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Apr 17, 2020
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wilson would have no changes. his rigid interpretation of presidential powers, despite what he had written earlier, would not allow him to compromise. and together with the senate insistence, he played into the hands of his opponents. the standoff between the two branches of government had important effects. no president after wilson dismissed the role of the senate in making treaties. when harry truman went to the san francisco conference in 1945, where the charter of the united nations would be signed, he took senators from both parties with him. truman would certainly have fit into wilson's group of presidents, "with unusual sagacity." eight. the growth of presidential power. congress integrated a great deal of power to the president. i'll buy it often with many misgivings. charles evans hughes, who had been the republican candidate in 1916, justified the expansion of government power in a speech to the american bar association. the importance of hughes'arguments will be explored by professor matt waxman, one w
wilson would have no changes. his rigid interpretation of presidential powers, despite what he had written earlier, would not allow him to compromise. and together with the senate insistence, he played into the hands of his opponents. the standoff between the two branches of government had important effects. no president after wilson dismissed the role of the senate in making treaties. when harry truman went to the san francisco conference in 1945, where the charter of the united nations would...
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Apr 17, 2020
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the allies were willing to yield on this point but not wilson. wilson with have no changes. the interpretation of presidential powers, despite what he had written earlier, would not allow him to compromise and together with the senate's insistence on doing its constitution constitutional duty, he played into the hands of the opponents. the standoff between the two branches of government had effects and no president after wilson dismissed the role of the senate in making treaties. when harry truman went to the charter of united nations signed, he took senators from both parties with him. truman fit into wilson's group of presidents with unusual segacity. eight, the growth of presidential power. congress delegated a great deal of power to the president. often with many misgivings. charles hughes justified the expansion of government power in a speech to the american bar association. the importance of hughes' arguments will be explored by professor matt waxman one week from tonight. now all of these issues presented constitutional questions. but not all of them came up before t
the allies were willing to yield on this point but not wilson. wilson with have no changes. the interpretation of presidential powers, despite what he had written earlier, would not allow him to compromise and together with the senate's insistence on doing its constitution constitutional duty, he played into the hands of the opponents. the standoff between the two branches of government had effects and no president after wilson dismissed the role of the senate in making treaties. when harry...
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Apr 13, 2020
04/20
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they go ahead and call president wilson kaiser wilson. 20 million american women are not self-governed, take the beam out of your own eye. now they're calling the president a kaiser while we're at war with germany. finally the president has had enough. tells the police force, get them off my sidewalk. i don't care what you have to do. they're not breaking any laws. so the police arrested them for a made-up charge for obstructing the traffic on the sidewalk. which is not a thing, right. and haul the women into jail and say, $5 fine or a night in jail. assuming all of the women is going to say here is my $5, i can't possibly go to jail, i'll never do it again, every single one of the woman say bring it. i'll go to jail. there are 30 more women who will pick up the pickets tomorrow. so that whole crew gets arrested. $5 fine, four nights jail. fine, four nights in jail. i got no problem with that. there is more women who will do it. so this escalated so crazy throughout the summer and fall of 1917 that these women are getting sentenced to 60 days in the work house for standing on a corner
they go ahead and call president wilson kaiser wilson. 20 million american women are not self-governed, take the beam out of your own eye. now they're calling the president a kaiser while we're at war with germany. finally the president has had enough. tells the police force, get them off my sidewalk. i don't care what you have to do. they're not breaking any laws. so the police arrested them for a made-up charge for obstructing the traffic on the sidewalk. which is not a thing, right. and haul...
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Apr 8, 2020
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president wilson in 1920 called for congress to reinstate beer.many of the congressman in 1920 as they were having the conventions, over 300 congressman complained that they were hearing from constituents that they wanted to have beer again. it's just amazing. it took a lot of people by surprise how are conan prohibition turned out to be. a lot of people said they were going to start drinking. there were bootleggers out there who were willing to supply the alcohol for a price. during prohibition, consumption of alcohol goes down. it is so much more expensive to buy it. there is a myth that people were drinking more than ever, that's actually not true. it's more expensive than ever before. many of the great bartenders went to paris during prohibition. one of the things that showed up almost right away, right off the coast of the united states was rum row. all of the ship captains were docking their shifts. call three miles offshore. speedboats were coming out to that limit, filling up the speedboats and race it back to shore, usually at night time.
president wilson in 1920 called for congress to reinstate beer.many of the congressman in 1920 as they were having the conventions, over 300 congressman complained that they were hearing from constituents that they wanted to have beer again. it's just amazing. it took a lot of people by surprise how are conan prohibition turned out to be. a lot of people said they were going to start drinking. there were bootleggers out there who were willing to supply the alcohol for a price. during...
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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>> yeah. >> wilson: okay. >> pelley: melba wilson took an order for takeout from someone who wanted toanonymous. 100 dinners to be delivered to nearby mount sinai hospital, one voice on the phone joining a chorus of americans, longing for better days ahead. >> wilson: i am so uplifted, first of all, by the fact that you are doing this for the medical staff and also that you are helping my employees. so, it means the world to me. >> and your name is melba? that obviously means you're the owner? >> wilson: yeah, my name is melba, yeah, i just happen to be the owner. and thank you so much. and stay safe, may god continue to bless you. thank you. >> yeah, bye-bye. >> wilson: okay, bye-bye. my grandmother always told us, "this too shall pass." and it's times of, when, of trials and tribulation that i lean on my faith and i lean on my spirit. i don't know how. i don't know when. but believe me, this too shall pass. ( ticking ) >> for more our on cowr our coverage of the coronavirus gosh, to "60 minutes".over time.com sponsored by cologard. . i'm noninvasive and detect altered dna in your sto
>> yeah. >> wilson: okay. >> pelley: melba wilson took an order for takeout from someone who wanted toanonymous. 100 dinners to be delivered to nearby mount sinai hospital, one voice on the phone joining a chorus of americans, longing for better days ahead. >> wilson: i am so uplifted, first of all, by the fact that you are doing this for the medical staff and also that you are helping my employees. so, it means the world to me. >> and your name is melba? that...
