchers at carnegie mellon university developed an application he says can determine the name and personal information with fairly good accuracy. we caught up with him in boston and put the app to the test. he took pictures of three subjects. photos uploaded to the app. the app spit out information about each of them. >> that is my name, my date of birth. >> the app determined the same information for paul. >> i'm
most can go out in public and remain unrecognized. and sisz tims may soon allow strangers to snap a picture and instantly learn your name, date of birth, where you're born, and maybe even your social security number. >> i think it's probably here to stay. >> facebook and fwoogel are using some forms of facial recognition. facebook's tag suggestion uz identify people in photos as they're uploaded. and this video demonstrates how owners of galaxy nexus can unlock phones by pointing it...
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Nov 13, 2011
11/11
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KGO
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. >> most can go out in public and remain unrecognized.acial recognition system may soon allow strangers to snap a picture and instantly learn your name, date of birth, where you were born and maybe even your social security number. >> i think facial recognition is here to stay. >> already facebook and google are using some forms of facial recognition. facebook tag suggestions automatically identifies people in photos as they are uploaded. >> google video demonstrates how owners of the new galaxy nexus can point of their phone at their own face. >> an associate professor at carnegie in pittsburgh. >> we're getting uneasy as we know it. >> he and researchers have developed an application that can determine the name and other personal information of a stranger with fairly good accuracy. we caught up with him in boston. he took pictures of three test subjects. photos were uploaded to his app and it spit out information about each of them. >> that is my date of birth. >> the app also accurately determined the same information for paul. >> i'm
. >> most can go out in public and remain unrecognized.acial recognition system may soon allow strangers to snap a picture and instantly learn your name, date of birth, where you were born and maybe even your social security number. >> i think facial recognition is here to stay. >> already facebook and google are using some forms of facial recognition. facebook tag suggestions automatically identifies people in photos as they are uploaded. >> google video demonstrates...
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Nov 8, 2011
11/11
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WJLA
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a new study says that's drowsy driving is the most unrecognized safety problem on the roads. >> i think an awful lot of us have had moments where behind the wheel you start to feel your eyelids get heavy and you are fighting to stay awake. particularly of weeks like this one where people are adjusting to a time change. officials say drowsy driving happens every day. asleep behind the wheel, the card drifting into another lane and hitting another car. drivers so drowsy they can't keep their eyes open. it is dangerous and may be a lot more common than you think. nearly one out of every three drivers on the road are dangerously drowsy according to a new aaa foundation survey. driver fatigue played a role in the bus crashed back in may. four people died and more than 50 others were hurt. >> you could be pushing the envelope you can fall asleep suddenly behind the wheel. that is what is disconcerting and so devastating about it. >> robin l. drives as many as 600 miles a week. she admits she has been a drowsy driver. >> you try to roll down the windows, turn on the air conditioning, too dumb,
a new study says that's drowsy driving is the most unrecognized safety problem on the roads. >> i think an awful lot of us have had moments where behind the wheel you start to feel your eyelids get heavy and you are fighting to stay awake. particularly of weeks like this one where people are adjusting to a time change. officials say drowsy driving happens every day. asleep behind the wheel, the card drifting into another lane and hitting another car. drivers so drowsy they can't keep...
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Nov 25, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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some ways was one of the greatest underreported stories of the 20th-century, but it also was an unrecognized immigration withinw the borders of our ownit countr. it began during world war one, and it did not end until the 19i 1970's.ht african-americans that you might actualn the north and midwest and western actually descendants from this great migration, and that is because when it began0% 90%, 90 percent of all africanal americans live in the south. in the time that it was over half of all african-americans are living outside of the south. that is a massive relocation of an einntire people. this is a universal human storyg of warning and fortitude and courage which is what in somedet ways made the country what it he. what these peseo ppeole did tiet different tone to it because there were defecting a caste system. coun it was a system that controls are removed there were seeking political asylum from all thet world that is almostoday which unimaginable to usis today, whio is why i wanted to be able toft understand what it was that thet left, understand the magnitude of what they had done.
some ways was one of the greatest underreported stories of the 20th-century, but it also was an unrecognized immigration withinw the borders of our ownit countr. it began during world war one, and it did not end until the 19i 1970's.ht african-americans that you might actualn the north and midwest and western actually descendants from this great migration, and that is because when it began0% 90%, 90 percent of all africanal americans live in the south. in the time that it was over half of all...
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Nov 25, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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this is one of the greatest underreported stories of the 20th century, but it also was an unrecognized immigration within the borders of our own countriment it began during world war i, and it didn't end until the 1970s, and it is the result of this that the mass majority of people that you might meet, african-americans that you might meet in the north, midwest and west are actually descended from this migration. and that's because when the migration began, 90% -- 90% of all african-americans were in the south. by the time the over in the 1970s, half of all african-americans were living outside of the south. that's a massive relocation of an entire people. and so this is in some ways the universal human story of longing and fortitude and courage that is what, in some ways, made the country what it is. what these people did, though, had a different tone to it because these people were defecting a caste system that existed within our country, a system that controlled their every move. in some ways they were defecting and speaking political -- seeking political asylum from a world that's
this is one of the greatest underreported stories of the 20th century, but it also was an unrecognized immigration within the borders of our own countriment it began during world war i, and it didn't end until the 1970s, and it is the result of this that the mass majority of people that you might meet, african-americans that you might meet in the north, midwest and west are actually descended from this migration. and that's because when the migration began, 90% -- 90% of all african-americans...
