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145
Mar 31, 2014
03/14
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KICU
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dennis wharton is the vp of communications at the national association of broadcasters. the reality is jsas have helped preserved local broadcasting in communities all over the country. what happens is one station which is stronger in a tv market assists a station that is failing and they are able to sell advertising for the struggling station. inevitably that results in more local news for that market and it results in better public service and a stronger, healthier station that can provide competition to the cable behemoths. the nab testified before congress that continuing to allow jsas benefits the local economies with local advertising dollars in a way that other entities such as cable, internet and mobile do not. local broadcasters are supportive of the jsa arrangements because it preserves localism and a competitive alternative to the large cable companies. sinclair broadcast group is one of the several large media companies that would be forced to sell stations if this bill does not pass and fcc chairman tom wheeler starts cracking down on jsas. sinclair has alre
dennis wharton is the vp of communications at the national association of broadcasters. the reality is jsas have helped preserved local broadcasting in communities all over the country. what happens is one station which is stronger in a tv market assists a station that is failing and they are able to sell advertising for the struggling station. inevitably that results in more local news for that market and it results in better public service and a stronger, healthier station that can provide...
45
45
Mar 26, 2014
03/14
by
KCSM
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eye 45
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fifty years ago i still don't know names east in the language of the settlers they kept saying that wharton graduate and on the acronym appeared. that was in his words is one of the news during the winter month of december. it was very cold and lost many people in the mountains of change time firstly we settled in the town of marion later in spring which develops and she can. the leader of immigrants was called kazakh lenses and threw it in silver bowl or the mall of abundance there for the people polled in high esteem because the customs and traditions. we also celebrate a traditional festival of the turks the notice holiday in that respect for traditional dishes and national bodies pushing it to the filing their own recipe. then the ninety s and performed jazz songs behind the festive table thus the time to bake as it is going to over fifty thousand tonnes while respecting t the kazakh real sr centuries old culture and language the annual student wall dedicated to notice holiday was having one of the leading universities in the united kingdom the university of warwick has extended student
fifty years ago i still don't know names east in the language of the settlers they kept saying that wharton graduate and on the acronym appeared. that was in his words is one of the news during the winter month of december. it was very cold and lost many people in the mountains of change time firstly we settled in the town of marion later in spring which develops and she can. the leader of immigrants was called kazakh lenses and threw it in silver bowl or the mall of abundance there for the...
41
41
Mar 26, 2014
03/14
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KCSM
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eye 41
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fifty years ago i still don't know names east of the language of the sceptics he kept saying that wharton graduate and an acronym that period the missing this was warned that governments during the winter month of december. it was very cold and lost many people in the mountains of things done firstly we settled in the town of marion later in spring look to the same period. the leader of immigrants was called kazakh lenses and threw it in silver bowl or the mall of abundance there for the donor people hold in high esteem because the customs and traditions we also celebrate a traditional festival of the turks to notice only the lavish the perfect additional dishes and national pockets. is it strictly following their own recipe. then the ninety s to perform kazakh sun is behind the festive table bus to come today casting is home to over fifty thousand coupons while respecting the traditions of the kazakh real sick either st result culture and language an annual student wall dedicated to notice holiday was having one of the leading universities in the united kingdom the university of warwick
fifty years ago i still don't know names east of the language of the sceptics he kept saying that wharton graduate and an acronym that period the missing this was warned that governments during the winter month of december. it was very cold and lost many people in the mountains of things done firstly we settled in the town of marion later in spring look to the same period. the leader of immigrants was called kazakh lenses and threw it in silver bowl or the mall of abundance there for the donor...
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193
Mar 14, 2014
03/14
by
KGO
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zune wharton is okay but realizes now she probably should not have fought her attacker. experience surreal saying things happened so fast, she could barely react. >> when i saw it, it kind of shook me a little bit like what the heck was i thinking. i realize, you know, he's jumping into my car, and instinctually, i don't know why, but i just tried to grab back on. >> while zune is relieved she got through this all unharmed, she says she is frustrated that the suspect, a repeat offender, was out of jail in the first place. >> we talked about that yesterday and talked about how tough she was. >> right, and what was going through her mind. good she probably regrets the reaction. not the safest plan. >>> a peaceful end to a hockey fight to show you now. a couple of guys in a minor league in quebec, canada, were really going at it the other night. >> man, oh, man. each man throwing throwing punch after punch, and when they were both completely exhausted, you're going to see it right here, they end with a high-five, and they hugged it out. >> wow. >> oh, my goodness. >> i don'
zune wharton is okay but realizes now she probably should not have fought her attacker. experience surreal saying things happened so fast, she could barely react. >> when i saw it, it kind of shook me a little bit like what the heck was i thinking. i realize, you know, he's jumping into my car, and instinctually, i don't know why, but i just tried to grab back on. >> while zune is relieved she got through this all unharmed, she says she is frustrated that the suspect, a repeat...