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Apr 12, 2020
04/20
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but sergeant terry wilson was focussing on narcy.to charge her with her husband's death, at least not yet. she had an alibi for the assumed time of the murder. the case against her was circumstantial. so someone else must have gotten into the room and killed her husband, but whom? then out of nowhere, an unanimous letter fluttered on to the desk of a detective 1,000 miles away from the crime scene. gary, an investigator in miami springs florida, personally knew nothing of the ben novak case, and his department wasn't involved. >> there's people obviously that heard the name and knew about him, the fontainebleau and all. i wasn't one of them. i didn't know anything about it until i talked to detective wilson in new york. >> the letter, written in spanish, was nothing less than a blueprint to the murder. naming names, siting motivations. >> this is shocking and it could be a big break. >> sergeant wilson up in west chester couldn't wait to see it. >> whoever wrote this letter obviously had information, inside information. >> looking ba
but sergeant terry wilson was focussing on narcy.to charge her with her husband's death, at least not yet. she had an alibi for the assumed time of the murder. the case against her was circumstantial. so someone else must have gotten into the room and killed her husband, but whom? then out of nowhere, an unanimous letter fluttered on to the desk of a detective 1,000 miles away from the crime scene. gary, an investigator in miami springs florida, personally knew nothing of the ben novak case,...
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Apr 17, 2020
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judy wilson griffin was 63. ♪
judy wilson griffin was 63. ♪
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Apr 6, 2020
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have been part of woodrow wilson's war cabinet.s was someone who had talked seriously with democrats in 1920. there was a wonderful letter that year from young franklin roosevelt to a friend who had talked about hoover's virtues, and fdr agreeing saying he certainly is a wonder. no one would be better than herbert hoover as a democratic nominee. hoover was not interested in being a sacrificial lamb that year. he knew enough about politics to know that in 1920, it was a republican year. so anyway, he allowed his name to be entered in the california primary against hiram johnson, a senator who was a militant isolationist. and the result was a mixed bag. he got enough votes to really wound johnson and make sure that johnson would not be nominated, but not enough votes to impress the professionals. and remember, that was the famous smoke-filled room convention where a senatorial cabal met and came up by process of elimination with warren harding. hoover was never a regular republican. again he had been a supporter of the bull moose thi
have been part of woodrow wilson's war cabinet.s was someone who had talked seriously with democrats in 1920. there was a wonderful letter that year from young franklin roosevelt to a friend who had talked about hoover's virtues, and fdr agreeing saying he certainly is a wonder. no one would be better than herbert hoover as a democratic nominee. hoover was not interested in being a sacrificial lamb that year. he knew enough about politics to know that in 1920, it was a republican year. so...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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wilson and hoover was part of the delegation. and later on, years later, hoover did something no american president had ever done. and in fact, the record stood until george w. bush wrote about his dad. hoover was the only american president to write a book about another american president. he wrote a book called "the ordeal of woodrow wilson," which is very sympathetic and a best-seller. the only book -- hoover wrote two dozen books. that was the only one on the best-seller list. but it's a fascinating -- and what it is in wilson that clearly appeals to hoover, it's useful to know in terms of predicting many of the problems that hoover would experience in the white house. >> who asked him to be commerce secretary, and how long was he there, and what impact did he have? >> interesting. the harding administration -- warren harding, rather touchingly aware of his own limitations, set out to recruit a cabinet of the best men. so i mean, charles evans hughes became secretary of state. and he asked hoover, and basically gave hoover a
wilson and hoover was part of the delegation. and later on, years later, hoover did something no american president had ever done. and in fact, the record stood until george w. bush wrote about his dad. hoover was the only american president to write a book about another american president. he wrote a book called "the ordeal of woodrow wilson," which is very sympathetic and a best-seller. the only book -- hoover wrote two dozen books. that was the only one on the best-seller list. but...
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Apr 30, 2020
04/20
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wilson had a 103 degrees fever. we had influenza. everybody around them commented about how disoriented he was. he's held firm to the principles that the u.s. had gone to war over before he got sick. after he got sick he couldn't remember anything. as i say he was disoriented and ended up caving in. >> so in other words, the positions that he wanted was more punitive towards germans them what wilson had wanted. those positions prevailed and how did that work out in the end? >> you had it exactly right. that's what clemens want on practically every point. john maynard keynes called wilson the greatest fraud on earth after the peace treaty. >> the course of the second world war probably came about because of some of the to do things against germany let's go to the next subject, which is one of the lessons that you took away from the work that you did? what lessons would be applicable to today from what you did in your research and writing? >> there were two lessons. the first is the best way to handle an outbreak like that is for the l
wilson had a 103 degrees fever. we had influenza. everybody around them commented about how disoriented he was. he's held firm to the principles that the u.s. had gone to war over before he got sick. after he got sick he couldn't remember anything. as i say he was disoriented and ended up caving in. >> so in other words, the positions that he wanted was more punitive towards germans them what wilson had wanted. those positions prevailed and how did that work out in the end? >> you...
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Apr 7, 2020
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john: wilson never made a public statement of any kind on the pandemic. earlier, some national public health leaders lied about it, they called it ordinary influenza by another name. we did have a public health and the surgeon general wasn't much good. people and the public health service, it wasn't a lot. it was a laboratory and a few quarantine stations, they did try. most of the effort came out of the military. desertionsortion of in the united states were incorporated into the military, including what is now rockefeller university and the theitute of research, entire entity became an army laboratory. became researchers captains and majors and so forth. the dean of johns hopkins medical school became a colonel. dean of university of michigan medical school became a colonel, and so on. the scientific community, most of them were in the army. they were extremely active. research that they again, they didn't know what caused it and didn't know whether it was a virus. there was at least one hypothesis that it was a bacteria, which still has influenza in it
john: wilson never made a public statement of any kind on the pandemic. earlier, some national public health leaders lied about it, they called it ordinary influenza by another name. we did have a public health and the surgeon general wasn't much good. people and the public health service, it wasn't a lot. it was a laboratory and a few quarantine stations, they did try. most of the effort came out of the military. desertionsortion of in the united states were incorporated into the military,...
