58
58
Oct 26, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
meanwhile, at vanderbilt things are finally starting to change. professor bell is here and he could probably talk about this than i can, but back in 1960, at the sit-ins leading them was reverend james lofton who was a student at the end of the of the time. the reaction from the administration at randall when they learned of his role in the sit-ins was to expel them from university, which is probably the low point in the history of vanderbilt. in reaction to that, they brought on a much more progressive chancellor who understood that race was a central question for the country and he understood that the outsider role that athletes play in american society, that if a record an african-american athlete it would signal things are changing but he told the basketball coach roy skinner not only could you recruit a black player, at the time there were none in the sec, that he wanted him to do it. be president of the university of kentucky had issued the same request to adolf roth -- adolphe raab, and he cannot do. but because vanderbilt wanted to, it was
meanwhile, at vanderbilt things are finally starting to change. professor bell is here and he could probably talk about this than i can, but back in 1960, at the sit-ins leading them was reverend james lofton who was a student at the end of the of the time. the reaction from the administration at randall when they learned of his role in the sit-ins was to expel them from university, which is probably the low point in the history of vanderbilt. in reaction to that, they brought on a much more...
99
99
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 99
favorite 0
quote 0
clive lee had been the star player at vanderbilt before perry. clive was white. he recommended perry go to church at the university church of christ across the street from the campus. perry said a new day is dawning, governor wallace wasn't at the schoolhouse door keeping me from going to vanderbilt, so i wouldn't have gone my whole life to this white church, but i'm going to try it now. the fourth week he shows up, and a church elder comes over and tells him that he's going to have to stop coming, he has to leave immediately and people have said if he continues to come to church, they're going to write the church out of their will. isolation came in the dormitory where doors were slammed. people would say in the hall and in class, his best friend, walter murray, his first day of english class he walks in, and the professor said so they've let the n-words in after all, i see. fraternity parties that had black bands playing, they didn't allow black members. perry's teammates, as i mentioned, were not supportive, so perry faced this entire situation alone. but all
clive lee had been the star player at vanderbilt before perry. clive was white. he recommended perry go to church at the university church of christ across the street from the campus. perry said a new day is dawning, governor wallace wasn't at the schoolhouse door keeping me from going to vanderbilt, so i wouldn't have gone my whole life to this white church, but i'm going to try it now. the fourth week he shows up, and a church elder comes over and tells him that he's going to have to stop...
299
299
Oct 17, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 299
favorite 0
quote 0
in 1794 hi great grandfather cornelius vanderbilt was born on staten island.burrowed money and bought a smaa small boat to car cargo. he under cut competitors and built a fleet of steam ships and moving into railroads. >> this is 2347b extraordinary structure. back in 1969 he bought 23 acres to build a depot for his new york central railroad. this wasn't called grand central terminal until 1913. this imposing statue of him outside of the building, i remember seeing it when i was a little kid and for years i believed that all grandparents turned into statues when they died. subsequent generations of vanderbilt, built huge mansions. excess is what they became known for. there is enormous houses in newport, rhode island that are museums to the public but many in new york have been torn down. this was my great gand mother's house that occupied an entire block and now a store burgdorf good mab stands in this spot. growing up, i never paid attention about the vapder builts. i read about them in school but they seemed like strangers. i was glad not to have the vander
in 1794 hi great grandfather cornelius vanderbilt was born on staten island.burrowed money and bought a smaa small boat to car cargo. he under cut competitors and built a fleet of steam ships and moving into railroads. >> this is 2347b extraordinary structure. back in 1969 he bought 23 acres to build a depot for his new york central railroad. this wasn't called grand central terminal until 1913. this imposing statue of him outside of the building, i remember seeing it when i was a little...
61
61
Oct 18, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
this is the vanderbilt mansion. alice vanderbilts lived there. it is right across from the park. this is sex fifth avenue -- s aks fifth avenue. edmund goodland, who was a government worker from rochester new york -- a garment worker from rochester new york, who founded a taylor shop, he moved uptown. tailoring has ever gone this far uptown. you are in vanderbilt country up on central park east. but he leases the property, and eventually buys it and controls that whole property. he and his wife lived in a penthouse on the top floor of the store. by new york law, custodians weren't permitted to live in a city's industrial buildings. industrial buildings, because women's made dresses on the sixth floor. jimmy walker is a friend, and he gets the goodmans listed as custodians. they had to be the richest janitors in the history of the world. it pays to know people. this is the regal stretch of fifth avenue, as it is transformed in the 20's. these two women i will be talking about had a lot to do with it. they formed the newest new york business. by 1935, it was the eighth largest busi
this is the vanderbilt mansion. alice vanderbilts lived there. it is right across from the park. this is sex fifth avenue -- s aks fifth avenue. edmund goodland, who was a government worker from rochester new york -- a garment worker from rochester new york, who founded a taylor shop, he moved uptown. tailoring has ever gone this far uptown. you are in vanderbilt country up on central park east. but he leases the property, and eventually buys it and controls that whole property. he and his wife...
85
85
Oct 4, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
the heir of the vanderbilt fortunes ... c-span: his elder brother was cornelius vanderbilt jr.? >> guest: that's right, cornelius vanderbilt, jr. and there'd been an argument within the family about his marriage, and so the bulk of the vanderbilt fortune had come to alfred. he was on the ship. he loved the lusitania, one of his favorite ships. he was coming over to england for a meeting about horses, his great love and passion, but also a meeting about -- he was providing funding for red cross ambulances at the front. and he really was one of the great heroes of the sinking, for me. and having led a somewhat a rakish life, he could not have spent the last 15 minutes of his life better. there are substantiated accounts from several survivors of how he and his valet, a man called ronald denyer, rushed around giving lifeboats to women and children. vanderbilt himself couldn't swim. he was the possessor of one of the most beautiful swimming pools in america, couldn't swim he gave his life jacket to a young nurse from seattle. he and the valet picked up young children, tucked them un
the heir of the vanderbilt fortunes ... c-span: his elder brother was cornelius vanderbilt jr.? >> guest: that's right, cornelius vanderbilt, jr. and there'd been an argument within the family about his marriage, and so the bulk of the vanderbilt fortune had come to alfred. he was on the ship. he loved the lusitania, one of his favorite ships. he was coming over to england for a meeting about horses, his great love and passion, but also a meeting about -- he was providing funding for red...