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126
Nov 14, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN
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eye 126
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realize that there are people out there that have done more brave things than i have who went unrecognizedpeople forgot about it or did not notice it or did not write them up. one guy was written up and the paper got lost. things like that happen. you get pretty humble about the particular medal on your chest. you always have a sense of i do not know if i did as well as that guy that earned it. there are people that may have a medal that did not earn it. you never know. >> what day did you get this? >> i remember very clearly. it occurred over several days. we had made an assault on a hill. we were surrounded. we took a lot of casualties. we lost most of the officers. i ended up taking over a couple of platoons and combining them under my command. i was an executive officer. that particular day was a final assault on the hill called 484. where i say i won, it was that the aircraft missed. they hit the wrong hill. the clouds are coming in. you have to go in without any problem. -- without an air prep. that is very difficult to do. we got taken under fire by machine guns. everybody went to t
realize that there are people out there that have done more brave things than i have who went unrecognizedpeople forgot about it or did not notice it or did not write them up. one guy was written up and the paper got lost. things like that happen. you get pretty humble about the particular medal on your chest. you always have a sense of i do not know if i did as well as that guy that earned it. there are people that may have a medal that did not earn it. you never know. >> what day did...
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Nov 12, 2011
11/11
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CNN
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>> well, the nation's leading allergy group has called attention to an unrecognized problem that involves plug-in room deoderizers aroma candles and popular aerosol odor eliminators. they are full of chemicals that can cause problems that involve your lungs and your heart and so people need to be aware that these products exist and they contain these chemicals and you will never find the information on the labels. >> we are talking about a host of things here. we are talking about aerosol deowd deoderiz deoderizers, scented candles. what are the symptoms to know? >> anyone that's familiar with allergies knows you will get water, itchy eyes, nasal congestion but if you are asthmatic you will feel tightness in your chest and wheezing as well. these are symptoms that tell you you have to get out of that room and you may just have one of the devices in your house chemicals can get to every room in the house and even applies to the unscented brands, fredricka. >> okay. you said there are some federal guidelines that may be on the horizon to what degree? >> you know, we are talking about indoor
>> well, the nation's leading allergy group has called attention to an unrecognized problem that involves plug-in room deoderizers aroma candles and popular aerosol odor eliminators. they are full of chemicals that can cause problems that involve your lungs and your heart and so people need to be aware that these products exist and they contain these chemicals and you will never find the information on the labels. >> we are talking about a host of things here. we are talking about...
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Nov 10, 2011
11/11
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KOFY
tv
eye 299
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. >> most can go out in public and remain unrecognized but facial recognition systems may soon allowstantly learn your name, your date of birth, where you were born and maybe even your social security number. >> i think that facial recognition is probably here to stay. >> already, facebook and google are using some forms of facial recognition. tag suggestions automatically identifies people in photos as they are uploaded. and this going the video demonstrates how owners of the new galaxy neck us is can unlock their phones by pointing it at their own o face. alessandralessandro is an assoe professor at carnegie university in pittsburgh we are getting closer to the end of anonymity as we know it. >> reporter: they developed an application he says can determine the name and other personal information of a stranger with fairly good accuracy. we caught up with him and put the app to the test. he took pictures of three test subjects. the photos were uploaded to his app and it spit out information about each of them. >> yeah, that is my name. that is my date of birth. that is my state of bi
. >> most can go out in public and remain unrecognized but facial recognition systems may soon allowstantly learn your name, your date of birth, where you were born and maybe even your social security number. >> i think that facial recognition is probably here to stay. >> already, facebook and google are using some forms of facial recognition. tag suggestions automatically identifies people in photos as they are uploaded. and this going the video demonstrates how owners of the...
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102
Nov 14, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN
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eye 102
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about it realize there are people out there who have done more brave things than i have who went unrecognized. they either did it when nobody was looking or they did it and combat was going on and people forgot about it or people write them up. i know one guy who has written it up and the paper work goss lost. so things like that happen. when things like that happen, you get pretty humble about the particular medal that's on your chest. like i said, you always have the sense of i don't know if i did as well as that guy who earned it. there are people that may have a medal that they didn't earn. you don't know. i said -- >> what day do you remember you got this? >> oh, i remember it very clearly. it occurred over several days. we had made an assault on a hill and we were surrounded. we ended up taking a lot of casualties on a second assault where we lost most of the officers. so i had taken over a couple of platoons and combined them under my command. i was the company executive officer. and the particular day was a final assault on a hill called 484. where i say i won the medal is we were all
about it realize there are people out there who have done more brave things than i have who went unrecognized. they either did it when nobody was looking or they did it and combat was going on and people forgot about it or people write them up. i know one guy who has written it up and the paper work goss lost. so things like that happen. when things like that happen, you get pretty humble about the particular medal that's on your chest. like i said, you always have the sense of i don't know if...
