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she was very concerned about the safety at yale.olved in projects where she and other students would walk women and other students back and forth from class from the lab or from the library. she even wrote an article about being safe on campus. it was a very important thing for her and she was concerned for her own safety as well as other students. >> vivien, paul and mary, thank you so much for your time this afternoon. >> thank you very much. >> yale did release this statement saying in part quote, there's no basis sis for the civil suit. yale had no information that ray monday clark was capable of committing this crime and no reasonable security measures could have prevented his unforeseeable act. this lawsuit serves neither justice nor annie's memory. >>> up next, an all expense paid summer camp for children who lost loved ones on 9/11. >>> first up, a look at the freedom tower this morning during the moment of silence at 9:08. and a choice. take advil now and maybe up to four in a day. or choose aleve and two pills for a day fr
she was very concerned about the safety at yale.olved in projects where she and other students would walk women and other students back and forth from class from the lab or from the library. she even wrote an article about being safe on campus. it was a very important thing for her and she was concerned for her own safety as well as other students. >> vivien, paul and mary, thank you so much for your time this afternoon. >> thank you very much. >> yale did release this...
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peru started asking for them a few years ago and yale basically said, you know, we've had this stuffour basement for a long time. you're going to ask for it back now. >> jon: they're not even displaying it. it's in their basement. >> most of it is in their basement. they're studying it. most of it is pottery fragments and human remains. >> jon: most of it is the ancestors of the people requesting it. >> but it's not king tut's treasure. but because it is that stuff, it was a big deal for peruians to get it back. yale agreed to send it back in november of last year. >> jon: it should be noted that the gentleman who did find it before him, this burns fellow.... >> he was basically just there to steal artifacts as quickly as he could. we don't know if he was successful or not. >> jon: he was there 40 years before. >> 1867. >> jon: he also probably found the cocoa leaves i would manage. >> he also probably found cocoa leaves. >> jon: you met some of these folks at the explorers club. is that a real place? >> the explorers club is a real place. >> jon: do the people at the door ever go, w
peru started asking for them a few years ago and yale basically said, you know, we've had this stuffour basement for a long time. you're going to ask for it back now. >> jon: they're not even displaying it. it's in their basement. >> most of it is in their basement. they're studying it. most of it is pottery fragments and human remains. >> jon: most of it is the ancestors of the people requesting it. >> but it's not king tut's treasure. but because it is that stuff, it...
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Sep 7, 2011
09/11
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but it is not clear what yale could have done or what yale has done in the past to make this crime possiblenal act of this one individual. >> the suit claims that yale created, i'm reading from the notes here, created a culture of tolerance that allowed aggressive male behavior. and, jeffrey, you remember when i covered the story out of yale, the delta kappa epsilon frat and these young pledges were walking around the university chanting about rape. i mean. >>> pretty horrific things. and it was a ritual. and women on the campus had spoken up about this type of behavior in the past and nothing was done about it until we made a national story out of it. so how do you -- is it tough to prove, in addition to this murder case, right, is it tough to prove a culture of tolerance for this type of behavior? >> well, it is tough to prove. and, you know, this is where the judge will have to make a difficult call if this case goes to trial. because yale will certainly argue, look. what these frat boys did was stupid. it was juvenile. it was embarrassing. but it had absolutely nothing to do with this c
but it is not clear what yale could have done or what yale has done in the past to make this crime possiblenal act of this one individual. >> the suit claims that yale created, i'm reading from the notes here, created a culture of tolerance that allowed aggressive male behavior. and, jeffrey, you remember when i covered the story out of yale, the delta kappa epsilon frat and these young pledges were walking around the university chanting about rape. i mean. >>> pretty horrific...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 24, 2011
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he is in his mid 40's and now teaching at yale. just got married to the woman that does the green design at yale. both programs are about a year old. the universities are finally trying to get this. amy on the right is the first chemist -- last year more women graduated than men. we have the technologies to figure this out. we need to get the billion dollar beauty companies supporting this research. of course the power of act vision, opi nail products. they are the largest seller of largest products worldwide, 70 countries. they are using -- why don't you take it out
he is in his mid 40's and now teaching at yale. just got married to the woman that does the green design at yale. both programs are about a year old. the universities are finally trying to get this. amy on the right is the first chemist -- last year more women graduated than men. we have the technologies to figure this out. we need to get the billion dollar beauty companies supporting this research. of course the power of act vision, opi nail products. they are the largest seller of largest...