424
424
Oct 14, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 424
favorite 0
quote 0
my mom is gloria vanderbilt.alth, but it was a different time, when parents like hers had little to do with raising their kids. her dad was reginald vanderbilt. he died when she was an infant. her mom gloria morgan was just 18 and had no idea how to raise a child. when my mom was 10, her father's sister, gertrude vanderbilt whitney, a skulter who founded new york's whitney museum went to court to take custody of my mom away from my grandmother. at the time it was called the trial of the century. it was at the height of the depression and made headlines around the world. it's hard to believe, but the court decided my mom should be taken away from her own mother and raised by her aunt gertrude who she barely knew. for my mom, that wound, that pain, is something that's never gone away. whenever people ask me about my family history, they're usually just referring to the vanderbilt side of my family, which is understandable, i suppose. the first vanderbilt came to america back in 1650. his name was jan artsen vanderb
my mom is gloria vanderbilt.alth, but it was a different time, when parents like hers had little to do with raising their kids. her dad was reginald vanderbilt. he died when she was an infant. her mom gloria morgan was just 18 and had no idea how to raise a child. when my mom was 10, her father's sister, gertrude vanderbilt whitney, a skulter who founded new york's whitney museum went to court to take custody of my mom away from my grandmother. at the time it was called the trial of the...
206
206
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 206
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaaper in, chairman department of preventable medicine from vanderbilt and dr.d sanders from purdue university. we would like to hear from you both this morning. what is your confidence level when it comes to how prepared u.s. hospitals are to treat an ebola patient if it were to go to them? >> actually, i'm very confident. and if anything, this event in dallas has given all hospitals once again a wakeup call and has been a lesson. hospitals are out there reviewing their infection control policies and procedures. they're training their personnel in how to use the protective gear that we would employ in the context of an ebola patient. and we're conducting drills. we at vanderbilt have had a fake ebola patient come in to our emergency room and then transferred to our intensive care unit. we all took notes during the process. you always learn something during drills. and so hospitals, even those in relatively remote areas now took a lesson from dallas and said, you know, that could happen here. so i think we're all increasingly aware and able to manage such patien
william schaaper in, chairman department of preventable medicine from vanderbilt and dr.d sanders from purdue university. we would like to hear from you both this morning. what is your confidence level when it comes to how prepared u.s. hospitals are to treat an ebola patient if it were to go to them? >> actually, i'm very confident. and if anything, this event in dallas has given all hospitals once again a wakeup call and has been a lesson. hospitals are out there reviewing their...
54
54
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
i was, i headed up the vanderbilt truman scholars program for years.e could never get anybody nor years. it -- for years. it's such a hard scholarship to get, very impressive. and he received his degree as magna cum laude from harvard law school and was editor of the harvard law review, another distinguished figure in our public law was a former editor of the harvard law review as well. in any respect, i think he offers us, he will offer us a very interesting perspective on counterinsurgency. ganesh? >> thanks so much for that wonderful introduction, and thank you all for coming, and i'd like the thank the humanities united as well for helping put on this event. i want to take you back to the summer of 2009, and if you remember that summer, we had a relatively new president at that time. and as of june we had a brand new commanding general in afghanistan, a guy named stan mcchris a. and in july -- mcchrystal. and in july of that summer be, general mcchrystal issued a tactical directive for all forces in afghanistan, and that directive -- i'll read you
i was, i headed up the vanderbilt truman scholars program for years.e could never get anybody nor years. it -- for years. it's such a hard scholarship to get, very impressive. and he received his degree as magna cum laude from harvard law school and was editor of the harvard law review, another distinguished figure in our public law was a former editor of the harvard law review as well. in any respect, i think he offers us, he will offer us a very interesting perspective on counterinsurgency....
140
140
Oct 5, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 140
favorite 0
quote 0
hospital, and joining us from nashville is the chairman of the department of prereventive medicine at vanderbilt university. doctors, thank you so much for being with us, and while we await this news conference, let me start with you, dr. shaffner and ask you, if there is anything missing in this public discussion of ebola coming to the u.s. >> well, perhaps not missing, but perhaps we have haven't emphasized enough that the key public health response, finding the close contacts and keeping them under surveillance was all done by the book. it is not very tellgenic, but it is the essential response. a lot of attention has been directed to the fact that it took a couple of days to dek decontaminate the apartment, and that is important, but of lesser importance than getting the contacts. you know, this virus, bow la, once it is out of the body, it is a as we we with say a wimp. it starts to die right a wway. so there was not a major hazard or even a minor hazard to all of that contaminated material in the apartment if nobody touched it. >> so, even for, and what you are saying to me, we were talkin
hospital, and joining us from nashville is the chairman of the department of prereventive medicine at vanderbilt university. doctors, thank you so much for being with us, and while we await this news conference, let me start with you, dr. shaffner and ask you, if there is anything missing in this public discussion of ebola coming to the u.s. >> well, perhaps not missing, but perhaps we have haven't emphasized enough that the key public health response, finding the close contacts and...
134
134
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 134
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner out of vanderbilt university hospital, thank you so much. elizabeth cohen, our chief medical correspondent -- our senior medical correspondent, thank you. ed lavandera in dallas for us, thank you so much. we'll continue to follow developments of this ebola story throughout the hour. >>> if air strikes are not stopping isis ground forces, what will? we get point and counter point from john mccain and bernie sanders. (receptionist) gunderman group. gunderman group is growing. getting in a groove. growth is gratifying. goal is to grow. gotta get greater growth. i just talked to ups. they got expert advise, special discounts, new technologies. like smart pick ups. they'll only show up when you print a label and it's automatic. we save time and money. time? money? time and money. awesome. awesome! awesome! awesome! awesome! (all) awesome! i love logistics. >>> now to the war on isis. we have been told all along that air strikes alone won't defeat isis, but the only boots on the ground, kurdish fighters and the iraqi security forces. both appear t
william schaffner out of vanderbilt university hospital, thank you so much. elizabeth cohen, our chief medical correspondent -- our senior medical correspondent, thank you. ed lavandera in dallas for us, thank you so much. we'll continue to follow developments of this ebola story throughout the hour. >>> if air strikes are not stopping isis ground forces, what will? we get point and counter point from john mccain and bernie sanders. (receptionist) gunderman group. gunderman group is...