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Apr 11, 2020
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you mentioned earlier, president wilson committed president wilson actually make a statement about thisdid he say about it he met. >> not one word. never did he make a single public statement about this pandemic, as far as he was concerned it was a distraction from a war. >> the reason he didn't do it because he wasn't convinced it was a problem or didn't want to detract from the war? >> he was obsessed with the war. a strange person he would focus on something and that would be it. the war was all he cared about. >> he went to paris to help resolve the war he spent roughly 6 months there. did he contract the virus when he was there? >> he did. one of the unusual complications of the 1918 virus was mental disorders. even to the extent the people that oliver sacks wrote about in the awakenings prophesied that was a result of the 1918 pandemic. wilson had 103 degrees fever, everybody around him had commented on how disoriented he was. he held firm to the principles the u.s. could going to war over it before he got sick. after he got sick he couldn't remember anything, he was disoriented.h
you mentioned earlier, president wilson committed president wilson actually make a statement about thisdid he say about it he met. >> not one word. never did he make a single public statement about this pandemic, as far as he was concerned it was a distraction from a war. >> the reason he didn't do it because he wasn't convinced it was a problem or didn't want to detract from the war? >> he was obsessed with the war. a strange person he would focus on something and that would...
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Apr 27, 2020
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wilson and hoover was part of the delegation. and later on, years later, hoover did something no america president had ever done. and in fact, the record stood -- wilson. which is very sympathetic and a best seller. hoover wrote two dozen books. that was the only one on the best seller list, but it's a fascinating -- and what is in wilson that clearly appeals to hoover, it's useful to know in terms of predicting many of the problems that hoover would experience in the white house. >> who asked him to be commerce secretary and how long was he there? and what impact did he have? >> two different things. the harding administration -- warren harding, rather touchingly, aware of his own limitations, set out to recruit a cabinet of the best men. so charles evans hughes became secretary of state. and he asked hoover -- and basically gave hoover a choice. and hoover picked the commerce department, which in those days was perhaps the least important department in the cabinet. well, of course, hoover being hoover, soon there were cartoons
wilson and hoover was part of the delegation. and later on, years later, hoover did something no america president had ever done. and in fact, the record stood -- wilson. which is very sympathetic and a best seller. hoover wrote two dozen books. that was the only one on the best seller list, but it's a fascinating -- and what is in wilson that clearly appeals to hoover, it's useful to know in terms of predicting many of the problems that hoover would experience in the white house. >> who...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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where did that come from, rita wilson?ferent audience is seeing he me now for the first time. i think music is healing. so if something is giving someone comfort or peace, i'm that you fe thankful to be a part of it really. >> that rita wilson, i have to tell you. not only is she one of the nicest human beings she's very talented. i asked her did she and tom have second thoughts about going public when they were first diagnosed because really everybody in the country gasped when we heard rita wilson and tom hanks has coronavirus. she said everyone has to have their own comfort level. she's been very candid about breast cancer. he's talked about his type 2 diabetes. they thought if it would help bring awareness they were glad to do that. kudos to both of them for sharing that information. i think a lot of people paid attention for the first time. she and tom feel completely normal now. note yourself. when your stuff is in the background, clean off your kitchen counters. but thank you so much to rita wilson for sitting down
where did that come from, rita wilson?ferent audience is seeing he me now for the first time. i think music is healing. so if something is giving someone comfort or peace, i'm that you fe thankful to be a part of it really. >> that rita wilson, i have to tell you. not only is she one of the nicest human beings she's very talented. i asked her did she and tom have second thoughts about going public when they were first diagnosed because really everybody in the country gasped when we heard...
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Apr 3, 2020
04/20
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this film of jacqueline wilson's update doesn't have the charm of those productions.hat it does have is a hint of the real world issues that wilson's books have always tackled, a great score and a likeably wrinkly sand fairy, to which kane lends deadpan vocal appeal. you also get to hear russell brand use the phrase ethnically insensitive erotic, and see him run around with his bottom on fire, which sums up the film. four kids and it is now available on sky cinema. at the other end of the spectrum, this week also sees the streaming release of the whalebone box, their latest fantastically inventive arthouse production from british maverick, andrew cotting. i asked him whether whalebone came from and he said it came from a washed up wail after the whale had been smashed up asa result of a storm. the box in question was made of the bones of a whale that washed up on the isles of harris in the outer hebrides many years ago. the film follows two journeys, one in which geographer ian sinclair and photographer anonymous join andrew on a pilgrimage to take the box back to har
this film of jacqueline wilson's update doesn't have the charm of those productions.hat it does have is a hint of the real world issues that wilson's books have always tackled, a great score and a likeably wrinkly sand fairy, to which kane lends deadpan vocal appeal. you also get to hear russell brand use the phrase ethnically insensitive erotic, and see him run around with his bottom on fire, which sums up the film. four kids and it is now available on sky cinema. at the other end of the...
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Apr 8, 2020
04/20
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so i mentioned the woodrow wilson house. when he left on march 24th 1921, he had a wine collection and he didn't want to leave it behind because his successor was a part drinker and he so he got permission to transport his wine collection, and during prohibition if you had alcohol in your possession before prohibition started, that was yours to keep. they weren't going to take it away from you. so personal possession was not outlawed during prohibition but you can't manufacture or transfer or sell it. it was permission to transport from the white house over to his new house on coloramma. and we have a prohibition tour that i lead sometimes and at the end of the tour we go down and see the prohibition era wine cellar. it is really cool. it is really unique. how many other houses in the country have original bottles. it is amazing. now, look right up front, that short bottle right in the center, that is kwaund row. the packaging has hardly changed. it is amazing. many of the bottles with believe the wilsons got from the french
so i mentioned the woodrow wilson house. when he left on march 24th 1921, he had a wine collection and he didn't want to leave it behind because his successor was a part drinker and he so he got permission to transport his wine collection, and during prohibition if you had alcohol in your possession before prohibition started, that was yours to keep. they weren't going to take it away from you. so personal possession was not outlawed during prohibition but you can't manufacture or transfer or...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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it worked and then woodrow wilson asked hoover to come home. he'd become a phenomenon as you might imagine and wilson entrusted him with something called the american food administration. and it's all voluntary. there are no ration cards in world war i. he uses propaganda. he uses public relations, this new embryonic science to reach people and touch people and motivate people to respond to his appeals. so there were meatless mondays and meatless wednesdays. not every campaign worked. a properly cared for pig is as sanitary as anything else, well the suburbs did not rise up and embrace that. whale steak was adapted to some but not many diets. sugarless gum is a by-product of the food administration. again, the idea was the american people would grow more, save more and together they would basically feed their allies across the seas. two problems with that. it confirmed hoover in his beliefs which was now a bedrock conviction that whatever the problem you didn't need a government solution, you just needed to organize. hoover always said the test
it worked and then woodrow wilson asked hoover to come home. he'd become a phenomenon as you might imagine and wilson entrusted him with something called the american food administration. and it's all voluntary. there are no ration cards in world war i. he uses propaganda. he uses public relations, this new embryonic science to reach people and touch people and motivate people to respond to his appeals. so there were meatless mondays and meatless wednesdays. not every campaign worked. a...