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Sep 7, 2011
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just days before her wedding on the campus of yale university.her death could have been prevented. >>> plus, police call it a suicide at a ceo's mansion, but some new eyebrow-raising discoveries. sunny hostin's on the case next. this is the kind of truck that has it all. guess that means, you can do it all. it's the chevy season of doing. now, combine the all-star edition discount with other offers for a total value of $6,000 or qualified buyers can get 0% apr for 60 months plus a thousand dollars cash allowance on all silverado models. get to your chevy dealer and get that truck today. but afraid you can't afford it? well, look how much insurance many people can get through selectquote for less than a dollar a day. selectquote found, rich, 37, a $500,000 policy for under $18 a month. even though dave, 43, takes meds to control his blood pressure, selectquote got him a $500,000 policy for under $28 a month. ellen, 47, got a $250,000 policy for under $20 a month. all it takes is a phone call. your personal selectquote agent will answer all your qu
just days before her wedding on the campus of yale university.her death could have been prevented. >>> plus, police call it a suicide at a ceo's mansion, but some new eyebrow-raising discoveries. sunny hostin's on the case next. this is the kind of truck that has it all. guess that means, you can do it all. it's the chevy season of doing. now, combine the all-star edition discount with other offers for a total value of $6,000 or qualified buyers can get 0% apr for 60 months plus a...
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Sep 7, 2011
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the family of 24-year-old annie le filed a wrongful death law suit against yale.as found strangled to death in 2009. she was set to wed her fiance on that day. her family claims the school failed to protect women on campus. raymond clark is serving a 44-year sentence for the murder. he was the lab technician at yale. >>> a bay area man is accused of leaving his 1-year-old baby boy inside of a hot car. 47-year-old serge chelicoth is behind bars on $50,000 bail. witnesses reported seeing the child strapped into a car seat with the windows rolled up. when the witnesses reportedly confronted the father, he lowered the windows and returned to the pub. the baby boy is back with his mother. the father will face child cruelty charges during his arraignment tomorrow. ♪ >> it's a painful reminder of american history. this sunday marks the tenth anniversary of the september 11th attacks. and since then, countless men and women have decided to join the military. cheryl hurd talked with the father of a fallen soldier who is now dedicating his life to make sure no one forgets t
the family of 24-year-old annie le filed a wrongful death law suit against yale.as found strangled to death in 2009. she was set to wed her fiance on that day. her family claims the school failed to protect women on campus. raymond clark is serving a 44-year sentence for the murder. he was the lab technician at yale. >>> a bay area man is accused of leaving his 1-year-old baby boy inside of a hot car. 47-year-old serge chelicoth is behind bars on $50,000 bail. witnesses reported seeing...
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Sep 23, 2011
09/11
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talk more about this big corporate shakeup at h.p., jeffrey sonnenfeld, professor of management at yale university. hi, jeff, hi, susie, how are you? >> susie: good, thank you. the big question everybody upons answered is whitman the right person for the job? >> she is the right person for the job, and for several reasons. first, she-- she wouldn't be the first choice for a lo of us hoping an insider really grounded in this business would get it, here she is on board for a little period of time. she has a good consumer marketing background. she's a great communicator. and she's gotten better after being bruised a bit in her campaign. she understands how to integrate businesses and she's tested, proven c.e.o., something which while she has some declines when she left at the end of e-bay, and had some challenges with amazon cutting in on space there and maybe overpaid a little bit for skype, she still on balance is quite promising. >> susie: analysts say some of the shortcomings they point to, she really doesn't have any experience in the p.c. and technology part of the business. she's ne
talk more about this big corporate shakeup at h.p., jeffrey sonnenfeld, professor of management at yale university. hi, jeff, hi, susie, how are you? >> susie: good, thank you. the big question everybody upons answered is whitman the right person for the job? >> she is the right person for the job, and for several reasons. first, she-- she wouldn't be the first choice for a lo of us hoping an insider really grounded in this business would get it, here she is on board for a little...