43
43
Oct 26, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
next, vanderbilt university professor sarah igo talks about the societal shift that occurred during the early 20th century as modernization impacted businesses and households. igo focuses on the literary works of the string frederick d
next, vanderbilt university professor sarah igo talks about the societal shift that occurred during the early 20th century as modernization impacted businesses and households. igo focuses on the literary works of the string frederick d
220
220
Oct 22, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 220
favorite 0
quote 0
my mom is gloria vanderbilt.ed history to say the least. but i was really interested in my dad's history. and, my dad is from mississippi. i grew up knowing a lot about his family. he wrote a book about, growing up in mississippi. there was a lot i really didn't know. it's that side of the family that i have always felt more connected to. >> let's explore it, shall we. >> my dad, wyatt cooper died when i was 10. when you are a kid and you lose a parent it is like the world as you know it comes to an end. clocks are reset. the calendar goes back to zero. after my dad died in 1978, it was just me my mom and my brother carter. my mom and dad met at a dinner party in 1962. they couldn't have been from more different background. that's the thing that interests me the most about my heritage. that the different branches my family tree mapped out by ancestri.com started off so apart and have come together in me. my dad was born here in mississippi in 1927. though growing up as a kid i never feat all that connected to the
my mom is gloria vanderbilt.ed history to say the least. but i was really interested in my dad's history. and, my dad is from mississippi. i grew up knowing a lot about his family. he wrote a book about, growing up in mississippi. there was a lot i really didn't know. it's that side of the family that i have always felt more connected to. >> let's explore it, shall we. >> my dad, wyatt cooper died when i was 10. when you are a kid and you lose a parent it is like the world as you...
50
50
Oct 9, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> kentucky, a state that's hurting economically. >> when the mines shut down it affects other businesses too you know, it hurts everything. >> some say it's time for a change. >> mitch has been in there so long. >> while others want to stay the course. >> all the way mitch! you know exactly what these people needs in kentucky. >> communities trying to cope. what does the future hold? >> the economy, the struggling coal industry and healthcare are all impacting their vote. >> "america votes 2014 / fed up in kentucky". all this week. only on al jazeera america. real reporting that brings you the world. giving you a real global pe
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> kentucky, a state that's hurting...
64
64
Oct 9, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> edge of eighteen, >> your entire life has brought you up to this point, right now! american teens, making a difference >> we wanna fight for our education >> choosing a path... >> if i'm not sharing the gospel, then i feel empty inside because that's the gift that god has given me >> deciding their own future... >> i'm petty burnt out... if i said that i was perfectly fine, i would be lying >> oscar winner alex gibney's edge of eighteen the powerful conclusion... only on al jazeera america >> kentucky, a state that's hurting economically. >> when the mines shut down it affects other businesses too you know, it hurts everythin
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> edge of eighteen, >> your...
47
47
Oct 9, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> protestors are gathering... >> there's an air of tension right now... >> the crowd chanting for democracy... >> this is another significant development... >> we have an exclusive story tonight, and we go live... >> this saturday, a horrific outbreak. >> the death toll from this epidemic could be much higher than anyone knows. >> the search for answers. >> 8000 people are already dead, mr. president. who should answer for those people? >> who brought cholera to haiti? >> so you don't have to explain yourselves? >> no. >> "faultlines". al jazeera america's hard-hitting, >> today, they will be arrested. >> groundbreaking, >> the
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. thank you for your answer he doctor. >> thanks joie. >> when we return, playing the field, "america tonight's" shoiz osarahhoye and how those tragedy be changing the game. >>> later on the program, as iowa goes, so goes the senate? >> 1-2-3 four, who you gonna vote for? >> in an otherwise bucolic background, michael okwu, what's at stake on america votes 2014. >> protestors are gathering... >>...
217
217
Oct 30, 2014
10/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 217
favorite 0
quote 0
at an event in vanderbilt last night, he said ebola -- obama's ebola response looked very incompetent to begin with, and that fueled fears that may not be justified. and now you have sfats are legitimately acting on their concerns, creating a lot more confusion than is necessary. howard fineman, and ron reagan, an msnbc contributor. i want to start with this. let's look at christie who is incapable of passing up a chance to take a shot at president obama. this is christie today defending his quarantine idea. >> i think folks should understand. part of the sacrifice is going there -- when you come home, health care worker directly exposed to the virus are now members have to be quarantined. qulong they'll give us seven-minute lectures. just get to work. >> christie was also showing he would throw a punch at just about anybody in the room. i want to show you this tape. here he is going after a bystander talking about something completely different. let's watch it. >> somebody like you doesn't know a dam thing about what you're talking about except to stand up and show up when the camera
at an event in vanderbilt last night, he said ebola -- obama's ebola response looked very incompetent to begin with, and that fueled fears that may not be justified. and now you have sfats are legitimately acting on their concerns, creating a lot more confusion than is necessary. howard fineman, and ron reagan, an msnbc contributor. i want to start with this. let's look at christie who is incapable of passing up a chance to take a shot at president obama. this is christie today defending his...
44
44
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> joining us on american history tv is kevin kim, a senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt university. what can you tell us about the book you're writing? >> it is mainly a political history of the cold war from the perspective of hemy wallace and herbert hoover. the full working title now is "worlds unseen, henry wallace, herbert hoover, and the rise of cold war america." it really uses these two figures as vehicles for exploring what the cold war, how it felt, how it was experienced, how it was thought about as a very contested, vibrant, phenomenon. and it starts, you know, focuses on these two figures with their biographies, what made them tick, their upbringing, their early political careers, but the heart really focuses on their experiences first in world war ii because it is a pivotal event as i hope to explain in the book for how both men saw the cold war coming. and the cold war from its inception up to vietnam which is when both men are in their later years and sadly pass away. >> what does "worlds unseen" mean in the context of the cold war? >> it has a couple different mean
. >> joining us on american history tv is kevin kim, a senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt university. what can you tell us about the book you're writing? >> it is mainly a political history of the cold war from the perspective of hemy wallace and herbert hoover. the full working title now is "worlds unseen, henry wallace, herbert hoover, and the rise of cold war america." it really uses these two figures as vehicles for exploring what the cold war, how it felt, how...