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Apr 20, 2020
04/20
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this because it humanizes wilson, which wilson was not always very good at himself. and it is a model of smart, scholarly, readable presidential history. in any event, it lit a match. and so i am, among other things, a lifelong wilsonian. but also, i was drawn to the biographical aspect of the presidency. there are a lot of different ways of approaching presidential performance. but as a biographer, i find every single one of these men maybe more interesting than most people do. and we also have to say, the late david herbert donald, a great lincoln scholar, tells the story about when he went to the kennedy white house. and jfk was obviously not happy with the day's news coverage, and he said to david, nobody should pass judgment on a president. ot even poor james buchanan, who has not sat at this desk and looked at the papers that come across. i think there was a little bit of special pleading there. there is only so much you can do for james buchanan. [laughter] but it is true. the study of every single president is useful, and i think will deepen your understandin
this because it humanizes wilson, which wilson was not always very good at himself. and it is a model of smart, scholarly, readable presidential history. in any event, it lit a match. and so i am, among other things, a lifelong wilsonian. but also, i was drawn to the biographical aspect of the presidency. there are a lot of different ways of approaching presidential performance. but as a biographer, i find every single one of these men maybe more interesting than most people do. and we also...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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i'm jane harman, president and ceo of the wilson center. it's the best job on the planet because i ge get to talk to geniuses every single day. one of them because and in my script but i'm going to call her out is megan came some of you may not know her but she runs a science technology and innovation program and is responsible for the schools we have on friday to teach the staff about cyber and artificial intelligence and today's genius would be ben buchanan is our go to guy when we teach those and been trying to teach me for a while. i think that i've been a repeater at all times. i am getting i getting is that n analog brain and i thank them for his patience. he is a global fellow and he will discuss his latest books right now called the hacker and the state. spoiler alert, they've changed the world. he says of cyber obligation thee now indelibly part of the operations and the gap between the united states and other countries has narrowednd abconsiderably. to hack a million dollars worth against the bank to the maligned activities from t
i'm jane harman, president and ceo of the wilson center. it's the best job on the planet because i ge get to talk to geniuses every single day. one of them because and in my script but i'm going to call her out is megan came some of you may not know her but she runs a science technology and innovation program and is responsible for the schools we have on friday to teach the staff about cyber and artificial intelligence and today's genius would be ben buchanan is our go to guy when we teach...
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Apr 21, 2020
04/20
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we'll be joined by morgan stanley's mike wilson. he's making a big call on the market today first, the investment committee. stephanie link, josh brown it's good to see everybody back with us today. let's again with a check on your money. we'll go right to the boards today and show you a sea of red. dow is down 600 points s&p 500 down about 3%. nasdaq, technology has been, as you know, a bright spot of late but that's selling off harder today. nasdaq down about 300 points all right rob, good to see you, beard and all. here we are in different place than we were on march 20th when you spoke about the pessimism being palpable in the market that we were in panic mode, as you said almost speaking that things needed to turn in a more positive way nonetheless, josh brown, i'll come to you. the point i was going to make is there was a point in time where pessimism was palpable now we're at a different place we have come a long way. the second day into this week we'll have our back to back down days if this holds today how should we be thin
we'll be joined by morgan stanley's mike wilson. he's making a big call on the market today first, the investment committee. stephanie link, josh brown it's good to see everybody back with us today. let's again with a check on your money. we'll go right to the boards today and show you a sea of red. dow is down 600 points s&p 500 down about 3%. nasdaq, technology has been, as you know, a bright spot of late but that's selling off harder today. nasdaq down about 300 points all right rob,...
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Apr 7, 2020
04/20
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john: wilson never made a public statement of any kind on the pandemic. earlier, some national public health leaders lied about it, they called it ordinary influenza by another name. we did have a public health and the surgeon general wasn't much good. people and the public health service, it wasn't a lot. it was a laboratory and a few quarantine stations, they did try. most of the effort came out of the military. desertionsortion of in the united states were incorporated into the military, including what is now rockefeller university and the theitute of research, entire entity became an army laboratory. became researchers captains and majors and so forth. the dean of johns hopkins medical school became a colonel. dean of university of michigan medical school became a colonel, and so on. the scientific community, most of them were in the army. they were extremely active. research that they again, they didn't know what caused it and didn't know whether it was a virus. there was at least one hypothesis that it was a bacteria, which still has influenza in it
john: wilson never made a public statement of any kind on the pandemic. earlier, some national public health leaders lied about it, they called it ordinary influenza by another name. we did have a public health and the surgeon general wasn't much good. people and the public health service, it wasn't a lot. it was a laboratory and a few quarantine stations, they did try. most of the effort came out of the military. desertionsortion of in the united states were incorporated into the military,...