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53
Mar 30, 2014
03/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 53
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neither henry james snort edith wharton whose age of innocence and the buccaneers dramatize the sameams knew that invest in the historian would find a reality ascom pelion as their fiction. [applause] i usually tell my students and ready to answer any question i know the are two. otherwise i say what teachers everywhere for millennia has that come to see me after class. [laughter] any questions? yes, sir. >> thank you for your talk. i am not very good at genealogy, but was betsy's son a second cousin of louis napoleon? >> yes. yes he was. >> he strikes me as a rather weak claim to succession. >> well, the issue was napoleon the third didn't have any children at the time they brought this. it's such a complicated story. at first, napoleon the third welcomes betsy and sharon and her son go. she calls him ofer bonaparte and says yes of course you're a member of the family and of course you belong. and man, betsy zacks has, jerome, who has a theory and vicious and truly nasty son -- i'm tempted to say he makes ted cruz looked nice, protested because pond on, this boy's name is jerome, to
neither henry james snort edith wharton whose age of innocence and the buccaneers dramatize the sameams knew that invest in the historian would find a reality ascom pelion as their fiction. [applause] i usually tell my students and ready to answer any question i know the are two. otherwise i say what teachers everywhere for millennia has that come to see me after class. [laughter] any questions? yes, sir. >> thank you for your talk. i am not very good at genealogy, but was betsy's son a...
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1.5K
Mar 9, 2014
03/14
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KPIX
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allan didn't start out as a tuba player or a tuba player collector he had just graduated from the whartonce in philadelphia when he and sandra met they were only in their 20s when they took over the hall. >> my mother was the one who sat with a wicker basket collecting the dollar bills. >> the ticket taker. >> and voucher. >> who did she have to keep out. >> in 1961, could be very scary place. especially for somebody that was celebrating african american culture. >> was it a dangerous thing to do? >> i any it was very dangerous. this was the only place in new orleans where blacks and whites were congregating openly, where there were mixed bands. that's what they referred to, black and white musicians performing to. >> really unusual in the early '60s. >> revolutionary. >> unusual throughout the whole south and illegal in louisiana which passed a law in 1956 outlawing integrated entertainment. allan broke that when he joined the band on tuba. sandra says both had to face the music for that. >> now that i would be at night court. >> tell us about that. >> we don't mix cream with our coffee
allan didn't start out as a tuba player or a tuba player collector he had just graduated from the whartonce in philadelphia when he and sandra met they were only in their 20s when they took over the hall. >> my mother was the one who sat with a wicker basket collecting the dollar bills. >> the ticket taker. >> and voucher. >> who did she have to keep out. >> in 1961, could be very scary place. especially for somebody that was celebrating african american culture....
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82
Mar 10, 2014
03/14
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CNBC
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eye 82
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and building products analyst at rbc capital markets, bob whitenhall and professor of finance at wharton, professor jeremy siegel. consider that stat. more money last year than during the financial crisis combined went out. where is all this money coming from? >> well, it's coming from how many trillions of dollars of money is in money market mutual funds that are earning a big fact zero. there is $10 trillion in savings accounts and demand deposits in banks that are earning just about zero. hey, with stocks, 2%, 3% yield and capital gains promised, i don't think it's a dumb choice at all to start moving into stocks. >> there are bulls and then there's you, professor siegel, and you are very well known as a bull. but give us your latest bullish call. where do you see the market going? where do you see all that cash, where does it push the market up to? >> well, my feeling is that the fair market value of the dow is somewhere around 18,000. fair market value of the s&p 500 is around 2,000. so we're talking about 10% to 15% above current levels and i say that from looking at the last 60 ye
and building products analyst at rbc capital markets, bob whitenhall and professor of finance at wharton, professor jeremy siegel. consider that stat. more money last year than during the financial crisis combined went out. where is all this money coming from? >> well, it's coming from how many trillions of dollars of money is in money market mutual funds that are earning a big fact zero. there is $10 trillion in savings accounts and demand deposits in banks that are earning just about...