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professor of political science at yale university thank you very much for being with us i'd like to get in with. with libya in fact we have nico margiela saying that he feels like mistakes haven't been learned from in terms of iraq and afghanistan what do you think your future holds for libya and how can the country get out of the situation that it's it well i think it's i think there's probably a right on the mark i think that the most comparison is with afghanistan because you're really dealing with something much different so-called arab spring. and. you tip into lesser iran you're really dealing with the civil war which is by no means over i mean even. if gadhafi is defeated and all killed which he said i think he's left the country now that doesn't mean the civil war will end either most of the leaders of the opposition were members of paid off he's government until. a few months ago. they don't have any history of promoting democracy and i don't see any particular reason to think that they'll start now so i do think it's much more like afghanistan and i understand the. impulse may
professor of political science at yale university thank you very much for being with us i'd like to get in with. with libya in fact we have nico margiela saying that he feels like mistakes haven't been learned from in terms of iraq and afghanistan what do you think your future holds for libya and how can the country get out of the situation that it's it well i think it's i think there's probably a right on the mark i think that the most comparison is with afghanistan because you're really...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Sep 6, 2011
09/11
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both of them at yale together, by the way, in the early 1960s, there was an absolute reaction against that. as much as yo were wanting in part way to emulate the majesty and therar eundof a jackson pollack or a painting by bill de kooning, there was also an absolute need to get away from there that. >> rose: is there an explanation for why there are bursts of creativity at certain places and certain times? >> well, i think both of them could speak that very much. there is no question that the myth of the isolationed genius in the studio is quite inaccurate or incomplete. because i think the generation of these two and many others-- whether you're talking about, in fact, theabstract expressionists or the french impressionists or florence in the italian renaissance, it's the togetherness that is such an impoant factor. it's the rivalry wh your colleagues, it's the desire to support each other, it's what you get from seeing what they're doing, it's talking and talking and talking. >> rose: creativity needs what? >> i think for people who are making and doing, when you're actually making
both of them at yale together, by the way, in the early 1960s, there was an absolute reaction against that. as much as yo were wanting in part way to emulate the majesty and therar eundof a jackson pollack or a painting by bill de kooning, there was also an absolute need to get away from there that. >> rose: is there an explanation for why there are bursts of creativity at certain places and certain times? >> well, i think both of them could speak that very much. there is no...
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Sep 7, 2011
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is filing a wrongful death suit against yale university.nnie le was a grad student in 2009 when she was killed at a lab at the ivy league school. the suit contends the university failed to adequately protect women on campus. yale officials say the suit has no merit. >>> and the suspect in the home invasion murder of a 96-year- old man will appear in court this afternoon. prosecutors say text messages connect 33-year-old juan cortinas to the 2009 saratoga murder. cortinas was already in custody on charges stemming from a july restaurant robbery in sunnyvale. >>> some people in richmond have had enough with banks that don't take care of foreclosed properties and some of those properties have literally become dumps with garbage and even dead animals. the bank is supposed to board up or maintain foreclosed homes or face fines of $1,000 a day. but city code enforcement officials say banks get around that by leaving the home you until the name of the foreclosed homeowner and neighbors say it's time to take action. >> we will foreclose on you. if
is filing a wrongful death suit against yale university.nnie le was a grad student in 2009 when she was killed at a lab at the ivy league school. the suit contends the university failed to adequately protect women on campus. yale officials say the suit has no merit. >>> and the suspect in the home invasion murder of a 96-year- old man will appear in court this afternoon. prosecutors say text messages connect 33-year-old juan cortinas to the 2009 saratoga murder. cortinas was already in...
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Sep 18, 2011
09/11
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>> political science, i studied political science at yale university and had been fascinated by science and history. i certainly love to studying physics, but i also took a lot of courses in college on government and public policy. i started off thinking i might want to study nuclear weapons and then began to get fascinated combining to interests and i still do have a strong interest. but to become fascinated by the question of why in the post 9/11 world, a time when you would think we would have a pretty good idea of where threats came from and what the nature of the threat we confront was, there was a pretty wide debate in the early part of that last decade of the nature of the threat and what to do about it, and it has begun to fascinate me. the more i thought about it the more i thought about it in a research sense and thought it had a lot to do with who was in power. >> written for graduate students, women? >> and number of audiences. scholars, political scientists, story ends, a lot of engagement. i certainly hope that it will find that audience. written for undergraduate and grad
>> political science, i studied political science at yale university and had been fascinated by science and history. i certainly love to studying physics, but i also took a lot of courses in college on government and public policy. i started off thinking i might want to study nuclear weapons and then began to get fascinated combining to interests and i still do have a strong interest. but to become fascinated by the question of why in the post 9/11 world, a time when you would think we...
