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Jun 6, 2014
06/14
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ALJAZAM
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in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closed up shop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. you're watching inside story, i'm ray suarez. there has been concern in the great recession about wages. in more than six years after the recession began the average worker has seen a raise of $20 a week. slim paychecks have meant less money to spend. businesses whose customers are spending less can find more equipment, hire more employees. you get the idea. and did you realize how pad things were going to get when this all first started? >> no. in fact, like a lot of thigh friends in business i felt like we weathered the recession with the tech crash, and we weathered the early 90s, when i started, and i felt like we've got an answer to this, and
in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closed up shop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. you're watching inside story, i'm ray...
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Jun 7, 2014
06/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 38
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in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closed up shop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. >> every saturday join us for exclusive, revealing, and surprising talks with the most interesting people of our time. grammy award winning singer, songwriter angelique kidjo >> music transforms lives of people >> inspiring strength >> read, be curious your brain is your ultimate weapon >> hope for the future >> the only thing that can transform my continent is girl's education >> talk to aljazeera only on al jazeera america >> tomorrow on the stream. the superstars. >> i love the underdog role, it's us against the world. we have this fight and this pride to play for the country. >> pushing for success. >> we've gone so far forward, the game's rea
in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closed up shop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. >> every saturday join us for...
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Jun 7, 2014
06/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 103
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in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closedshop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. >> misbehaving children locked up doing time while they should be in school. >> they have to prepare for jail >> throwing away our future >> we're using the same failed policies in districts throughout the country >> are we failing our kids? fault lines al jazeera america's hard hitting... >> they're locking the doors... >> ground breaking... >> we have to get out of here... >> truth seeking... award winning investigative documentary series fault lines the school to prison pipeline only on al jazeera america >> today on the stream. the superstars. >> i love the underdog role, it's us against the world. we have this fight and this pride to play for the
in western massachusetts, for example, there are lots of towns where during the recession companies closedshop. they left. they outsourced, and those towns are struggling. there are lower level of jobs that have come back-to-back fill. >> we'll come back and talk about older workers who are retiring a lot earlier than they planned, and younger workers who are having a tough time getting their careers going. this is inside story. stay with us. >> misbehaving children locked up doing...
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Jun 2, 2014
06/14
by
CSPAN2
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as a young man, he studied the trolley network which was really electricity, right, of western massachusetts and what it did to commerce. and in that time you could take the trolley to amherst there north ham on the and back again, and -- northampton and there were three or four different lines of train you could take from boston in to western mass. if you're interested in trains, a lot of us are interested in trains because as vain as we are about the success of our internet network and our linking, we've failed in trains and in some areas of electricity, right? so i see a ton modern in coolidge. the other thing he liked was aviation, aviation wasn't unmodern, right? he believed in aviation as a vehicle of diplomacy. he sent charles lindbergh down to mexico. and i'll say finally to those technicians who say history's old and retrograde, those are the same technicians whose stocks were really challenged in the market crisis, because they were unacquire that policy -- unaware that policy and the history behind policy could affect stock prices. history affects stock prices. it affects bond pri
as a young man, he studied the trolley network which was really electricity, right, of western massachusetts and what it did to commerce. and in that time you could take the trolley to amherst there north ham on the and back again, and -- northampton and there were three or four different lines of train you could take from boston in to western mass. if you're interested in trains, a lot of us are interested in trains because as vain as we are about the success of our internet network and our...
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886
Jun 19, 2014
06/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 886
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we were married in lennox, massachusetts, western massachusetts years ago. >> look at how happy you look doesn't remember that because instead of first dance, he had no pants. >> right. that's true. everyone remembers different things. >> he sure did. no pants kilmeade. >> i got some news to bring you now. the redskins saying that the fight is not over. they were dealt a legal blow that could soon force the team to take on a new name. the owner of the team says he still will not change it. u.s. patent and trademark office stripping the team of their trademark registration, saying the redskins' name is, quote, disparaging to native americans. but what exactly does this mean? fox news' senior judicial analyst, judge andrew napolitano, joined us earlier to explain the ruling. listen to this. >> by challenging it, that means they want to remove federal protection for the trademark. federal protection for the trademark means nobody else can use the name in a similar vein. no other team could call itself the redskins. >> the redskins said they will appeal that decision. napolitano expects the
we were married in lennox, massachusetts, western massachusetts years ago. >> look at how happy you look doesn't remember that because instead of first dance, he had no pants. >> right. that's true. everyone remembers different things. >> he sure did. no pants kilmeade. >> i got some news to bring you now. the redskins saying that the fight is not over. they were dealt a legal blow that could soon force the team to take on a new name. the owner of the team says he still...
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122
Jun 27, 2014
06/14
by
KPIX
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western edition. the supreme court was unanimous in a pair of rulings today-- one on the rights of protesters, the other on presidential authority. in the first case, the justices struck down a massachusetts law that prevented antiabortion activists from getting anywhere near the entrances of clinics. jan crawford is covering the court. >> you can't control it! >> reporter: massachusetts said the law was necessary to protect women as they entered clinics for abortions. it requires protesters to keep their distance, off public sidewalks within 35 feet of clinic entrances. but the law also kept away people like eleanor mccullen, a massachusetts grandmother who quietly counsels women against abortion and said the law violated her right to free speech. the justices unanimously agreed, striking down the massachusetts law and calling into question similar laws across the country. in a majority opinion by chief justice john roberts, joined by the four liberal justices... >> it's never too late to change your mind. >> reporter: ...the court referred to america's historical traditions of protest, enshrined in the first amendment, which includes speech some people may not want to hear. "petitioners
western edition. the supreme court was unanimous in a pair of rulings today-- one on the rights of protesters, the other on presidential authority. in the first case, the justices struck down a massachusetts law that prevented antiabortion activists from getting anywhere near the entrances of clinics. jan crawford is covering the court. >> you can't control it! >> reporter: massachusetts said the law was necessary to protect women as they entered clinics for abortions. it requires...