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Jun 11, 2011
06/11
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it is 1-0 yale and how the game ended. 1-0 yale over harvard. harvard's loss frustrated roosevelt. in a letter to his mother he didn't say whether he enjoyed himself. the future president, no inkling of future popularity of football and couldn't anticipate a critical role he would play in the game's future but he did give voice to the frustration we all know of the agony of defeat. i am sorry to say we were beaten he wrote to his mother, because our opponents played very foul. in a moment i will talk about teddy roosevelt but i would like to say a few things about why football matters to me personally and to americans generally. i met my wife on the way to a football game. we walked from our dorm to michigan stadium. that was my first clear memory of her. we didn't start dating until basketball season. our bond was formed out of mutual love of the maize and blue. college football goes back further with my father saying hail to the victors as a boy. we would talk about the carter era. we were not talking about a troubled presidency in the 1970s but a time when anthony carter wore a
it is 1-0 yale and how the game ended. 1-0 yale over harvard. harvard's loss frustrated roosevelt. in a letter to his mother he didn't say whether he enjoyed himself. the future president, no inkling of future popularity of football and couldn't anticipate a critical role he would play in the game's future but he did give voice to the frustration we all know of the agony of defeat. i am sorry to say we were beaten he wrote to his mother, because our opponents played very foul. in a moment i...
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Jun 6, 2011
06/11
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CSPAN2
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it's one to nothing, yale and that is how the game ended. over harvard in 1876. the loss frustrated roosevelt. in a letter to his mother the next day he didn't say whether he enjoyed himself, the future president knowingly a football future popularity with couldn't anticipate their role he would play in the game's future, but he did give voice to the frustration we all know in the agony of defeat. i'm sorry to say we were beaten, he wrote to his mother, principally because the opponent's paid very foul. in a moment i will talk more about teddy roosevelt and what he did to save football but i would like to see why football matters but to me personally, both to americans generally. i met my wife on the way to a football game in ann arbor. we walked from our dorm across campus to michigan stadium. my first clear memory of her. we didn't start dating until basketball season, but our bond was formed out of a mutual love. my romance with college football actually goes back further with my father teaching me how to sing hail to the victors, and when we talk about the ca
it's one to nothing, yale and that is how the game ended. over harvard in 1876. the loss frustrated roosevelt. in a letter to his mother the next day he didn't say whether he enjoyed himself, the future president knowingly a football future popularity with couldn't anticipate their role he would play in the game's future, but he did give voice to the frustration we all know in the agony of defeat. i'm sorry to say we were beaten, he wrote to his mother, principally because the opponent's paid...
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Jun 19, 2011
06/11
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KBCW
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and i'm sure you run into that -- you taught at yale and nyu, stanford. what do you tell aspiring actors as the best advice that you could give them for starting out. >> letters for young artist is my book too we were joking about a minute ago is all about. that what i try -- first of all, becoming a star is a bunch of variety of things that you may or may not have control over. i don't actually think myself that's a very good pursuit and you have to question why you are pursuing that in a society that is full of celebrity and reveer it for good reasons and bad reasons. one reason is to find out something about you and bless all over the world that you don't want people to know. it's not necessarily a great predicament. we will call tapredicament. but again i think that what you can do with this natural ability that you have to attract attention is turn the camera passed you going on in something in the world. and another thing i try to say to aspiring actors is that you got to know what you are doing. i say look, put a sign in your -- on your mirror that
and i'm sure you run into that -- you taught at yale and nyu, stanford. what do you tell aspiring actors as the best advice that you could give them for starting out. >> letters for young artist is my book too we were joking about a minute ago is all about. that what i try -- first of all, becoming a star is a bunch of variety of things that you may or may not have control over. i don't actually think myself that's a very good pursuit and you have to question why you are pursuing that in...
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Jun 7, 2011
06/11
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FOXNEWS
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do you have against yale? i'd do it -- >> glenn: all right. >> to explain to your viewers, i met glenn when he was doing a morning radio show in new haven, connecticut, quite a long time ago. we just got to be friends. i was impressed with him. it must say though you are right, we haven't agreed a lot of the time, i've been really proud of your remarkable rise over the years since then. >> glenn: well, thank you, sir. i called you and you said yes, you would be there. you said mainly because if i may quote you, mainly because of what you saw me do in washington on 8-28, that it was not a political event. and that you knew you could trust that this event would be something dignified and good. >> absolutely right. look, first, i think the idea of the restoring courage gathering in jerusalem is an important idea and very constructive one. at a very important time for israel. and a time that also could be potentially destructive for israel and for us. for the united states of america. i know you want it to be nonp
do you have against yale? i'd do it -- >> glenn: all right. >> to explain to your viewers, i met glenn when he was doing a morning radio show in new haven, connecticut, quite a long time ago. we just got to be friends. i was impressed with him. it must say though you are right, we haven't agreed a lot of the time, i've been really proud of your remarkable rise over the years since then. >> glenn: well, thank you, sir. i called you and you said yes, you would be there. you said...