52
52
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 52
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> joining us on american history tv is kevin kim, a senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt. what can you tell us about the book you are writing? -- it is mainly a political history of the cold war from the perspective of henry wallace and herbert hoover whose working title is "worlds unseen." figuresy uses these two as vehicles for exploring what the cold war, how it felt, how it was experienced, how it was thought about as a vibrant phenomenon. it starts focusing on these two figures, their biographies, what made them tick, their upbringing. at the heart of it, it focuses on their experiences in world war ii, because it is a pivotal event for how both men saw the coming, and then the cold war, focusing from its inception in late world war ii up until vietnam, which is about when both men are in their later years and pass away. unseen" meanrlds in the context of the cold war? >> it has a couple different meanings. the broadest meaning is that ,oth men did stand for things for worlds that literally didn't come to pass. that aspect is true. they both envisioned and fought for
. >> joining us on american history tv is kevin kim, a senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt. what can you tell us about the book you are writing? -- it is mainly a political history of the cold war from the perspective of henry wallace and herbert hoover whose working title is "worlds unseen." figuresy uses these two as vehicles for exploring what the cold war, how it felt, how it was experienced, how it was thought about as a vibrant phenomenon. it starts focusing on these...
49
49
Oct 20, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
on americans history tv is kevin kim, senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt university. what can you tell us about the book you are writing? that is mainly a political and intellectual history of the cold war from the perspective of henry wallace and herbert hoover. worldsking title is unseen, henry wallace, herbert hoover, and the rise of cold war america. it uses these figures as vehicles for exploring the cold war, how was experienced and thought about as a very contested, barbara phenomenon. it starts because it's focused on these two figures, their biographies, what made them tick, their upbringing. their political careers, but the heart of it focuses on their experiences first in world war ii, and because it is a pivotal event, how both men saw the cold war coming, and in the cold war focusing from its inception in ,ate world war ii of to vietnam which is when both men are in their later years and sadly passed away. >> what did worlds unseen mean in the context of the cold war? >> it has a couple of different meanings, and the first one, i think with the broadest m
on americans history tv is kevin kim, senior lecturer in history at vanderbilt university. what can you tell us about the book you are writing? that is mainly a political and intellectual history of the cold war from the perspective of henry wallace and herbert hoover. worldsking title is unseen, henry wallace, herbert hoover, and the rise of cold war america. it uses these figures as vehicles for exploring the cold war, how was experienced and thought about as a very contested, barbara...
59
59
Oct 26, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 59
favorite 0
quote 0
basketball player, didn't mean wallace want to go to vanderbilt. his whole life he had wanted to get out of the south, to get out of segregation. .. and that is what interested him. so it wasn't because he would be a pioneering make history. it was in spite of it. the mac watch this and other programs on line at the tv to work. >> kristin o'keeffe recounts the life of an 18th century reconstruct researchers, dr. thomas stenson router. the author examines the medical practices which include use of anesthesia, pre-and postoperative care in the operating room. it's about 45 minutes. [applause] >> thank you for coming tonight. it's an honor to introduce kristen. she's one of my oldest friends in the world did we met 18 years ago last month at the old alamo draft house that got demolished at the poetry slam when she was running good slant in cbg piece when she was 18, nick junior sold. she's been working on this book almost the entire time we've known each other. she started screenwriting at nyu and discovered the story i wrote an amazing screenplay and
basketball player, didn't mean wallace want to go to vanderbilt. his whole life he had wanted to get out of the south, to get out of segregation. .. and that is what interested him. so it wasn't because he would be a pioneering make history. it was in spite of it. the mac watch this and other programs on line at the tv to work. >> kristin o'keeffe recounts the life of an 18th century reconstruct researchers, dr. thomas stenson router. the author examines the medical practices which...
165
165
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 165
favorite 0
quote 1
william shaffner, who is head of the department of family medicine at vanderbilt university and also,nior associate at the pittsburgh medical center, and dr. robert macgregor-skinner remains with us. so dr. shaffner, can you talk to us about the breach of protocol, and explain to us exactly what that means to you about what happened? >> well, something obviously inadvertent happened, because the nurse to date has not reported an overt breach, and her colleagues working with her have not reported that a breach took place. however, this is early days in the investigation, and if subsequent information comes out, we will find it. as many of us have said, the most hazardous moment is actually when you are going on break, when you are off of your shift, and after working in the intensive environment like this with all of the protective equipment, you are eager to take it off. and you need to be with a buddy, because that moment of disrobing is the most hazardous. it is more hazardous there than taking care of the patient. >> dr. hidalgia, can you tell us how is it that the nurse involved s
william shaffner, who is head of the department of family medicine at vanderbilt university and also,nior associate at the pittsburgh medical center, and dr. robert macgregor-skinner remains with us. so dr. shaffner, can you talk to us about the breach of protocol, and explain to us exactly what that means to you about what happened? >> well, something obviously inadvertent happened, because the nurse to date has not reported an overt breach, and her colleagues working with her have not...
200
200
Oct 5, 2014
10/14
by
KPIX
tv
eye 200
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner is an infectious disease specialist at vanderbilt university. >> if children get anness and infection and have underlying medical conditions that make them more frail, it's the urntd lying medical condition that will determine the outcome. the vast majority of these children are doing perfectly well. >> reporter: the mayor there says the boy's name was ely and his personality leapt off the page. he has two siblings and both parents are educators. the school district is inviting parents to a meeting tomorrow night. there is no vaccine for the virus. and another child who goes to the same school as ely is now being tested for the virus. michelle. >> mark albert, thank you. a day after isis released a video of the beheading of british hostage alan henning, the parents of an american hostage are making a video appeal for their son's release. charlie d'agata in london has more on the desperate effort to spare a fifth western hostage from execution. >> reporter: isis militants say he's next, 26-year-old american peter kasig, to changed his name to abdul rahman while in cap
william schaffner is an infectious disease specialist at vanderbilt university. >> if children get anness and infection and have underlying medical conditions that make them more frail, it's the urntd lying medical condition that will determine the outcome. the vast majority of these children are doing perfectly well. >> reporter: the mayor there says the boy's name was ely and his personality leapt off the page. he has two siblings and both parents are educators. the school...