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Sep 7, 2011
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yale officials say there's no basis for the lawsuit and no additional security measures could have prevented the killing. the 24-year-old le was found strangled to death inside a lab on september 14th 2009. that is the date she was supposed to get married. a research technician in the same building raymond clark iii is now serving 35 years in prison for her murder. >>> it's the newest tourist attraction here in the bay area. we've been following the building of a huge statute called remember them. ever since the artist first started making it with 60,000 pounds of bronze. it's 21 feet high and it was officially unveiled today. the statute is located right next to the fox theater in oakland. janine de la vega is there now and shows us what that statute looks like. >> it is big and it's located here in a new uptown neighborhood. you can liken it to california's own version of mount rushmore because it shows the faces of heros and humanitarians. >> reporter: hundreds of people erupted into applause after they got the first glimpse of remember them. they stood in line for hours waiting to see th
yale officials say there's no basis for the lawsuit and no additional security measures could have prevented the killing. the 24-year-old le was found strangled to death inside a lab on september 14th 2009. that is the date she was supposed to get married. a research technician in the same building raymond clark iii is now serving 35 years in prison for her murder. >>> it's the newest tourist attraction here in the bay area. we've been following the building of a huge statute called...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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Sep 22, 2011
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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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Sep 1, 2011
09/11
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kitchen of yale room. going to use it. it wept wrong. some spanish fly experiment they were going to use on. -- >> bill: i have no idea what you just said but let's go on to the "new york times" op-ed that says there has to be affirmative ax for people who don't look so good. unattractive people. we must help them out. >> i think the "new york times" knows they can cherry pick this issue because they are bullet-proof. they constantly, some would say, incessantly put bad-looking people on the people's mast head. that started when they first started to hiring ugly people. not under him with him when they first made that. >> bill: the theme is there are some people in life who are not blessed with good lucks. they're held back in society. they don't makes a much money and we have to help them out. >> if they are going to get into the affirmative action things on other things other than skin color. they should start hiring humble people over there the entire staff is cock shore. they have to hire humble people
kitchen of yale room. going to use it. it wept wrong. some spanish fly experiment they were going to use on. -- >> bill: i have no idea what you just said but let's go on to the "new york times" op-ed that says there has to be affirmative ax for people who don't look so good. unattractive people. we must help them out. >> i think the "new york times" knows they can cherry pick this issue because they are bullet-proof. they constantly, some would say, incessantly...
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Sep 13, 2011
09/11
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both were banned at yale in 1970 over the war in vietnam. in april, stanford invited rotc back on campus there. >>> it's another first for gabrielle giffords he she and her husband are about to do. and gas prices are going up. how much more we're paying at the punch and it's a rare sight, whales, blue whales, feeling the spotlight on the california coast. we'll show you where. [ male announcer ] some people say... good things come to those who wait. truth is... good things come to those who work. ♪ this is l.a. and this is what we do. ♪ [ male announcer ] now lease the all-new 2011 chrysler 300 for $339 a month for well-qualified lessees. >>> breaking news in san francisco. newschopper 2 is high above the city there are about 30 or so protestors on the move, heading from the sync center bart station east to the powell street station. you can see some on the sidewalk, and i see at least one banner carried. about 40 or so police officers according to our crews on the scene. you can see interest there. a lot of police and they're creeping prote
both were banned at yale in 1970 over the war in vietnam. in april, stanford invited rotc back on campus there. >>> it's another first for gabrielle giffords he she and her husband are about to do. and gas prices are going up. how much more we're paying at the punch and it's a rare sight, whales, blue whales, feeling the spotlight on the california coast. we'll show you where. [ male announcer ] some people say... good things come to those who wait. truth is... good things come to...