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Apr 26, 2020
04/20
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special he was a emissary of president wilson. he told an audience in new york in the summer of 1917 that "pro german tracers" -- pro german traders" were threatening the war effort. he said there are men walking about the city tonight who ought to be taken out and shot for treason. newspapers published in this city every day, the editors of which deserve conviction and execution for treason. with his hatred of the media, he would be right at home in the trump administration. people like him were as appears as they were about the war because there was considerable resistance to it. this is another thing that gets left out of our history books. there was a group called the women's pieced party that agitated against the war, both before and after the united states turned. here's an advertisement for an antiwar meeting that was to take place on the very eve of the war itself the day before wilson went to congress to ask for the declaration. two days later, this organization's office two blocks away from the white house was vandalized
special he was a emissary of president wilson. he told an audience in new york in the summer of 1917 that "pro german tracers" -- pro german traders" were threatening the war effort. he said there are men walking about the city tonight who ought to be taken out and shot for treason. newspapers published in this city every day, the editors of which deserve conviction and execution for treason. with his hatred of the media, he would be right at home in the trump administration....
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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wilson? >> yeah, the story is right behind me. this is what the evening commute looks like.his is something you can measure in the bay area. the air is getting cleaner. as for how this might involve itself with our larger climate discussion, that may require, well, more testing. >> the roof of duncan hall, we have an air quality station and we have been looking at the data and when we normally see this rise due to traffic, we still see that, but it's much, much lower than it is normally. >> in the santa clara valley, the mountains do look closer as the air is cleaner. the university has been tracking the fall of air pollution and you can see it following the march 16 shelter in place order. >> we measure black carbon aerosol and we have seen a 50% reduction during traffic times in those aerosols in the atmosphere. >> no matter where you live in the bay area, you are enjoying the same cleaner air. >> what we are seeing now is a 70% reduction on the amount of vehicles on the road and vehicles being sort of the number one cause of air pollution in the bay area, number one sourc
wilson? >> yeah, the story is right behind me. this is what the evening commute looks like.his is something you can measure in the bay area. the air is getting cleaner. as for how this might involve itself with our larger climate discussion, that may require, well, more testing. >> the roof of duncan hall, we have an air quality station and we have been looking at the data and when we normally see this rise due to traffic, we still see that, but it's much, much lower than it is...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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KGO
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russell wilson.t. >> turn on the advanced noise canceling features on your headphones, so nothing distracts you. >> guillermo: you read my mind! my team selects joe burrow! >> let's go, yes! >> brutal. >> no, joe. >> guillermo: more passion. >> joe burrow! >> yes, i did it, i did it. >> guillermo: joe, leave the acting to the security guards. >> how about a lasso. >> yee-haw! >> jump in the box. ooh, ooh. >> that's not it, joe, need more energy, bud. >> yes! how was that one? >> guillermo: listen, joe, good luck in the nfl. >> that was actually funny. >> dicky: bose, official headphones of the nfl, visit bose.com to learn more. >> jimmy: that's our time, i want to thank arnold schwarzenegger, edward norton. apologies to matt damon, we only had room on the show for one donkey tonight. if you're really lonely, maybe just let the bedbugs bite a little. >>> right now work is just getting under way in san francisco on a major construction project along highway 101. these are live pictures. the shelter in
russell wilson.t. >> turn on the advanced noise canceling features on your headphones, so nothing distracts you. >> guillermo: you read my mind! my team selects joe burrow! >> let's go, yes! >> brutal. >> no, joe. >> guillermo: more passion. >> joe burrow! >> yes, i did it, i did it. >> guillermo: joe, leave the acting to the security guards. >> how about a lasso. >> yee-haw! >> jump in the box. ooh, ooh. >> that's...
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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KNTV
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rita wilson sang the national anthem. she and her husband tom hanks beat the virus in australia. 11 laps into the race, bubba wallace and clenlt bowyer playing bumper cars. wallace was so mad, he stopped playing. he said i'm not playing. rob gronkowski is living his best life. the former patriots tight end hosting wrestlemania. he looked like a natural in front of the camera. there were no fans becausewwe c all out to put onba? no problem. robbie gold using his kids for a workout in their backyard. that looks good. he put protective equipment so they would stay safe with the #stay home. that's a look at sports. more news after the break. by the end of my world tour i'll turn you all into rock zombies. rock and roll! [ screaming ] if we're gonna save the world we need to unite all the trolls. like country. the country trolls look friendly. get em'. hip hop. ♪ tiny diamond is my name peace and love tiny and daddy out. come on man! ♪ one more time the world premiere is in your home friday. go to watchtrolls.com for more. >>>
rita wilson sang the national anthem. she and her husband tom hanks beat the virus in australia. 11 laps into the race, bubba wallace and clenlt bowyer playing bumper cars. wallace was so mad, he stopped playing. he said i'm not playing. rob gronkowski is living his best life. the former patriots tight end hosting wrestlemania. he looked like a natural in front of the camera. there were no fans becausewwe c all out to put onba? no problem. robbie gold using his kids for a workout in their...
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Apr 29, 2020
04/20
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KPIX
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long line, wilson. >> yeah, ken, more than 3 million californians have filed unemployment claims over the that's five weeks and as of today, millions more californians are eligible to file those claims and they're also eligible to get in line. >> i just finished filing for unemployment online like ten minutes ago. right? >> self employed with a couple of part time jobs on the side, barbara falls into two categories of workers now eligible for unemployment in california. and she just made her way through the application prs. >> it was a process. it did take -- i got booted off the system. i couldn't get into the system. because so many people -- millions of people are going into that little, you know, website. >> too many unemployed workers right now. >> he's in the other group of workers now eligible. those in the gig economy. >> i used to work for lyft and uber. and right now i'm working on doordash on grub hub. >> even though he's still working, he could make a claim for lost income. now, based on his filings, the state would decide how much he might be eligible for. but farook has
long line, wilson. >> yeah, ken, more than 3 million californians have filed unemployment claims over the that's five weeks and as of today, millions more californians are eligible to file those claims and they're also eligible to get in line. >> i just finished filing for unemployment online like ten minutes ago. right? >> self employed with a couple of part time jobs on the side, barbara falls into two categories of workers now eligible for unemployment in california. and...