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Jun 18, 2011
06/11
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KQED
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i said at the yale school of medicine.e found my files within a half an hour. >> and it points out dramatically the different ways that people are treated within our system of health care. juxtapose later with one of the most powerful characters in the play which is the doctor in new orleans at charity hospital at the time of the hurricane. >> well, certainly part of the crisis is that we all aren't -- unless you have a lot of money, you aren't going to be able to get everything, right, anyway. so let's put -- have that as an overview and certainly people who are vulnerable are really going to be left out. and, you know, we don't seem to be concerned enough about that. >> it's not just their records that are lost. they're lost. >> they're lost. in this case of, yes, i went down to new orleans after katrina and this is a hospital for poor people, charity hospital, one of the oldest hospitals for poor people in america. it's now no longer in existence. but they were stuck there for six days. nobody came to get them. >> and p
i said at the yale school of medicine.e found my files within a half an hour. >> and it points out dramatically the different ways that people are treated within our system of health care. juxtapose later with one of the most powerful characters in the play which is the doctor in new orleans at charity hospital at the time of the hurricane. >> well, certainly part of the crisis is that we all aren't -- unless you have a lot of money, you aren't going to be able to get everything,...
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Jun 3, 2011
06/11
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KTVU
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today a yale university lab technician is likely to receive a 44-year prison sentence for killing theille woman. her body was found the day she was supposed to be married. raymond clark entered a guilty plea. >>> a new interactive map wants to show you the crime hot spots. it uses data to map out crime in different cities. it shows the most dangerous neighborhoods are south of market, the tenderloin, the mission, and civic center. the website will be updated as frequently as information comes in from the police department. >>> local businesses and volunteers are giving young patients at lucille pack card children's hospital a night to remember. tonight is the prompt dreamworks studios is applying all the decorations. other businesses are donating their time. it was inspired by the young patients who come to that hospital from all over the world. >>> the hockey player is speaking out about an unusual hitchhiker he picked up -- front man u2bono. >> i got him in the car and we took him to horse soo -- horseshoe bay. >> the superstar went out for a walk and got stranded in the rain. to th
today a yale university lab technician is likely to receive a 44-year prison sentence for killing theille woman. her body was found the day she was supposed to be married. raymond clark entered a guilty plea. >>> a new interactive map wants to show you the crime hot spots. it uses data to map out crime in different cities. it shows the most dangerous neighborhoods are south of market, the tenderloin, the mission, and civic center. the website will be updated as frequently as...
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Jun 26, 2011
06/11
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CSPAN2
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i give all the credit to yale university press. their graphic designers came up with it. if you notice, the block title is a little bit off the page kind of symbolizing how out of reach social assistance has become for many working poor americans. >> professor scott allard is the author of "out of reach: place, poverty and the new american welfare state." he joins booktv at the university of chicago. >> we'd like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv. >> university of chicago professor james t. sparrow, what did world war ii do to the size of the federal government? >> >> oh, it increased it by more than tenfold. >> how so? >> well, the economic mobilization required a drastic increase in the presence of the government within the economy. the armed forces grew drastically as well, over 16 million people served over the course of the war, and roughly half of the economy was absorbed by the mobilization. so it was an unprecedented expansion, the scope of the government. >> how did it compare to the 1930s during fdr's first terms? >> yeah. well, the '3
i give all the credit to yale university press. their graphic designers came up with it. if you notice, the block title is a little bit off the page kind of symbolizing how out of reach social assistance has become for many working poor americans. >> professor scott allard is the author of "out of reach: place, poverty and the new american welfare state." he joins booktv at the university of chicago. >> we'd like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback....
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Jun 21, 2011
06/11
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KDTV
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ciudad de cuzco daÁ la bienvenida a 200 piezas arquelogicas devueltas este aÑo por la universidad de yaleon educativa durante 100 aÑos. --su retorno a la nacion sudamericana ocurriÁ en el marco de los festejos por el centenario del descubrimiento de la ciudadela inca.--los valiosos articulos fueron sacados de peru por su descubridor el cientifico "hiram bingham". regresamos con la accion deportiva. bernardo osuna y los deportes... --maÑana, procure dejar el auto en --maÑana, procure dejar el auto en casa y si sufre de males respiratorios, trate de no practicar actividades al aire libre.---y es que ante las condiciones atmosfericas desfavorables para la dispersion de contaminantes, las autoridades decretaron este martes como "dia para cuidar el aire" o "spare the air day" como se le conoce en ingÉs.--las zonas de livermore y san jose, suelen ser las que presentan mas problemas de smog.--se recomienda compartir el auto con compaÑeros de trabajo o de estudios o utilizar el transporte publico.---aqui esta guillermo quiroz con el pronostico. mas adelante en noticias univision 14...----cad vez
ciudad de cuzco daÁ la bienvenida a 200 piezas arquelogicas devueltas este aÑo por la universidad de yaleon educativa durante 100 aÑos. --su retorno a la nacion sudamericana ocurriÁ en el marco de los festejos por el centenario del descubrimiento de la ciudadela inca.--los valiosos articulos fueron sacados de peru por su descubridor el cientifico "hiram bingham". regresamos con la accion deportiva. bernardo osuna y los deportes... --maÑana, procure dejar el auto en --maÑana,...