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Sep 14, 2011
09/11
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colleges, harvard and princeton tied for the number one spot, followed by yale and columbia. >>> now here is an early look at how wall street will kick off the day. the dow opens at 11,105 after adding 44 points yesterday. the s&p gained 10 points. the nasdaq rose 37. taking a look at overseas trading this morning, in tokyo the nikkei fell 97 points but in hong kong the hang seng inched up 14. >>> on wall street tuesday, investors bet that european leaders could act soon to stop its spreading debt crisis. news french president nicolas sarkozy and german chancellor angela merkel gave buyers a measure of hope for the debt-ridden region. however that optimism faded overnight as asian stocks slipped on fears that eurozone leaders lack a clear plan to solve its sovereign debt crisis. back on wall street, industrials led the day's gain. general electric added nearly 3% while cummins jumped 6%. oracle gave the nasdaq the biggest boost, rising nearly 3%. apple shares inched up 1% on renewed expectations for investor incentives. best buy shares plunged 7% after an unexpectedly weak quarterly
colleges, harvard and princeton tied for the number one spot, followed by yale and columbia. >>> now here is an early look at how wall street will kick off the day. the dow opens at 11,105 after adding 44 points yesterday. the s&p gained 10 points. the nasdaq rose 37. taking a look at overseas trading this morning, in tokyo the nikkei fell 97 points but in hong kong the hang seng inched up 14. >>> on wall street tuesday, investors bet that european leaders could act soon...
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Sep 2, 2011
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yale. and the cooper, and the morse papers are at yale but the fact it is coming to the national gallery is thrilling. it deserves much more attention than it has been getting for a long time. it has been in storage for years. cspan: who owns it? >> guest: the terra foundation in chicago. cspan: they used to have a museum. no longer. >> guest: that's right. when he finished he thought maybe he could get enough money to, more than compensate him for all his work. he he might get somewhere, 3, $4,000 for it, which was considerable amount of money then. he couldn't sell it. finally somebody from up in cooperstown, cooper's hometown, bought it for $2,000. in the 1980s it sold for over $2 million which was the greatest amount of money ever paid for an american, a painting by an american at that point. no longer that way. but, it's a very important painting. cspan: in your book you have acknowledgements. you acknowledge a lot of people including a man named mike hill. >> guest: yes. cspan: intere
yale. and the cooper, and the morse papers are at yale but the fact it is coming to the national gallery is thrilling. it deserves much more attention than it has been getting for a long time. it has been in storage for years. cspan: who owns it? >> guest: the terra foundation in chicago. cspan: they used to have a museum. no longer. >> guest: that's right. when he finished he thought maybe he could get enough money to, more than compensate him for all his work. he he might get...
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Sep 10, 2011
09/11
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MSNBCW
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george bush went to yale, farmers in parts of texas nobody wanted to farm.is life story is incredibly compelling and there's a fiscal difference, a class difference, but i got to say to the -- if not war, the kerfuffle, i think parts of this is psychological. perry is linked to criticism of bush and reminds of this line of attack that was withering and launched at george bush the cowboy stuff, the texas stuff. >> now they are those making the attack. >> couple of things going on, chris. >> aren't they? >> i think there are a couple of things. one is carl rove very much sees himself as a king maker of the party. there's a sense they can win this in 2012 and they need a candidate that can win in the general and they don't think that candidate is rick perry. >> here he is talking about rick perry, he needs to deal with extreme language in his books, calling social security a ponzi scheme, let's listen to it. >> what they've done this far is inadequate. are toxic in a general election environment and in a primary. >> carl has been over the top for a long time an
george bush went to yale, farmers in parts of texas nobody wanted to farm.is life story is incredibly compelling and there's a fiscal difference, a class difference, but i got to say to the -- if not war, the kerfuffle, i think parts of this is psychological. perry is linked to criticism of bush and reminds of this line of attack that was withering and launched at george bush the cowboy stuff, the texas stuff. >> now they are those making the attack. >> couple of things going on,...
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Sep 19, 2011
09/11
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teamed up with 180 universities worldwide, including the massachusetts institutes of technology and yale university. the nus invites first-class researchers from associated universities. it's also established student exchange courses, joint degree and double degree programs. in the two-year masters course, for example, students take an example at nus in the first year. then they have the option of finishing the degree at a partner university. singapore began actively recruiting international students ten years ago. it's part of government efforts to build up a highly skilled workforce and promote high-tech industries. various strategies are used to keep talented people in singapore. scholarships require students to work in the country after graduation. >> so therefore i expect this college to have a good number of foreign students. they will provide fresh perspectives, they will stimulate the learning process. we hope that after graduation some of them will strike roots here. >> we are now joined by akiyoshi yonezawa, an expert in the internationalization of higher education. professor,
teamed up with 180 universities worldwide, including the massachusetts institutes of technology and yale university. the nus invites first-class researchers from associated universities. it's also established student exchange courses, joint degree and double degree programs. in the two-year masters course, for example, students take an example at nus in the first year. then they have the option of finishing the degree at a partner university. singapore began actively recruiting international...