139
139
Mar 10, 2014
03/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 139
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at that time it was the scientists -- the individuals from the "economist" i should sigh from the wharton school of economics, the m.i.t., they participated, all of the estimates were between $300 billion and $400 billion a year. now, that's something you want to be real careful of. i know every time you hear a billion dollars, it doesn't really register. doesn't really register how much that is. in my state of oklahoma, what i do at the end of each yeesh year, i get the total number of people who voted -- who file a federal tax return and then i do my math as to what it is going to cost. for $300 billion to $400 billion a year, it would cost each taxpayer in the state of oklahoma some $3,000 a year. now, that went -- that could be, you know, really significant, when you -- but not if there's a problem that they're addressing out there. however, when -- again, getting back to lisa jackson, lisa jackson, who is the obama appointee to be director of the e.p.a., i asked the question -- and this was at a hearing -- i'm sure our senator from california remembers this well, because it was in on
at that time it was the scientists -- the individuals from the "economist" i should sigh from the wharton school of economics, the m.i.t., they participated, all of the estimates were between $300 billion and $400 billion a year. now, that's something you want to be real careful of. i know every time you hear a billion dollars, it doesn't really register. doesn't really register how much that is. in my state of oklahoma, what i do at the end of each yeesh year, i get the total number...
113
113
Mar 31, 2014
03/14
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 113
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me is the deutsche bank see io economist -- senior siegel,t and jeremy university of pennsylvania whartonchool of finance professor. i will start with you, professor. on thee been so bullish market. the fed has been there to support all of it. do you continue to think we will with fed support? >> most certainly. i think she is starting to backpedal from her news conference. that was a realizes mistake. she once the market to know the fed will keep rates low for a considerable amount of time, maybe even more than six months after qe ends. you mention the market was up almost 100 points before her comments. i think a lot of people came back after the weekend. is that what is fueling the market here? is that what investors consume -- assume should continue to fuel it? were up a lot in 2000 13 over 12. we had 12-15%. forecasts are very similar this year. what the market is saying now that the record -- weather is finally getting better, this economy will get better and earnings are moving up. i do not think we need a lot of said boosting here. i think we need tightening. i think they will car
me is the deutsche bank see io economist -- senior siegel,t and jeremy university of pennsylvania whartonchool of finance professor. i will start with you, professor. on thee been so bullish market. the fed has been there to support all of it. do you continue to think we will with fed support? >> most certainly. i think she is starting to backpedal from her news conference. that was a realizes mistake. she once the market to know the fed will keep rates low for a considerable amount of...
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255
Mar 11, 2014
03/14
by
CNBC
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eye 255
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a new study by researchers from harvey, m.i.t., and wharton show handsome men are moreli likely get investmentks do matter but i don't buy that it's good looking men that get ahead over women. especially if anybody watches shark tank, if a good looking woman comes in and wants an investment, i watch my fellow sharks change like that. >> you think beautiful women have an edge? if you had to say if you think one cohort have an edge you would say that's the advantage. >> i think beautiful people have an edge, i think smart people have an edge. i think you can't make it gender biased or looks biased. if you're really brilliant and you have a great idea, people will go with you. >> that's what we hope. but sometimes it's a beauty-ocray? what do you think, marcus? >> we talked about this on an earlier "power lunch." it's ridiculous. to think we're going to write a check because of someone's gender or looks, at the end of the day the check is written because the product is right or the people is right. >> come on. how many times, and there have been studies about ceos where the more attractive ones -
a new study by researchers from harvey, m.i.t., and wharton show handsome men are moreli likely get investmentks do matter but i don't buy that it's good looking men that get ahead over women. especially if anybody watches shark tank, if a good looking woman comes in and wants an investment, i watch my fellow sharks change like that. >> you think beautiful women have an edge? if you had to say if you think one cohort have an edge you would say that's the advantage. >> i think...
79
79
Mar 11, 2014
03/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 79
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well, the first reports that we got were from, i think, charles rivers and from the wharton school, some of their economists came up with it. the range is always between $300 billion and $400 billion a year, and this is based off of a regulatory threshold of 25,000 tons. this is pretty tough here. i have a good friend, senator ed markey, that was in the house with with me for some time, we disagree on this issue. but the last bill that came up, the last legislation that forced tough a type of cap and trade was based on capping these people who emit 25,000 tons or more. now, that's -- that is based off the regulatory threshold of 25,000 tons. only the largest facilities like oil refineries and power plants would have been affected. doing it by regulation what they cannot do by legislation, they have to do it under the clean air act. this is kind of in the weeds but it is very important. the bill that i thought was too costly for the american people would regulate those who emitted 25,000 tons or more. but the clean air act would regulate those 250 tons or more. that's every school, every
well, the first reports that we got were from, i think, charles rivers and from the wharton school, some of their economists came up with it. the range is always between $300 billion and $400 billion a year, and this is based off of a regulatory threshold of 25,000 tons. this is pretty tough here. i have a good friend, senator ed markey, that was in the house with with me for some time, we disagree on this issue. but the last bill that came up, the last legislation that forced tough a type of...