129
129
Oct 3, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: in nashville at vanderbilt university medical center researcher say they are working day and night to try to develop antibodies from people who survive ebola. dr. james crow hopes his research leads to new treatment for the virus. >> that we can actually manufacture or produce the naturally occurring antibodies the patients made themselves and then we have those as a protein we can give as a drug. >> reporter: dr. fauci says experimental drugs are not the tion to this outbreak. >> healthcare providers, field hospitals, equipment, identifying, isolating, treating, contact tracing, that's how the epidemic will end. >> reporter: susan mcguiness, cbs news, bethesda. >> we contacted nine of the major hospital groups in our area to see if they'd gotten the latest protocols for ebola and put them into practice and so far we've gotten answers from three. the responses are on www.wusa9.com. >> - oh, the young. their energy seems like an unlimited resource we sometimes wish would run out, at least for a moment. but as we grow into adults, it's important to learn how to use our ener
. >> reporter: in nashville at vanderbilt university medical center researcher say they are working day and night to try to develop antibodies from people who survive ebola. dr. james crow hopes his research leads to new treatment for the virus. >> that we can actually manufacture or produce the naturally occurring antibodies the patients made themselves and then we have those as a protein we can give as a drug. >> reporter: dr. fauci says experimental drugs are not the tion...
79
79
Oct 23, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
pullman, you had jpmorgan, you had the vanderbilts, the carneghe's, you had the rockefellers, you had the kennedys. now we don't have those individuals but we have the multinational corporations. so you know, jpmorgan is replaced by wal-mart. ka carnaghis replaced by young brands. rockefellers replaced by amazon. and the kennedys, bastards, have been like -- excuse me, have been replaced by disney. so you have these multinational corporations who are doing the same thing that these robber barons did in the 20th century. they don't want to give living wages. they don't want to give workers any dignity. they don't want to give work rs respect. they don't want to recognize union. what we need to do now in 21st century is what our brothers and sisters from the fight for 150, fight, fight for moving forward, fight for what wal-mart is doing, move on not just a local but a national and international scale. and look at the issues of inequality and how the 1% are controlling 99% of our economy. and when all of this is going on, you see that people are rising up. workers from all over the worl
pullman, you had jpmorgan, you had the vanderbilts, the carneghe's, you had the rockefellers, you had the kennedys. now we don't have those individuals but we have the multinational corporations. so you know, jpmorgan is replaced by wal-mart. ka carnaghis replaced by young brands. rockefellers replaced by amazon. and the kennedys, bastards, have been like -- excuse me, have been replaced by disney. so you have these multinational corporations who are doing the same thing that these robber...
148
148
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 148
favorite 0
quote 0
william shaffner, chairman of the department of preventive medicine at vanderbilt university. doctor, i want to start with you. do you see the spread of this as a realistic possibility? we know that containment is a big part of being able to control this disease. have they been able, do you think, to contain this in dallas? >> you know, the answer is i think we've always expected that there may be another individual who will come down with the ebola from the transmission of this one particular person and we always felt that it was going to likely be one of his close contacts or one of the health care workers because that's the way this virus works. it's usually a disease that is spread to close family members or to the people who care for that individual. i will tell you that the fact that we identified this individual so quickly is actually to me a sign that the system is working, that we are able to contain it, because we knew who this person was. we knew that he was a person, and we know all the people that have been taking care of mr. duncan who had the ebola disease. so w
william shaffner, chairman of the department of preventive medicine at vanderbilt university. doctor, i want to start with you. do you see the spread of this as a realistic possibility? we know that containment is a big part of being able to control this disease. have they been able, do you think, to contain this in dallas? >> you know, the answer is i think we've always expected that there may be another individual who will come down with the ebola from the transmission of this one...
172
172
Oct 4, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: in nashville at vanderbilt university medical center researchers say they're working day and night trying to develop antibodies from people who survive ebola. dr. james crow hopes his research will lead to new treatments for the virus. >> so we can actually manufacture or reproduce the naturally occurring antibodies the patients made themselves and then those we can give as a drug. >> reporter: dr. fauci says while current research is encouraging, experimental drugs are not the solution to this outbreak. >> healthcare providers, field hospitals, equipment, identifying, isolating, treating, contact tracing is how the epidemic will end. >> reporter: nih has clinical trials underway testing a vaccine that would prevent ebola. now doctors treated another american, dr. richard sacra, with an experimental drug and gave him a serum of antibodies from blood of dr. brantly. >>> the united states will have another ebola patient to treat, nbc cameraman ashoka mukpo. he will come back to the united states for treatment. what does a mother feel in times like this? >> fear. sad that i
. >> reporter: in nashville at vanderbilt university medical center researchers say they're working day and night trying to develop antibodies from people who survive ebola. dr. james crow hopes his research will lead to new treatments for the virus. >> so we can actually manufacture or reproduce the naturally occurring antibodies the patients made themselves and then those we can give as a drug. >> reporter: dr. fauci says while current research is encouraging, experimental...
150
150
Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
WPSG
tv
eye 150
favorite 0
quote 1
making a move on the offensive line today releasing former pro bowler wade smith, resigning julian vanderbilt plays both guard and center and he'll serve as a backup along the line until some of those injured eagles can return. thursday night football should be a great game this week. afc east matchup between the jets and patriots. jets coming in with a one and five record but you don't throw out those records when you can come to a division game. pregame coverage starts right here on cbs3 at 7:30. >>> what should be our game of the week for the friday football frenzy? we have a big delaware matchup between saint mark's and salesianum or go the our audio road show on that on where you think we >> got a story you would like us to investigate? e-mail your ideas to i-team at cbs3.com. >> ♪ >> it is the picture perfect way to purchase everything from clothes to lightbulbs. three on your side consumer reporter jim donovan shows you the latest way to buy exactly what you want in a snap. you'll see how tonight on "eyewitness news" at 11:00. >>> it is official. george clooney's wife amal amal alamudd
making a move on the offensive line today releasing former pro bowler wade smith, resigning julian vanderbilt plays both guard and center and he'll serve as a backup along the line until some of those injured eagles can return. thursday night football should be a great game this week. afc east matchup between the jets and patriots. jets coming in with a one and five record but you don't throw out those records when you can come to a division game. pregame coverage starts right here on cbs3 at...