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Sep 4, 2011
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judgment of this man, the son of grandparents who were sharecroppers who raised him, and he went to yale law school. he did everything right including allowing for anita hill to rise through the ranks of the legal profession through jobs with him where she never had a sexual relationship with him at all. he did nothing untoward, and she was party to this take down, and i did not understand how it could be that these white people of privilege were attacking this black man who was in this historic position while the mainstream media took him down while the naacp and the urban league and other black liberal leaders sat and seemed to relish this take down. >> host: who are your mentors? you had a mentor at that time who we'll get to later who was brutally murdered, but it was a mentor, and it was along that time that you started questioning the indoctrination. >> guest: the smartest person i met was this guy named mike. i was delivering pizza in high school, and he was just different. he was alternative, and he was the smartest guy i ever knew. hindsight, he was not the most ethical guy. he
judgment of this man, the son of grandparents who were sharecroppers who raised him, and he went to yale law school. he did everything right including allowing for anita hill to rise through the ranks of the legal profession through jobs with him where she never had a sexual relationship with him at all. he did nothing untoward, and she was party to this take down, and i did not understand how it could be that these white people of privilege were attacking this black man who was in this...
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Sep 9, 2011
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in a live interview the mother of a murdered yale student explains why she's suing the university for wrongful death. now keep it on this channel for continuing local news, weather, sports and more. i'm lynn berry. thanks for watching "early today" just the first stop of the day today on your nbc station.
in a live interview the mother of a murdered yale student explains why she's suing the university for wrongful death. now keep it on this channel for continuing local news, weather, sports and more. i'm lynn berry. thanks for watching "early today" just the first stop of the day today on your nbc station.
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Sep 22, 2011
09/11
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KPIX
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. >> reporter: yale economist robert shiller. >> ...right now, we've been in a bad unemployment equilibrium for going on four years. and it could go on for another four years. that's worse than a recession. >> reporter: shiller, coauthor of the influential book "animal spirits," says a collapse in confidence can bring the economy to its knees. psychology is its own economic force. >> absolutely. variations in psychology are the most important driver of fluctuations in the economy. >> reporter: the toxic debate in washington this summer, shiller says, raised the specter of another recession among americans still suffering from the last one. that fear has frozen hiring and spending. how do you beat that? >> i don't know that we have a science. in the great depression we never figured it out, not until world war ii came, and brought us out of it. >> it will have less shoulder to it. >> reporter: back in chicago, jeff landis sees no easily tailored solution to the crisis of confidence. >> you can't say, "oh, come on, spend the money, tomorrow's going to be better," because you really don't know
. >> reporter: yale economist robert shiller. >> ...right now, we've been in a bad unemployment equilibrium for going on four years. and it could go on for another four years. that's worse than a recession. >> reporter: shiller, coauthor of the influential book "animal spirits," says a collapse in confidence can bring the economy to its knees. psychology is its own economic force. >> absolutely. variations in psychology are the most important driver of...
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Sep 14, 2011
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colleges, harvard and princeton tied for the number one spot, followed by yale and columbia. >>> now here your first look at how wall street will kick off the day. the dow opens at 11,105 after adding 44 points yesterday. the s&p gained 10 points. the nasdaq rose 37. taking a look at overseas trading this morning, in tokyo the nikkei fell 97 points but in hong kong the hang seng inched up 14. >>> on wall street tuesday, investors bet that european leaders could act soon to stop its spreading debt crisis. news french president nicolas sarkozy and german chancellor angela merkel gave buyers a measure of hope for the debt-ridden region. however that optimism faded overnight as asian stocks slipped on fears that eurozone leaders lack a clear plan to solve its sovereign debt crisis. back on wall street, industrials led the day's gains. general electric added nearly 3% while cummins jumped 6%. oracle gave the nasdaq the biggest boost, rising nearly 3%. apple shares inched up 1% on renewed expectations for investor incentives. best buy shares plunged 7% after an unexpectedly weak quarterly
colleges, harvard and princeton tied for the number one spot, followed by yale and columbia. >>> now here your first look at how wall street will kick off the day. the dow opens at 11,105 after adding 44 points yesterday. the s&p gained 10 points. the nasdaq rose 37. taking a look at overseas trading this morning, in tokyo the nikkei fell 97 points but in hong kong the hang seng inched up 14. >>> on wall street tuesday, investors bet that european leaders could act soon to...