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Jun 1, 2011
06/11
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KQED
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i remember, was it yale and harvard? then you work at forei affairs magazine o"time" magazinend then seen nen. >> in the middle my brief shining moment was for four days i guest hosted the charlieose show when you were out. >> you've done everything. so if you came here as an 18-year-old today in 2011, do you think you would stay here or would you get that very fine education and probably go back to india where your parents still live? >> you know it's a tough question. i like to think that i would still come here because still believe in this country. i still believe that there is such an enormous sense of freedom and opportunity and freedom to be whoever you want and the canvas is so large. intellectually it is so stimuling. i nell love with this country when i came here. i was not... i came from a middle-class family. i wasn't rich but i didn't come here out of desperation economically. so i think that there's still an enormous amount th country has to off. it's still creating this extraordinary thing. you go to an am
i remember, was it yale and harvard? then you work at forei affairs magazine o"time" magazinend then seen nen. >> in the middle my brief shining moment was for four days i guest hosted the charlieose show when you were out. >> you've done everything. so if you came here as an 18-year-old today in 2011, do you think you would stay here or would you get that very fine education and probably go back to india where your parents still live? >> you know it's a tough...
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study out of yale why not found severe facial wrinkems indicate lower bone density. skin and bones relie on coledgen to stay healthy and estrogen therapy is one aspect being stored to slow down bone loss. for a change we are enjoying the weather. it is right through the weekend . a live picture from the sky 17 hd. clouds out there . a beautiful afternoon and expecting more sunshine and temperatures continuing to rise. we had low clouds out there this morn patches on the san mateo coast. we saw a clearring trend. temperatures responded. they are running a good five-15 degrees warmer than yesterday at this time. and sunny skies and hold for the weekend. there is a quite pattern. and here in the bay area and coastline. we do have a first tropical depression in the pacific. and tracked at three miles per hour . it would be tropical storm adrian and expected to entensify in a category two hurricane. remaining off of the coast . overnight look for loww clouds to develop . temperatures in the 40s and 50s. 73 for san jose and up to 75 degrees . 67 in mila . ghostal areas abo
study out of yale why not found severe facial wrinkems indicate lower bone density. skin and bones relie on coledgen to stay healthy and estrogen therapy is one aspect being stored to slow down bone loss. for a change we are enjoying the weather. it is right through the weekend . a live picture from the sky 17 hd. clouds out there . a beautiful afternoon and expecting more sunshine and temperatures continuing to rise. we had low clouds out there this morn patches on the san mateo coast. we saw...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 9, 2011
06/11
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SFGTV2
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you could send a youth to 3 years in law school in stan ford and yale. beyond that, every year we have looked to issues of critical importance. not only locally but throughout the nation. 2 years ago, we looked at undocumented youths particularly those from honduras and other countries where a hostile relationship were being deportd and sent back without parental support. so this year, we focus on the problems of guns and violence in our schools. both to and from schools and at schools. we raise this not as an insend iary issue. but as the headlines read and give the impression that youth themselves are to blame for these incidents that we often hear about involving guns and gun violence. but to recognize as a society, we have done little to decrease the proliferation of guns on our streets. we have done little. it's just like the war to drugs. you know, it seems almost strange toous those words since it's been such a failure. but the same thing we've seen with guns. particularly those of you who work with youth and in the communities, which are plagued
you could send a youth to 3 years in law school in stan ford and yale. beyond that, every year we have looked to issues of critical importance. not only locally but throughout the nation. 2 years ago, we looked at undocumented youths particularly those from honduras and other countries where a hostile relationship were being deportd and sent back without parental support. so this year, we focus on the problems of guns and violence in our schools. both to and from schools and at schools. we...