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Nov 13, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 228
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actually all three of them did a lot that went unrecognized.she was the eldest daughter and the person that was most like him. she was really a brilliant journalist and she was not credited with this because once again it is written with history, but he hoped for is prisoners where they were badly mistreated in giving mice fed as for crimes that should have only done six months. she did a letterwriting campaign that was picked up throughout europe and eventually resulted in a parliamentary inquiry and the release of these prisoners. she then continued journal is the mark as a wife. but journalism in those days didn't pay anything, so this is never an occupation she could have to support herself. she taught languages, that she was a very -- i think she was a profound critical thinker. how many actually free man? and laura, his second daughter married frenchmen and she translated the letter irks his ratings into french and was herself a really wonderful writer. she is being courted by one of marx's colleagues and talks about the fact that he walk
actually all three of them did a lot that went unrecognized.she was the eldest daughter and the person that was most like him. she was really a brilliant journalist and she was not credited with this because once again it is written with history, but he hoped for is prisoners where they were badly mistreated in giving mice fed as for crimes that should have only done six months. she did a letterwriting campaign that was picked up throughout europe and eventually resulted in a parliamentary...
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Nov 6, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 242
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the most, i think, of that -- >> guest: well, actually, all three of them did a lot that went unrecognized. she was marx's eldest daughter and the person he said was -- of his daughters was most like him. and she was really a brilliant journalist, and she was not credited with this because, once again, it was written out of history. but she helped freeze irish -- frees irish political prisoners from jails where they were being given life sentences for crimes that sometimes should have only had sick months. and she did a letter-writing campaign that was published in france and picked up throughout europe, and eventually it resulted in a parliamentary inquiry and the release of these a prisoners. and she then continued her journalism work as a wife. but journalism in the those days didn't pay anything, so this was never an owpg she could have -- occupation she could have to support herself. she taught, she was a governess, she taught languages. but she was a very, i think she was a profound political thinker. i mean, how many people's writings actually free men? that's pretty senate. >> host
the most, i think, of that -- >> guest: well, actually, all three of them did a lot that went unrecognized. she was marx's eldest daughter and the person he said was -- of his daughters was most like him. and she was really a brilliant journalist, and she was not credited with this because, once again, it was written out of history. but she helped freeze irish -- frees irish political prisoners from jails where they were being given life sentences for crimes that sometimes should have...
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Nov 6, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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eye 284
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. >> host: all three of them can do a lot that could go unrecognized. she was the oldest daughter and was most like him and she was really a brilliant adjournist and she was not credited with this. once again it was written out of history, but she helped freeze irish political prisoners out of irish jails and giving life sentences for crimes that sometimes should have only had six months. and she did a letter-writing campaign that was published in france and picked up through europe and ultimately it became into a inquiry in the release of these prisoners. and she then continued her journalism work as a wife. journalism in those days didn't pay anything and this was never an occupation she could have to support herself. she taught languages but she was a very -- i thought she was a profound political thinker. how many people's writings actually free men? that's pretty significant. then laura his second daughter who lived in france most of her adult life because she married a farmers branchman and she translated a lot of marx's writing in french and her
. >> host: all three of them can do a lot that could go unrecognized. she was the oldest daughter and was most like him and she was really a brilliant adjournist and she was not credited with this. once again it was written out of history, but she helped freeze irish political prisoners out of irish jails and giving life sentences for crimes that sometimes should have only had six months. and she did a letter-writing campaign that was published in france and picked up through europe and...
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Nov 9, 2011
11/11
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CSPAN2
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yet, when they enter the civilian world, very often those skills are simply unrecognized by laws requiringseparate training or lie shiner, and we -- licensure and we ought to do more to recognize these brave men and women. that's why i author a similar provision in the honoring all veterans to ensure educational institutions recognize a veterans military training. the iraq and afghanistan veterans of america reported -- and i'm quoting -- 61% of employers, 61% do not believe they have a complete understanding of the qualifications ex-service members offer. and recently-separated service members with college degrees earn on average almost $10,000 less than their non-veterans counterparts. i applaud my colleagues for including section 222 in the vow to veterans act. it is a vital step toward helping employers find the employees they need and toward closing the income gap that exists now. the legislation before us also expands education and training opportunities for older veterans by providing 100,000 unemployed veterans of past wars with up to one year of additional g.i. benefits to go towa
yet, when they enter the civilian world, very often those skills are simply unrecognized by laws requiringseparate training or lie shiner, and we -- licensure and we ought to do more to recognize these brave men and women. that's why i author a similar provision in the honoring all veterans to ensure educational institutions recognize a veterans military training. the iraq and afghanistan veterans of america reported -- and i'm quoting -- 61% of employers, 61% do not believe they have a...