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Apr 22, 2020
04/20
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wilson? >> reporter: yeah, for all the things shutdown and not moving right now, public works moving ahead with a ton of projects around the city. the city, itself, has simply not stopped working. masked and instructed to keep their distance, san francisco public works crews are trying to take advantage of the city's down time, starting with potholes. >> this is an ideal time to do it. there's not a lot of traffic, so this is an opportunity to get the streets safe and smooth again. >> reporter: and while much of the city's work force stays home, work continues on most public projects. >> construction projects, a lot of them we've been working on are going ahead. 2nd street, jefferson street, that work is continuing. >> reporter: there may be an area the city needs more work. >> we're working really hard to keep the city clean. we're seeing a lot of graffiti in the town, so we wish the vandals would shelter in place a little more. >> reporter: back to the pothole crews. they can do more in a g
wilson? >> reporter: yeah, for all the things shutdown and not moving right now, public works moving ahead with a ton of projects around the city. the city, itself, has simply not stopped working. masked and instructed to keep their distance, san francisco public works crews are trying to take advantage of the city's down time, starting with potholes. >> this is an ideal time to do it. there's not a lot of traffic, so this is an opportunity to get the streets safe and smooth again....
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Apr 6, 2020
04/20
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KTVU
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. >>> there is tom hanks wife, actress rita wilson. she sang the anthem mystery.ita wilson and tom hanks have recovered from the coronavirus after being diagnosed and treated in australia last month. they are back at their home in los angeles where rita wilson recorded her performance. my time is for 157. there was at least one sports event on sunday. wrestlemania. it went on as planned, and formrob gronkowski went from hosting to being part of the action. >> wait a minute. he is covering mojo. that is the 24th. >> there is gronkowski. he became the 24 seven champion. that big two-day event was held at the wwe performance center in orlando, florida. gronkowski pinned his friend, mojo raleigh to get that title. >>> it is 4:57, and it could still be weeks until pro sports resume. may be longer than that. trade ktvu's day in sports. >> the giants on their season for the day five years ago. the giants are defending world champions. madison bumgarner made his first appearance since being the mvp. the giants held on for a five- for when in arizona. all the runs they wou
. >>> there is tom hanks wife, actress rita wilson. she sang the anthem mystery.ita wilson and tom hanks have recovered from the coronavirus after being diagnosed and treated in australia last month. they are back at their home in los angeles where rita wilson recorded her performance. my time is for 157. there was at least one sports event on sunday. wrestlemania. it went on as planned, and formrob gronkowski went from hosting to being part of the action. >> wait a minute. he is...
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Apr 15, 2020
04/20
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FOXNEWSW
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wilson himself contracted burning fever.aris and almost died himself there. when you're getting towards our modern era, we start having antibiotics and better medical supplies. back in 1793, dr. rush would bleed people to help them with their fever. in 1918 we really had no clean sanitation of medical facilities and certainly no antibiotics which were developed later for use in the second world war. so i think each era just deals with these things differently. fdr had the great depression. the differences once we got bombed at pearl harbor, he called for full employment, meaning hyper mobilization of the country, that's what got us out of the great depression. president trump is having to deal with the exact opposite, that this close down is really damaging the economy. >> martha: yeah, it certainly is. douglas brickley, author of american moon shot and other amazing books. that's available in paperback. thank you very much. you wouldn't accept an incomplete job from anyone else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonas
wilson himself contracted burning fever.aris and almost died himself there. when you're getting towards our modern era, we start having antibiotics and better medical supplies. back in 1793, dr. rush would bleed people to help them with their fever. in 1918 we really had no clean sanitation of medical facilities and certainly no antibiotics which were developed later for use in the second world war. so i think each era just deals with these things differently. fdr had the great depression. the...
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Apr 11, 2020
04/20
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plus stephen welcomes keith urban and casey wilson! featuring jon batiste and stay human.live on tape from the ed sullivan theater in new york city, it's stephen colbert! ( cheers and applause ) ( theme song playing ) >> stephen: hey! nice to see. delightful! delightful! ( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: good to see you! there you go! >> stephen: stephen! stephen! stephen! >> stephen: nice. there you go. a busy night. a busy night here. spring is in the air. nice to see you, chris. welcome, one and all, to "the late show." i'm your host, stephen colbert. another candidate-- ( cheers and applause ) yet another candidate has dropped out of the democratic race. and we're getting a clearer picture of america's future, and it looks a lot like america's past. ( laughter ) and i'll give you the latest in tonight's edition of: >> i have a plan for that. >> i beat trump. >> corn pop was a bad dude! >> aaahhh! >> bing, bing, bong, bong. >> "fury road to the white house 2020!" >> come on! >> stephen: now-- ( cheers and applause ) ( piano riff ) >> stephen: folks, i'm afraid i have
plus stephen welcomes keith urban and casey wilson! featuring jon batiste and stay human.live on tape from the ed sullivan theater in new york city, it's stephen colbert! ( cheers and applause ) ( theme song playing ) >> stephen: hey! nice to see. delightful! delightful! ( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: good to see you! there you go! >> stephen: stephen! stephen! stephen! >> stephen: nice. there you go. a busy night. a busy night here. spring is in the air. nice to...
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Apr 4, 2020
04/20
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she could also be a bit -- he would pull rank, she was friends with henry wilson who was senator andas not afraid to tell anybody like rucker, i don't think what you are telling me that senator wilson would approve of. there was that aspect and i could go on but i think enough said that they were human beings, real human beings. >> i have a question. i know you have been fascinated by these five women and they are all notable but at any point had you considered others to include here, runners-up who might be worthy of in order of -- >> there are many other women i could take off now who had lesser accomplishments but these were women who for me did extraordinary things over a long time. i couldn't find anyone who had quite the longevity i was looking for and my wife always told me three is not a good number, too few. you can't have an even number, you've got to do five so i focused on five and not to be silly about it but it turned out those five were the most notable people i came across in my research and any of you who talked about the south, why didn't i include them? what i want
she could also be a bit -- he would pull rank, she was friends with henry wilson who was senator andas not afraid to tell anybody like rucker, i don't think what you are telling me that senator wilson would approve of. there was that aspect and i could go on but i think enough said that they were human beings, real human beings. >> i have a question. i know you have been fascinated by these five women and they are all notable but at any point had you considered others to include here,...