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Jun 26, 2011
06/11
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it is the standard applied at yale. it is enforced with a great deal of ruthlessness on american campuses today. how will we resolve this attention? are the ringing principles of snyder vs phelps going to crowd out the increasing efforts to protect people against offensive speech where the offensiveness is based upon the favored categories of race, sex, religion, sexual orientation, and so forth? it is interesting that none of the opinions in this case recognizes that this is -- there is this huge domain of speech restriction based upon offensiveness that exists in this country. which principal will prevail? >> i have not read the amicus briefs. did they address this point? >> i have not read them. >> that is a profoundly important point. you have set up very nicely for me to pass the baton to you. >> just one general remark looking at not just this term, but the last several terms, is that free speech is alive and well in the supreme court. i would say that this is the most consistently and strongly free speech protect
it is the standard applied at yale. it is enforced with a great deal of ruthlessness on american campuses today. how will we resolve this attention? are the ringing principles of snyder vs phelps going to crowd out the increasing efforts to protect people against offensive speech where the offensiveness is based upon the favored categories of race, sex, religion, sexual orientation, and so forth? it is interesting that none of the opinions in this case recognizes that this is -- there is this...
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Jun 8, 2011
06/11
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KTVU
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yale ringing the bell on the new york stock exchange. can see on the lower part of your screen the dow jones down 10%. really pretty dismal news but not so bad as far as the reaction here in the u.s.. we'll keep watching. >> we will smile and say good morning, to you. thank you for joining us on the ktvu morning news. the middle of the week now. it's wednesday, june 8th i'm dave clark. >> and i'm pam cook. >>> overnight two fires are now being investigated in berkeley and firefighters think it could be arson. both fires were reported on cragmont avenue very close to each other. tara moriarty is live on the scene with the first fire reported with more on the suspected connection. >> reporter: good morning. could an arsonist be on the loose? that is what this fire investigator is trying to figure out. he believes the fire started on the back end of this car. you can see where it melted the tires completely off and also where the flames lapped up the front of the house. now the investigator has been trying to pry open the hood to get a bett
yale ringing the bell on the new york stock exchange. can see on the lower part of your screen the dow jones down 10%. really pretty dismal news but not so bad as far as the reaction here in the u.s.. we'll keep watching. >> we will smile and say good morning, to you. thank you for joining us on the ktvu morning news. the middle of the week now. it's wednesday, june 8th i'm dave clark. >> and i'm pam cook. >>> overnight two fires are now being investigated in berkeley and...
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Jun 3, 2011
06/11
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KNTV
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in connecticut, raymond clark iii, the lab technician who pleaded guilty to 2009 killing of yale graduatetudent annie lay is expected to be sentenced to 40 years in prison. >> in st. louis, federal judgs s will get updates on progress in the nfl dispute, the owners and players union are trying to reach a new collective bargaining agreement. >>> and resist temptation if you can. it is national doughnut day created in the 50s to honor women who served in world war i. today, it's mainly celebrated by stores that offer doughnuts. >>> all day long, you can stay on top of the very latest developments in those stories and others as they break on msnbc. and tonight be sure to watch brian williams with nbc "nightly news." >>> and, finally, here's a look at what's coming up later this morning on the "today" show. a live report on the growing concerns over the u.s. dismal economic picture. and for all you die hard boy band fans, the new kids on the block and the back street boys, now known as nkotbsb take the stage for a joint performance live concert. >>> now keep it on this channel for continuing
in connecticut, raymond clark iii, the lab technician who pleaded guilty to 2009 killing of yale graduatetudent annie lay is expected to be sentenced to 40 years in prison. >> in st. louis, federal judgs s will get updates on progress in the nfl dispute, the owners and players union are trying to reach a new collective bargaining agreement. >>> and resist temptation if you can. it is national doughnut day created in the 50s to honor women who served in world war i. today, it's...
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plus, at the knob creek machine gun shoot, there's vendors selling militia handbooks and nazi par a yalewith prices so low everyday is a white sale. (laughter) unfortunately this harmless gathering of weapons enthusiasts has been marred by speeches advocating the overthrow of the government. for example, in april 2010, the not at all anti-semitic christian patriot metal band poker face played knob creek and the band's lead singer, tom toe petty declared obama is basically the exclamation point on the takeover of the united states. too many of us are waking up and too many of us are heavily armed. they are going to push and we are going to shove back. the second american revolution will commencement scary stuff. and by rand paul's logic, anyone there to hear them should be arrested. f.b.i., you're going to want to arrest this guy. (laughter) arrest this guy. and arrest... wait a minute, jimmy, freeze! enhance! that's rand paul! (laughter) (applause) senator rand paul who, on his own web site, admits he was there. and face it, being a terrorist makes more sense than his previous cover stor
plus, at the knob creek machine gun shoot, there's vendors selling militia handbooks and nazi par a yalewith prices so low everyday is a white sale. (laughter) unfortunately this harmless gathering of weapons enthusiasts has been marred by speeches advocating the overthrow of the government. for example, in april 2010, the not at all anti-semitic christian patriot metal band poker face played knob creek and the band's lead singer, tom toe petty declared obama is basically the exclamation point...