101
101
Oct 16, 2014
10/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
we at vanderbilt have been training our own personnel in the emergency room and our intensive care units and if such a person came to our doors, we'd feel we could take care of them effectively and safely. it would require a lot of attention, but we think we can do that. and i'm sure there are many other hospitals across the country who feel the same way. >> well, mary, with regard to the training and the preparation, matt lauer had a pretty remarkable interview with a nurse from texas health presbyterian about how unprepared they were for this crisis. let's take a listen. >> i would imagine when you have a possible ebola patient walking into an emergency room given all the attention that had been paid to the ebola crisis and the fear of it coming into the united states that it would be some kind of code red that there be a lockdown that emergency protocols would be put immediately into place. is that what you experienced? >> well, first, i think we've all been watching too much tv. because we never talked about ebola and we probably should have. >> you never talked about it prior to mr.
we at vanderbilt have been training our own personnel in the emergency room and our intensive care units and if such a person came to our doors, we'd feel we could take care of them effectively and safely. it would require a lot of attention, but we think we can do that. and i'm sure there are many other hospitals across the country who feel the same way. >> well, mary, with regard to the training and the preparation, matt lauer had a pretty remarkable interview with a nurse from texas...
78
78
Oct 11, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
ii story where fdr is now president, and he's using his friends, really, jacob aster, and robert vanderbiltve a group of very well connected men who work out of a room that the vanderbilts own in a building on 63rd street, and they're an informal spy network before america goes to war, trying to put the pieces together for fdr, before pearl harbor. >> you mention one of the german culprits, and you said that his father was a civil war hero. >> a medal of honor winner. >> right, and you said they were involved. was the father involved in this? >> the father was not involved. his brother and his sister were involved. the father died, but you know, you pick up the papers today, and the fear is that someone from isis will have an american passport, will be an american kid from detroit or wherever and he's now going to work with the enemy and he'll be able to go right through security because he's an american. there's no way to stop him. well, that's what the germans did. they got -- and tom dillinger, who was an american citizen, had an american passport, was able to come here, didn't have to t
ii story where fdr is now president, and he's using his friends, really, jacob aster, and robert vanderbiltve a group of very well connected men who work out of a room that the vanderbilts own in a building on 63rd street, and they're an informal spy network before america goes to war, trying to put the pieces together for fdr, before pearl harbor. >> you mention one of the german culprits, and you said that his father was a civil war hero. >> a medal of honor winner. >>...
169
169
Oct 31, 2014
10/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 169
favorite 0
quote 0
. ♪ half a mill sons live like vanderbilt ♪ ♪ an soon as they can reach the wheel ♪ ♪ go on everybody >> other anchors got ready, rosie treated the audience of "the view" with a little freestyling. >>> "way too early" with thomas rock ert roberts starts now. >> we said we would not stop until frein was brought to justice and held to answer for his alleged heinous crimes. tonight we have a sense of closure, especially for the families of trooper dickson and dougla douglass, and also the community itself. an alleged cop killer has been taken into custody, and placed in happened cuffs. this individual is no longer a threat to this community. and is now behind bars. he has been stripped of his guns, his bombs and now his freedom. >> captured, a 48 day manhunt comes to an end as suspected cop killer eric frein is found and arrested. the midterm elections may be just four days away, but ted cruz is worried about 2016. why he thinks moderate republicans will lose to hillary clinton. >>> and record treat. this super friendly scarecrow terrifies everybody he comes in contact with. boo, this is
. ♪ half a mill sons live like vanderbilt ♪ ♪ an soon as they can reach the wheel ♪ ♪ go on everybody >> other anchors got ready, rosie treated the audience of "the view" with a little freestyling. >>> "way too early" with thomas rock ert roberts starts now. >> we said we would not stop until frein was brought to justice and held to answer for his alleged heinous crimes. tonight we have a sense of closure, especially for the families of trooper...
33
33
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i'm a -- at vanderbilt in sociology so i love your book. >> thanks. >> i have a question about it. you have one chapter on wifes we wives and girlfriends, and what struck me is women are always defined in relationship to men and there wasn't a huge focus on what the intersection of race and gender was doing to women rather -- without the relationship to men. so i wondering if you could talk about that and all the folks talk about how gender intersects with race in what you do, and also -- i'm curious about being -- in the transition to wisconsin, and so i'm curious about how the transition to madison is shaping your work, and how being in a new place is shaping your work on race and inequality. >> yes. so, i guess the way i think about gender in the book is -- it's a great question, by the way. so i think -- i don't have women just all grouped into one chapter and this is a chapter on women. there's women everywhere, talking all kinds of different roles. so, it didn't -- i didn't think about it as like the women chapter. the point of the chapter was to -- what i had read about wom
. >> i'm a -- at vanderbilt in sociology so i love your book. >> thanks. >> i have a question about it. you have one chapter on wifes we wives and girlfriends, and what struck me is women are always defined in relationship to men and there wasn't a huge focus on what the intersection of race and gender was doing to women rather -- without the relationship to men. so i wondering if you could talk about that and all the folks talk about how gender intersects with race in what...
124
124
Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
KYW
tv
eye 124
favorite 0
quote 0
they released former pro bowler smith and resigned vanderbilt.e'll be back up along that line until some of the injured eagles return. thursday night football should be great this week we have have afc matchup between the jets and patriots. the jets come into foxboro with a one and five record but throw out that record when it comes to division game. pre-game coverage starts right here on cbs-3 at 7:30. >>> and our game of the week for the friday football frenzy. a big delaware matchup go to our audio road show app vote and you will see beasley there friday night. >> cardinals and giants in game three of the nlcs the giants had the lead that's until the seventh. randall homers to left. that will tie up the game at four. this game will go into extra innings. and leave it to blanco with the bunt. randy throws the away. giants go up two-one in the series with a five-four win. we'll be right back. ♪ >> we want to update you now on breaking news and it is good news tonight. the amber alert for this little girl has now been canceled in trenton as polic
they released former pro bowler smith and resigned vanderbilt.e'll be back up along that line until some of the injured eagles return. thursday night football should be great this week we have have afc matchup between the jets and patriots. the jets come into foxboro with a one and five record but throw out that record when it comes to division game. pre-game coverage starts right here on cbs-3 at 7:30. >>> and our game of the week for the friday football frenzy. a big delaware matchup...