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Apr 9, 2020
04/20
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kpix 5's wilson walker on what needs to happen before restrictions can be lifted. wilson. >> reporter: ken we were talking about how we have successfully flattens the curve. it pushes things out a little bit and i'm sure a lot of you are asking the same question, if the end of the curve is in may, does that mean we kind of start moving back to normal? best-case scenario might be a little bit. >> so we're working really hard right nowryg to t a signals be,t do we need to have in place in order to relax a little bit. that planning not -- it's not just underway here in our county. this is what's happening really across the world. >> reporter: they are planning but no answers yet, even a flattened curve leaves us with the same problem we faced on day one. >> most of the people living in our community are still susceptible. >> we're treading water until a vaccine comes. how do we replace shelter in place until a vaccine comes? ten months, 11 months, something like that. >> ucf's george rutherford says while we are doing well, we are stuck if we stop social distanci roar
kpix 5's wilson walker on what needs to happen before restrictions can be lifted. wilson. >> reporter: ken we were talking about how we have successfully flattens the curve. it pushes things out a little bit and i'm sure a lot of you are asking the same question, if the end of the curve is in may, does that mean we kind of start moving back to normal? best-case scenario might be a little bit. >> so we're working really hard right nowryg to t a signals be,t do we need to have in...
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Apr 23, 2020
04/20
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. >> judy wilson griffin from st. louis, missouri. caius kelly, new york, new york. noel sinket, washington, d.c. cynthia mendoza, norfolk, virginia. >> those are of course a few of the nurses we have lost in this country due to the virus. i'm joined now by one of the nurses who spoke at that protest yesterday, erica jones, a nurse at med star washington general. erica, i wonder if you can talk a little bit about what motive you'd to protest amidst all this. >> you know, actually, i really struggled with coming out and participating in a protest when i'm telling people to stay at home. but i've had my own coronavirus scare where i had to isolate away from my family and then you see our colleagues throughout the country are getting sick and they're dying because they don't have the right personal
. >> judy wilson griffin from st. louis, missouri. caius kelly, new york, new york. noel sinket, washington, d.c. cynthia mendoza, norfolk, virginia. >> those are of course a few of the nurses we have lost in this country due to the virus. i'm joined now by one of the nurses who spoke at that protest yesterday, erica jones, a nurse at med star washington general. erica, i wonder if you can talk a little bit about what motive you'd to protest amidst all this. >> you know,...
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Apr 24, 2020
04/20
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KGO
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russell wilson. on. >> jimmy: you read my mind. my team selects joe >> let's go, yes! >> brutal. >> no, joe. >> guillermo: more passion. >> joe burrow! >> yes, i did it, i did it. >> guillermo: joe, leave the acting to the security guards. >> how about a lasso. >> yee-haw! >> jump in the box. ooh, ooh. >> how's that one? >> guillermo: listen, joe, good luck in the nfl. >> that was actually funny. >> dicky: bose, official headphones of the nfl, visit bose.com to learn more. >> jimmy: that's our time, apologies to matt damon, we only had room on the show for one donkey tonight. if you're really lonely, maybe just let the bedbugs bite a little. >>> this is "nightline." >>> tonight, tinder box. covid-19 and the long-term care crisis. >> some of them would crash real fast, like nothing i've ever seen before in my life. >> nursing homes. first flash point of the pandemic. the staggering loss of life spreading across the nation. now the accusations the trump administration could have done more to save lives
russell wilson. on. >> jimmy: you read my mind. my team selects joe >> let's go, yes! >> brutal. >> no, joe. >> guillermo: more passion. >> joe burrow! >> yes, i did it, i did it. >> guillermo: joe, leave the acting to the security guards. >> how about a lasso. >> yee-haw! >> jump in the box. ooh, ooh. >> how's that one? >> guillermo: listen, joe, good luck in the nfl. >> that was actually funny. >> dicky:...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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CNBC
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mike wilson cuts back concentration. we have been talking about that for years already. >> we have even before. even before this whole thing happened we have had this conversation repetitively in some cases for the last years number of years. it has been a heavier concentration. tech is the largest part of the s&p. you're going to have over weightings in those names but it is even more concentrated names, steve, that have led this market back into a v and has even perpetuated the conversation of a disconnect between wall street and main street. the how in the world can the market be where it is because main street -- with main street where it is and you say, i look at amazon, apple, microsoft, go google and facebook and that tells you the story. >> right here is how explain it i'm confused also. i look on the news you read the papers and you see food lines that are miles long having that kind of poverty, that kind of desperation, tragedy is inconsistent with the market marching higher here is how i try to explain it, try
mike wilson cuts back concentration. we have been talking about that for years already. >> we have even before. even before this whole thing happened we have had this conversation repetitively in some cases for the last years number of years. it has been a heavier concentration. tech is the largest part of the s&p. you're going to have over weightings in those names but it is even more concentrated names, steve, that have led this market back into a v and has even perpetuated the...
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Apr 10, 2020
04/20
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wilson? >> reporter: there were really two weddings. it was a long, complicated, legal plod that led us to where we are today and it started with one very big day here back in 2004. >> i now pronounce you spouses for life. >> reporter: february 12th, 2004, the first same-sex wedding at san francisco city hall and the newlyweds are del martin and phyllis lyo what did she have say about at momentous oc? >> why did we do it today? because it seemed like a nice day to do it. >> reporter: they had met at gay rights pioneers in san francisco in the 1950's and continued to be pioneers for the remainder of their lives. those historic marriage licenses that came in 2004 were, of course, issued at the order of then mayor gavin newsom. >> we made a statement and i think we have reignited a fundamental debat that's about discrimination. >> reporter: that debate came in the form of a long legal fight that would see those marriage licenses voided by the california supreme court before being legitimized by another court ruling years late so lyon and m
wilson? >> reporter: there were really two weddings. it was a long, complicated, legal plod that led us to where we are today and it started with one very big day here back in 2004. >> i now pronounce you spouses for life. >> reporter: february 12th, 2004, the first same-sex wedding at san francisco city hall and the newlyweds are del martin and phyllis lyo what did she have say about at momentous oc? >> why did we do it today? because it seemed like a nice day to do it....