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Jun 19, 2011
06/11
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CSPAN2
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then a friend of yours at yale said andrew breitbart, i have the perfect job for you. >> he was from harvard, an astro physics major, who calls cared for me. he always knew that in prep school i was not going to be the a student but i was the class clown and i meant well. that is how skirted around my add and was able to maintain my place in an elite private academy where everybody was harvard, stanford, princeton bound. i didn't want to leave my friends. seth knew my burden. seth knew -- >> you visited him. >> he visited me and said, i need to talk you on a walk. i said, just sitdown. he said, need to talk you on a wake. he walked me around the street in santa monica, and she said, i have seen your future. it's this thing called the internet. it works the way your brain works. and at that point i had been diagnosed with adult add, and i had tried ritalin for about a month and i hated it. i felt hideous about it. i was trying to figure out how i could conform the workplace, where people have to work in can cubicles, and i knew i couldn't do that. i'd rather drive around l.a. listenin
then a friend of yours at yale said andrew breitbart, i have the perfect job for you. >> he was from harvard, an astro physics major, who calls cared for me. he always knew that in prep school i was not going to be the a student but i was the class clown and i meant well. that is how skirted around my add and was able to maintain my place in an elite private academy where everybody was harvard, stanford, princeton bound. i didn't want to leave my friends. seth knew my burden. seth knew --...
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Jun 12, 2011
06/11
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>> actually i was at yale, an art major, and i didn't know about literature. took a class on contemporary women poets. we read mostly lesbian poets. there was a woman named joy whose poetry i loved. we read a collection called we had some horses. i looked at it today, and she does that repetitive thing that i'm doing now. i didn't realize that, but we had horses, we had horses, it's just beautiful and encaptain story, and there was something about her work how she incorporated the landscapes that i find myself doing now, and very wide openceps of the world, but something i had never read poetry like that. there was a japanese-american woman poet, i think she had a book of poems called "camp" which referred to the camps in world war ii where the japanese were sent, and that's the first place i saw the camp my mother and family were sent to written about, and that was very kind of eye opening. like, you can write about this stuff, and it's all right. i think that's where i was first exposed to it. i remember it was a different time then, but at the end of the cl
>> actually i was at yale, an art major, and i didn't know about literature. took a class on contemporary women poets. we read mostly lesbian poets. there was a woman named joy whose poetry i loved. we read a collection called we had some horses. i looked at it today, and she does that repetitive thing that i'm doing now. i didn't realize that, but we had horses, we had horses, it's just beautiful and encaptain story, and there was something about her work how she incorporated the...
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Jun 4, 2011
06/11
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CNNW
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. >>> here we are now, two years after a grisly crime at yale university.of a grad student now knows his sentence. that's next. >>> 36 minutes past the hour. some of the stories making headlines. former yale university lab technician raymond clark has been sentenced to 44 years in prison for the killing of annie le. clark's dna was found at the crime scene. >>> also a show of bipartisan in washington. yeah right. well, president obama and house speaker john boehner have scheduled a golf date and the president extended the invitation a few weeks ago. boehner accepted. they are skecheduled to play tw weeks from today. we don't know which course they'll visit. >>> the e. coli has led to several countries in europe. 18 people have died, all but one in germany. about 1,800 people have gotten sick. three people who traveled to the u.s. from germany last month are still in the hospital. on the line with us is david acherson former chief medical officer at the food and drug administration and now with levitt partners which advises people about food safety. doctor,
. >>> here we are now, two years after a grisly crime at yale university.of a grad student now knows his sentence. that's next. >>> 36 minutes past the hour. some of the stories making headlines. former yale university lab technician raymond clark has been sentenced to 44 years in prison for the killing of annie le. clark's dna was found at the crime scene. >>> also a show of bipartisan in washington. yeah right. well, president obama and house speaker john boehner...
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Jun 7, 2011
06/11
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WMAR
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david katz, a nutritionist at yale university, to weigh in. >> the dukan diet essentially does exactlyhat the atkins diet did. very restrictive, use a lot of weight fast. then make it a diet you can live with and oopsy daisy maybe you'll start to gain back weight. not to worry, just go back to the beginning and start over. >> reporter: dr. katz argues this vicious cycle of yo-yo dieting is harmful and high-fat diets have been linked to heart disease, high cholesterol and even breast cancer it it's the atkins diet that allows you to eat high-fat proteins, a no no on the dukan diet. you don't let bacon -- >> no, of course. >> reporter: no fatty cheese. atkins, that's all -- >> at this time, big, big problem with the fat because you can have cheese, ham, you can have -- >> reporter: which may be why just this week the american dietetic association's book review said the dukan diet is not dangerous. do you think that losing the case could ruin dr. dukan's reputation? >> i believe yes, and i'm very disappointed because this was not my objective. i didn't want to go to the court. he decided
david katz, a nutritionist at yale university, to weigh in. >> the dukan diet essentially does exactlyhat the atkins diet did. very restrictive, use a lot of weight fast. then make it a diet you can live with and oopsy daisy maybe you'll start to gain back weight. not to worry, just go back to the beginning and start over. >> reporter: dr. katz argues this vicious cycle of yo-yo dieting is harmful and high-fat diets have been linked to heart disease, high cholesterol and even breast...