239
239
Oct 3, 2014
10/14
by
WUSA
tv
eye 239
favorite 0
quote 0
the third-year man out of vanderbilt.: casey hayward you look at this green bay team, they're short of players up front. but linebackers, defensive backs, they are deep. we saw that during the preseason. we thought they were going to be deep on the defensive line, but they've had some injuries, and of course the one they lost in the third preseason game when we were here was b.j. raji kind of unsettled them a little bit. jim: pondser. somehow got it away to banyard. banyard makes the catch. as ponder somehow escaped another sack. phil: really good job makes the decision he's not going to be able to make it if he tries to escape the pocket. jim: first and goal to go at the 9. to banyard. they call a time-out. phil: yeah. jim: when you think about the packers and the vikings think of all their history and the one part of it that they shared, brett favre. two seasons with minnesota. phil: that's pretty impressive. jim: he's the last vikings quarterback to win a game at lambeau field. back in 2009. phil: i came up here and sa
the third-year man out of vanderbilt.: casey hayward you look at this green bay team, they're short of players up front. but linebackers, defensive backs, they are deep. we saw that during the preseason. we thought they were going to be deep on the defensive line, but they've had some injuries, and of course the one they lost in the third preseason game when we were here was b.j. raji kind of unsettled them a little bit. jim: pondser. somehow got it away to banyard. banyard makes the catch. as...
239
239
tv
eye 239
favorite 0
quote 0
the third-year man out of vanderbilt. phil: casey hayward, you look at this green bay team, they're short of players up front. but linebackers, defensive backs, they are deep. we saw that during the preseason. we thought they were going to be deep on the defensive line, but they've had some injuries, and of course the one they lost in the third preseason game when we were here was b.j. raji, kind of unsettled them a little bit. jim: pondser. somehow got it away to banyard. banyard makes the catch. as ponder somehow escaped another sack. phil: really good job, makes the decision, he's not going to be able to make it if he tries to escape the pocket. jim: first and goal to go at the 9. to banyard. they call a time-out. phil: yeah. jim: when you think about the packers and the vikings, think of all their history and the one part of it that they shared, brett favre. two seasons with minnesota. phil: that's pretty impressive. jim: he's the last vikings quarterback to win a game at lambeau field. back in 2009. phil: i came up h
the third-year man out of vanderbilt. phil: casey hayward, you look at this green bay team, they're short of players up front. but linebackers, defensive backs, they are deep. we saw that during the preseason. we thought they were going to be deep on the defensive line, but they've had some injuries, and of course the one they lost in the third preseason game when we were here was b.j. raji, kind of unsettled them a little bit. jim: pondser. somehow got it away to banyard. banyard makes the...
215
215
Oct 25, 2014
10/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 215
favorite 0
quote 0
he is the son of gloria vanderbilt. >> i am a new yorker, but telling you the truth. and this guy is a reporter himself. you should know better. you may as well got behind anderson cooper and yell baba-boe. >> should anderson help him get his job back? >> no. 9 worse thing he accused him of is exploiting him. you are a reporter and he is a reporter covering news. you can't as a reporter -- accuse another exploiter would do. if you don't know that you are in the wrong business. >> i have nothing to say. it is so obvious. >> this show was built on conversation, father. if everybody says what is to say and i am left with nothing. >> i thought this was a serious p co int by the way. it says in the catholic church there are -- people get chosen to do different projects. by coming on the show, the purpose is to make sure i never get qhoasen more -- chosen for. >> you are saying you don't like rome. >> no interest in becoming pope? >> exactly. >> imagine the youtube video i'm with you guys and it is a sad thing. when you get to a certain point -- >> no, i thought this was is
he is the son of gloria vanderbilt. >> i am a new yorker, but telling you the truth. and this guy is a reporter himself. you should know better. you may as well got behind anderson cooper and yell baba-boe. >> should anderson help him get his job back? >> no. 9 worse thing he accused him of is exploiting him. you are a reporter and he is a reporter covering news. you can't as a reporter -- accuse another exploiter would do. if you don't know that you are in the wrong business....
64
64
Oct 14, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. >> thank you joie. >> when we return, a mother's fears. >> towards the end of the pregnancy i was so terrified to social services and her being born addicted and the consequences of what could happen to her if she was born addicted. >> "america tonight's" sheila macvicar, following up on a controversial law and what's more to it. young offenders, convicted of drug crimes in tennessee. so many money stories sound complicated. but don't worry. i'm here to take the fear out of finance. every night on my show i break down confusing financial speak and make it real. e-righter may not be -- e-reader may not be as good as a plain old fashioned book. top of the ho hour. >> in the last few years prosecutors have been going after another target, pregnant women. maint's sheil "america tonight's" sheila macvicar has been following this closely. >> a woman who visited a meth lab was sentenced to 12 years in prison, half of that sentence six years was solely because she was pregnant at the time. a coalition of activists has sent a letter to attorney ge
william schaffner, from vanderbilt university. >> thank you joie. >> when we return, a mother's fears. >> towards the end of the pregnancy i was so terrified to social services and her being born addicted and the consequences of what could happen to her if she was born addicted. >> "america tonight's" sheila macvicar, following up on a controversial law and what's more to it. young offenders, convicted of drug crimes in tennessee. so many money stories sound...
44
44
Oct 1, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 44
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> infectious disease expert dr william shav ner reviolence us from vanderbilt university. thank you for joining us. it's not clear if there's a link between entero virus and the paralysis. why are doctors concerned? >> we are concerned because of paralitic disease. that's a concern - concern for the patients and their families. if there is a causal relationship, we want to know it. if it's not the entero virus, what is if. one thing or several things in coincidence. we need to be good disease detectives. >> the thing that we think about, polio, this illness that almost inevitably results in paralysis, there are other kined of paralysis that occurs, how does it happen, what happens. it goes into the muscle? >> not no the muscle, but the spinal cord and infects the cells in the spinal cord that controls the movement. if there's inflammation around the cells or they are destroyed by the virus, the signal to move doesn't come and so the muscle lies there flaccid. >> so theoretically the entero virus could go from what we thing of being an intestinal gut illness, making its way
. >> infectious disease expert dr william shav ner reviolence us from vanderbilt university. thank you for joining us. it's not clear if there's a link between entero virus and the paralysis. why are doctors concerned? >> we are concerned because of paralitic disease. that's a concern - concern for the patients and their families. if there is a causal relationship, we want to know it. if it's not the entero virus, what is if. one thing or several things in coincidence. we need to be...