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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an ef-4 in mississippi. >>> news tonight about rita wilson's recovery from coronavirus.tress says she and husband suffered extreme side effects after being prescribed the anti-malaria drug chloroquine, including nausea, vertigo, and she was too weak to walk. a reminder of what doctors have been saying, more research is needed. >>> when we come back, the remarkable moment. the help on the other side of the glass. ♪ fifty years ago, humpback whales were nearly extinct. they rebounded because a decision was made to protect them. making the right decisions today for your long-term financial future can protect you and your family, and preserve your legacy. ask a financial advisor how retirement and life insurance solutions from pacific life can help you plan for your future. unlike ordinary wmemory supplementsr? neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. the worst lies are the lies you (mitell yourself,is, like smoking isn't that da
an ef-4 in mississippi. >>> news tonight about rita wilson's recovery from coronavirus.tress says she and husband suffered extreme side effects after being prescribed the anti-malaria drug chloroquine, including nausea, vertigo, and she was too weak to walk. a reminder of what doctors have been saying, more research is needed. >>> when we come back, the remarkable moment. the help on the other side of the glass. ♪ fifty years ago, humpback whales were nearly extinct. they...
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Apr 16, 2020
04/20
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CSPAN2
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of extraordinary scientist, that is sort of the situation on one side, you have a larger society, wilson said a spirit of ruthless brutality had to infuse every aspect of americanam life. in the scientific community, you have these great scientist organize and trying to prepare for some disease they expected to erupt. now you have the enemy, the enemy of course is the virus, now all influenza viruses are bird viruses, every one of them. periodically and through history it is happened 3 - 5 times in a century, periodically in influenza virus will jump species from birds to people. and it can do this because it is one of the fastest mutating of any virus that exist and in fact they refer to it and a few other viruses as a mutant swarm because there is no single -- even a viral subtype -- there is no single virus, they all sort of are like a swarm of hornets, moving around like an average kind of virus, and when influenza virus infects itself, in about six hours, the single cell ends up admitting or explodesp in between 100,000 ino the million particles escape from the cell. and every one o
of extraordinary scientist, that is sort of the situation on one side, you have a larger society, wilson said a spirit of ruthless brutality had to infuse every aspect of americanam life. in the scientific community, you have these great scientist organize and trying to prepare for some disease they expected to erupt. now you have the enemy, the enemy of course is the virus, now all influenza viruses are bird viruses, every one of them. periodically and through history it is happened 3 - 5...
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Apr 14, 2020
04/20
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please give a warm savannah welcome to robert wilson. [applause] >> thank you, chris. i appreciate that introduction. i'm hoping your app works better than the app that was done for .he iowa caucuses [laughter] i trust it will. you probably actually tested it. thanks to all of you for coming this morning on this cold morning.init it's very pleasant to see so many of you here and it's very pleasant to see c-span here and i want to thank c-span for all it does to support book culture in america and i'm tempted and i am would be tended to say normally what remains a book culture in america but on a day like today is very optimistic about the state of course. i love being in savannah and my wife martha and i come often as we can. we live outside of washington dc and we have a place on the panhandle of florida and we used to dread the 15 hour drive until we decided that we could stop off in savannah on the way and go to the gray for dinner and so now we look forward to the trip very much. this is as chris said the third biography i've written and this is not really a trilog
please give a warm savannah welcome to robert wilson. [applause] >> thank you, chris. i appreciate that introduction. i'm hoping your app works better than the app that was done for .he iowa caucuses [laughter] i trust it will. you probably actually tested it. thanks to all of you for coming this morning on this cold morning.init it's very pleasant to see so many of you here and it's very pleasant to see c-span here and i want to thank c-span for all it does to support book culture in...
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Apr 27, 2020
04/20
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KQED
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one drson facing it is a fri of melissa siller's, rachael wilson. she was once a thriving ballet and lyric dancer before her diagnosis. in fact, the two met in an online sugrpporp for people battling ehlers danlos-syndrome. >> my case has somewhat been elevated just within the past few da. >> reporter: just a few weeks wait while her doctors decidedo the best course of treatment for ar disorder. but in recent daelated fluid to build up in her brain, putting pressure on her neurological system. >> i'm having a lot of seizures. i'm not able to walk properly-- or much at all. actually, i need a lot of help walking. um, i'm having vision loss, neurological-type thing.ow, pretty much everything, you know. another one is not being able to remember things. ( laughs ) so, it's very difficult to, you know, live any type of life. >> reporter: wilson lives in prior to the covid-19 pandemic she was traveling to the washington, d.c., area to see specialists who treat her condition. e doctors can't see he now, though her condition has become life threatening. >>y
one drson facing it is a fri of melissa siller's, rachael wilson. she was once a thriving ballet and lyric dancer before her diagnosis. in fact, the two met in an online sugrpporp for people battling ehlers danlos-syndrome. >> my case has somewhat been elevated just within the past few da. >> reporter: just a few weeks wait while her doctors decidedo the best course of treatment for ar disorder. but in recent daelated fluid to build up in her brain, putting pressure on her...
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Apr 5, 2020
04/20
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i'm jane harman, president and ceo of the wilson center. it is the best job on the planet because i get to talk to geniuses every single day. one of them who's not in my script but i'm going to call her out, she's going to hide somewhere, is maggie king. some of you may not know her but she runs our science, technology, and innovation program and is responsible for the schools we have on fridays to teach capitol hill staff about cyber and artificial intelligence. and today's genius, that would be ben buchanan, is our go to guy when we teach some of those schools and has been trying to teach me for a while. i think i've been the repeater of all time at some of those schools. i'm kind of getting get but i have an analog brain and i think him for his patients. he is a global fellow and he will discuss his latest book right now called "the hacker and the state."le spoiler alert, hackers have changed the world. how? ben says quote cyber operations are now indelibly part of international relations and the gap between the united statesf and other
i'm jane harman, president and ceo of the wilson center. it is the best job on the planet because i get to talk to geniuses every single day. one of them who's not in my script but i'm going to call her out, she's going to hide somewhere, is maggie king. some of you may not know her but she runs our science, technology, and innovation program and is responsible for the schools we have on fridays to teach capitol hill staff about cyber and artificial intelligence. and today's genius, that would...