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Jun 15, 2011
06/11
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KQEH
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at this medical school, at the yale school of medicine. he found my files within half an hour. tavis: i saw this in new york city and i loved it. i was able to catch you. >> i am honored. >> i enjoyed your telling me, you think it is even better now? >> it makes me look like a braggart, that was between you and me. >> i thought it was amazing, how could it be better? gosh i have been performing in since the fall of 2009, so it should be better. i have a chance to really get deeper and deeper into characters, i guess. this thing has 20 different characters. had you not crisscross? >> why are you putting the idea in my head? i have to goack on stage, don't give me that idea. don't you remember that on talk shows they would always as aretha franklin, when you are singing a song, who are you thinking about? they say, i am trying to hit the note. it is technical stuff. >> what makes this fascinating for me is the research he did. tell me about the research you did to put together this particular thing. >> i interviewed 320 people on three continents. it is likely to do. i would love
at this medical school, at the yale school of medicine. he found my files within half an hour. tavis: i saw this in new york city and i loved it. i was able to catch you. >> i am honored. >> i enjoyed your telling me, you think it is even better now? >> it makes me look like a braggart, that was between you and me. >> i thought it was amazing, how could it be better? gosh i have been performing in since the fall of 2009, so it should be better. i have a chance to really...
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a judge sentenced a former yale lab technician to 44 years for killing annie le days before her wedding. raymond clark apologized in court for the murder. lay's body was found five-days after she was last seen. the judge told clark he took the life of a promising young woman and destroyed the of two families. >> the family of a bay area nursing student who disappeared is holding a vigil. michelle le was in the hospital and she told a co-worker she had to get something from her car and never returned. michelle's family is offering a $40,000 reward for her safe return. her white honda was found abandoned. >> 30 years ago, centers for disease report issued a report for a strange disease that attacked five gay men . san francisco was the epicenter. it was known as aids. doctors are relying on a strategy to treat people earlier than before. for years doctors waited before prescribing the drug therapy. now these drugs are improved. researchers say it is better to treat the patients in the earlies of the disease. >> i think we are going to see a reduction in transmissions of hiv. we are seeing
a judge sentenced a former yale lab technician to 44 years for killing annie le days before her wedding. raymond clark apologized in court for the murder. lay's body was found five-days after she was last seen. the judge told clark he took the life of a promising young woman and destroyed the of two families. >> the family of a bay area nursing student who disappeared is holding a vigil. michelle le was in the hospital and she told a co-worker she had to get something from her car and...
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Jun 8, 2011
06/11
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over tanning or cosmetic surgery and botox won't alter it but the yale study measures natural wrinklecale from 1 to 6 the bigger the chance of bone disease. direct link between aging skin and aging skeleton. >> they have the same collagen. when that breaks down and you lose bone density the collagen in the skin that we can see breaks down also and causes wrinkle and other changes in the skin thicknesses. >> important discovery that could limb tonight the need for expensive across the board bone density testing. which can cost 350 dollars a patient. instead post menopause women between the ages of 45 and 58 with heavy wrinkles would be identified as high risk by their doctors with the naked eye. >> it tells them that those people who have the fair amount of wrinkles may be ones who also have very low bone density and might benefit from being treated early. >>reporter: just by lacking. >> just by looking at them. >>reporter: vital early treatment because women with osteoporosis suffer most of the bone loss during the first 10 years after menopause. the this is abc news new york. >>> who
over tanning or cosmetic surgery and botox won't alter it but the yale study measures natural wrinklecale from 1 to 6 the bigger the chance of bone disease. direct link between aging skin and aging skeleton. >> they have the same collagen. when that breaks down and you lose bone density the collagen in the skin that we can see breaks down also and causes wrinkle and other changes in the skin thicknesses. >> important discovery that could limb tonight the need for expensive across...