134
134
Oct 10, 2014
10/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 134
favorite 0
quote 0
it is a study coming from vanderbilt.eds of players and if you are a football player and center have contact sports you have twice the risk of getting mrsa. it can kill people and a deadly one. >> what are the symptoms and how do you know you have it? >> they would have fever and body aches and it spreads and caused infection and hit the organs. >> how dow treat it? >> antibiotic is supposeed to knock it out. but there is a lot of resistance because of the overdoing of antibiotics. this will not be a problem unless there is a cut or abrasion and then it causes a problem. for the most part, players can carry the bug without having other issues. but if it is in the blood system it is a problem. >> how dow know you have it as opposed of the flu. >> they don't know unless they swab the mouth or throat. >> the body is fighting it. pregnant women and immune compromised and elderly have a problem. the players should not share soap and towels. >> they should do fencing. you are covered. >> and backgammon. >> that's true. and now
it is a study coming from vanderbilt.eds of players and if you are a football player and center have contact sports you have twice the risk of getting mrsa. it can kill people and a deadly one. >> what are the symptoms and how do you know you have it? >> they would have fever and body aches and it spreads and caused infection and hit the organs. >> how dow treat it? >> antibiotic is supposeed to knock it out. but there is a lot of resistance because of the overdoing of...
46
46
Oct 11, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
ii story where fdr is now president, and he's using his friends, really, jacob aster, and robert vanderbilt, they have a group of very well connected men who work out of a room that the vanderbilts own in a building on 63rd street, and they're an informal spy network before america goes to war, trying to put the pieces together for fdr, before pearl harbor. >> you mention one of the german culprits, and you said that his father was a civil war hero. >> a medal of honor winner. >> right, and you said they were involved. was the father involved in this? >> the father was not involved. his brother and his sister were involved. the father died, but you know, you pick up the papers today, and the fear is that someone from isis will have an american passport, will be an american kid from detroit or wherever and he's now going to work with the enemy and he'll be able to go right through security because he's an american. there's no way to stop him. well, that's what the germans did. they got -- and tom dillinger, who was an american citizen, had an american passport, was able to come here, didn't
ii story where fdr is now president, and he's using his friends, really, jacob aster, and robert vanderbilt, they have a group of very well connected men who work out of a room that the vanderbilts own in a building on 63rd street, and they're an informal spy network before america goes to war, trying to put the pieces together for fdr, before pearl harbor. >> you mention one of the german culprits, and you said that his father was a civil war hero. >> a medal of honor winner....
63
63
Oct 5, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
american history since the gilded age in the late 19th century the age of the rockefellers and the vanderbilt, these titans. what the federal government can do when we think about ferguson would be whether it's a great society or an urban renewal program. what's interesting is that what impact white americans as well and latinos. the reason why i say that as americans we should think about black equality because even the new deal and great society because of institutional racism black equality was not actually achieved even though there were these huge federal mandates. in 2014 because we are aware of racial injustice we should have huge federal programs that achieve things of social justice for everyone. i think the federal government can do a whole lot not just for black equality but just for poverty in the united states. >> guest: i'm going to agree with that but let's take a it a step further. the new deal did a lot for a lot of people but it took truman's fair deal to implement so much of that. if you recall from the new deal and i know you know this much better than i do roosevelt did a
american history since the gilded age in the late 19th century the age of the rockefellers and the vanderbilt, these titans. what the federal government can do when we think about ferguson would be whether it's a great society or an urban renewal program. what's interesting is that what impact white americans as well and latinos. the reason why i say that as americans we should think about black equality because even the new deal and great society because of institutional racism black equality...
112
112
Oct 4, 2014
10/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 112
favorite 0
quote 0
william shatner from vanderbilt in nashville. good to have you back. >> hello victor.th you. >> considering thomas duncan lied on the form, got into the country. went to the hospital sick. and they sent him home and then left him home with his family in sweaty sheets and towels, are you confident the u.s. is ready to prevent this becoming an outbreak? >> actually i am. and we have to recognize there were some glitches, what we haven't talked about is the there was things done really well. the contact tracing. that is being done wonderfully by the local people in association with people from the cdc. those people have been identified. they are under surveillance and that is the really important part. yes, the environmental aspects, the apartment such as you mentioned victor, that is part of it. but actually the risk from that is very, very low. this is a very wilmingtonpy vir -- wimpy virus. once it gets out of body it deteriorates very quickly. it was unpleasant, etc. we all have to figure how do that in a much more expeditious fashion. but there is not going to be an
william shatner from vanderbilt in nashville. good to have you back. >> hello victor.th you. >> considering thomas duncan lied on the form, got into the country. went to the hospital sick. and they sent him home and then left him home with his family in sweaty sheets and towels, are you confident the u.s. is ready to prevent this becoming an outbreak? >> actually i am. and we have to recognize there were some glitches, what we haven't talked about is the there was things done...
77
77
Oct 19, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
ken macleish, i'm an anthropologist, and i teach in the program medicine, health and society at vanderbilt university, and my research and the subject of my book, making war at fort hood, is the question of how people experience war and military institutions in their daily lives. i'm interested in the ways that people experience war as something that is normal and routine and highly organized even as it's also incredibly intense, overwhelming and traumatic. and my research and writing are mostly based on time that i spent at fort hood, an army base in central texas that i imagine a lot of folks have heard of. it's one of the largest and busiest military installations in the world and one of the most centrally-important u.s. military installations to the wars in iraq and afghanistan. and it's a place where for that reason war is really close to everyday life. the, through a combination of things like lengthy and repeated deployments that can last for 12 months, for 15 months, sometimes even longer than that, often with a year or far less time in between, all sorts of conditions that people
ken macleish, i'm an anthropologist, and i teach in the program medicine, health and society at vanderbilt university, and my research and the subject of my book, making war at fort hood, is the question of how people experience war and military institutions in their daily lives. i'm interested in the ways that people experience war as something that is normal and routine and highly organized even as it's also incredibly intense, overwhelming and traumatic. and my research and writing are...