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Jun 10, 2011
06/11
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KQED
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robert shiller with yale university. >> suzanne: the downturn in home building is getting a lot of blame for the nation's high jobless rate. unemployment in the construction industry tops 16%, and experts say construction and the other related businesses account for nearly one-fifth of the economy. diane eastabrook looks at how the housing slump is rippling through the chicago area. >> reporter: for sale in upscale hinsdale, illinois, is this newly-built nantucket-style house. price tag: $1.6 million. >> in here is the kitchen. this is a white inset painted cabinet. >> reporter: steve subkoyack built the 3,600-square-foot home on spec, and he says it took roughly 175 people to do it. >> that goes from your architect, your engineer, demo, all the way through framers, electricians, plumbers, dry wall, all the way through final cleaning, window washers, everybody. >> reporter: the jobs created by the construction of this one home clearly illustrate why the stagnant housing industry is weighing so heavily on the rest of the u.s. economy. experts estimate one construction job can generate at
robert shiller with yale university. >> suzanne: the downturn in home building is getting a lot of blame for the nation's high jobless rate. unemployment in the construction industry tops 16%, and experts say construction and the other related businesses account for nearly one-fifth of the economy. diane eastabrook looks at how the housing slump is rippling through the chicago area. >> reporter: for sale in upscale hinsdale, illinois, is this newly-built nantucket-style house. price...
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Jun 4, 2011
06/11
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KICU
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. >>> the men have confessed to the murder of yale graduate student was sentenced today to 4 4-years in prison. raymond clark iii apologized for killing annie calling her a wonderful person. he confessed of killing and sexually assaulting her. she had been missing for 5 days in september of 2009 before her body was found on what would have been her wedding day. she had been stuffed into a basement. >>> the man arrested in connection with the giant fan giant stow remains jail tonight on unrelated charge. los angeles parole officer held on parole violation in a gun case. he has not been charged in the attack on stow. the parole officer found there was not probable cause to hold ramirez, the spokesman said only minimal evidence was presented. los angeles police say they're looking for a second attacker and a woman who drove them from the scene. >>> florida marlins player -- scott has repeatedly apologized for the play that left him with a broken leg and torn ligaments. he issued a statement today reiterating how bad he feels about the injuries he suffered. he has tried without success t
. >>> the men have confessed to the murder of yale graduate student was sentenced today to 4 4-years in prison. raymond clark iii apologized for killing annie calling her a wonderful person. he confessed of killing and sexually assaulting her. she had been missing for 5 days in september of 2009 before her body was found on what would have been her wedding day. she had been stuffed into a basement. >>> the man arrested in connection with the giant fan giant stow remains jail...
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Jun 4, 2011
06/11
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KOFY
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clark apologized to the court today for the 2009 murder of the yale graduate student.er body found behind a lab wall 5 days after she was last seen. the judge told clark that he took the life of a promising young woman and destroyed the lives of 2 families. gentleman federal government has now taken the lead in the scandal that has enveloped 4 current and former police officers in contra costa county. the investigation into drug dealing now includes allegations of prostitution and marijuana grow farm. laura has the story from martinez. >> growing law enforcement scandal too much of a burden on his limited resources, contra costa county district attorney mark peterson announced federal government is now taking the lead in the complex investigation. >> it is my belief that the interest for the people of this county are best served if ween list the resources of the united states attorney's office and fbi. >>reporter: peterson office will still assist and local drug and other charges against former commander norman welch. private investigators chris butler and former polic
clark apologized to the court today for the 2009 murder of the yale graduate student.er body found behind a lab wall 5 days after she was last seen. the judge told clark that he took the life of a promising young woman and destroyed the lives of 2 families. gentleman federal government has now taken the lead in the scandal that has enveloped 4 current and former police officers in contra costa county. the investigation into drug dealing now includes allegations of prostitution and marijuana...
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Jun 3, 2011
06/11
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KTVU
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. >>> today the man who pleaded guilty to murdering a woman attending yale university will be sentenced. anny le was strangled. >>> a man nominated for a medal from the san francisco police department for taking down a gunman during a fatal nightclub shootout has been fired. it was february of 2010 when patrol special officer rob burns shot one of two officers. a 19-year-old man was killed and three others were hurt. on wednesday the police commission voted to revoke burns badge for refusing to follow several rules including wearing the correct uniform. >>> the only medical marijuana dispensary at east palo alto is fighting to stay in business. they went before the east palo alto city council to make its case on why it should remain open. east palo alto has also ordered the collective to shut down. but the city code is too vague of what should and shouldn't be a business. >> you have to make the determination up front and saying this is what we mean. this is what we mean by charitable organizations this is what we mean by drugstore and moving forward you can point to that and say that's
. >>> today the man who pleaded guilty to murdering a woman attending yale university will be sentenced. anny le was strangled. >>> a man nominated for a medal from the san francisco police department for taking down a gunman during a fatal nightclub shootout has been fired. it was february of 2010 when patrol special officer rob burns shot one of two officers. a 19-year-old man was killed and three others were hurt. on wednesday the police commission voted to revoke burns...
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Jun 3, 2011
06/11
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KTVU
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. >>> a 26-year-old lab technician at yale university was sentenced this morning to 44 years in prison for killing a graduate student from northern california. raymond clark the third pleaded guilty in march to murder and attempted sexual assault in the 2009 death of annie lay from placerville. he apologized during the sentencing. she disappeared and 5 days later her body was found behind a wall in the university lab on the same day she was to have been married. >> dr. jack kervorkian died of heart failure this morning. he was 83. he was known around the world as a crusader in the emotional battle over suicide. nicknamed dr. death, he is believed to have taken part in more than 130 suicides, he was convicted in 1999 of second- degree murder and spent eight years in prison. just last year he was the subject of a tv movie called you don't know jack, staring al pacino. >>> an investigation into the officer-involved shooting of a man guarding an illegal marijuana operation in santa clara county was legally justified. this is the word about the killing of 26-year-old jose soto last june. sh
. >>> a 26-year-old lab technician at yale university was sentenced this morning to 44 years in prison for killing a graduate student from northern california. raymond clark the third pleaded guilty in march to murder and attempted sexual assault in the 2009 death of annie lay from placerville. he apologized during the sentencing. she disappeared and 5 days later her body was found behind a wall in the university lab on the same day she was to have been married. >> dr. jack...
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Jun 19, 2011
06/11
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CSPAN2
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where she was an editor of the yale law journal. she received her ba summa cum laude from berman university. before joining the faculty, or faster brown bag and practice law in new york city and serve as a law clerk to the honorable jane ross of the states court of appeals for the third circuit them and to the honorable robert l. carter at the united states district court for the southern district of new york. at uva professor brown-nagin teaches constitutional law, constitutional and social history, and education law. she is considered one of the nations leading young legal historians and has written widely in areas of legal history, education law, and the supreme court people protection jurisprudence. her scholarship has appeared in some of the foremost law journals within the legal academy. in february of this year oxford university press published professor brown-nagin's first book, "courage to dissent: atlanta and the long history of the civil rights movement" your asocial legal history about lawyers, courts and community based
where she was an editor of the yale law journal. she received her ba summa cum laude from berman university. before joining the faculty, or faster brown bag and practice law in new york city and serve as a law clerk to the honorable jane ross of the states court of appeals for the third circuit them and to the honorable robert l. carter at the united states district court for the southern district of new york. at uva professor brown-nagin teaches constitutional law, constitutional and social...
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Jun 3, 2011
06/11
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KPIX
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. >>> the man who killed a yale grad student from placerville will spend the next 44 years behind bars. annie le was found dead in 2009 behind a lab wall on campus. today a judge in connecticut handing down that four decade- plus sentence to that man, raymond clark, a former animal research technician. clark pled guilty in march to murder and attempted sexual assault. >>> a last-minute deal to keep dozens of cops on the streets. what san jose police gave up and what they got in return. >>> and who is hiring and who is firing? what a new job report says about the economy. plus, why the bay area is the best place to be if you're looking for work. >>> home from the front lines, but not out of danger. how a soldier put himself in the line of fire to save his kids and stop a bank robbery. >>> it's cloudy outside right now, and those rain showers are on their way. i can tell you when we can expect them on my detailed forecast. ,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,, the city's just announced a tent he officers >>> welcome back. good news for san jose police officers today. the city's just announced a tentative ag
. >>> the man who killed a yale grad student from placerville will spend the next 44 years behind bars. annie le was found dead in 2009 behind a lab wall on campus. today a judge in connecticut handing down that four decade- plus sentence to that man, raymond clark, a former animal research technician. clark pled guilty in march to murder and attempted sexual assault. >>> a last-minute deal to keep dozens of cops on the streets. what san jose police gave up and what they got...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Jun 12, 2011
06/11
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SFGTV2
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university of washington was where everybody went unless they got lucky and went to harvard or yale. about put on the waiting list for some of those. i did try. -- i got put on the waiting list for some of those. i did try. this little university was willing to give me a four-year scholarship. i took a risk. it was one of the best decisions i made. it was one of the best experiences i had come up being in one of these small liberal arts colleges. it was completely on the opposite side of the world. >> you were one of the few asians there. there was a bristly joke -- bruce lee joke. >> do not talk to my wife. she has these pictures of me in college. my hair was down to here. they did not know what i was. i had a mustache, long hair, big glasses. you cannot tell if i was russian or indian. [laughter] you have to ask. i got a lot of those questions. when people found out i was chinese, and was one of five on campus. there was a lot of ignorance about chinese-americans on the campus. i had two jokes. i was either bruce lee's brother or a descendant of robert e. lee. [laughter] whenever i
university of washington was where everybody went unless they got lucky and went to harvard or yale. about put on the waiting list for some of those. i did try. -- i got put on the waiting list for some of those. i did try. this little university was willing to give me a four-year scholarship. i took a risk. it was one of the best decisions i made. it was one of the best experiences i had come up being in one of these small liberal arts colleges. it was completely on the opposite side of the...