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Sep 19, 2011
09/11
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so ethan allen's education -- and he was being prepared to go to divinity school at yale, which turned out to be pretty ironic later on. and he came home and took over the family, helped his mother raise the other seven children, run the farm, bay off his father's debt because his father was already speculating in land which was the addiction of early americans. if you couldn't clear enough land, well, maybe somewhere else you could have even more. so he raised his younger brothers -- he was a bit of a bully to them. there's evidence of this -- he was a tough big brother. and he stayed at home until age 26. he only left twice briefly to join militia trying to re-enforce the english during the french and indian wars. and he saw no combat but he saw vermont for the first time crossing over the mountains through the valley of vermont remembering how beautiful it was. at age 26, he married, which was about average for an american male. and he married a woman six years older than he was. it was not a flaming romance. it's just that he had carried the corn on sacks to his her father's millin
so ethan allen's education -- and he was being prepared to go to divinity school at yale, which turned out to be pretty ironic later on. and he came home and took over the family, helped his mother raise the other seven children, run the farm, bay off his father's debt because his father was already speculating in land which was the addiction of early americans. if you couldn't clear enough land, well, maybe somewhere else you could have even more. so he raised his younger brothers -- he was a...
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lines clearing underbrush and putting out fires actually so they didn't get real big robert shiller a yale university economist had. stated that it would cost about thirty billion dollars to employ a million americans in a civilian conservation corps and thirty billion dollars is really small change compared to the figures that we're talking about whether it's the previous stimulus from two thousand and nine which is in the hundreds of billions or the federal reserve's support for wall street. which goes into many trillions of dollars right there you think something like obama's fiscal plan and his stimulus plan that he's announced his jobs plan doesn't doesn't fit the profile of what you're talking about it certainly is a much smaller plane it relies heavily on tax incentives to prod businesses to hire workers that's proven to be in effect is over the last two years and it's going to say to businesses will give you tax credit between fifty six hundred dollars or ninety six hundred dollars if you hire veterans or a four thousand dollars a chance credit to hire the long term unemployed you
lines clearing underbrush and putting out fires actually so they didn't get real big robert shiller a yale university economist had. stated that it would cost about thirty billion dollars to employ a million americans in a civilian conservation corps and thirty billion dollars is really small change compared to the figures that we're talking about whether it's the previous stimulus from two thousand and nine which is in the hundreds of billions or the federal reserve's support for wall street....
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Sep 19, 2011
09/11
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>> political science at yale university. i was fascinated by science and history, and i certainly loved studying physics and i took lots of courses in college on government and public policy and i started off thinking i want to study nuclear weapons and then began to get fascinated which was something -- combined the two interests, and i have a strong interest in that, but began to become fascinated by the question of why in the post-9/11 world, again, a time when you would think we would have a pretty good idea of where threats came from and what the nature of the threat we confronted was, there was a pretty wide debate in the early part of that last decade over the nature of the threat and what to do about it, and that question just began to fascinate me, and the more i thought about it and the more i began to think about it in a research sense, it was obvious to me it had a lot to do with who was in power. >> host: leaders at war. who is it written for? graduate students, laymen? >> guest: a number of audiences. scholars
>> political science at yale university. i was fascinated by science and history, and i certainly loved studying physics and i took lots of courses in college on government and public policy and i started off thinking i want to study nuclear weapons and then began to get fascinated which was something -- combined the two interests, and i have a strong interest in that, but began to become fascinated by the question of why in the post-9/11 world, again, a time when you would think we would...
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Sep 28, 2011
09/11
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>> reporter: yale economist robert shiller, co-founder of the case shiller index, has tracked home values back to 1890. >> home prices are not high anymore but they're not low, either, by historical standards. so if confidence were to slip more, home prices could fall further. >> reporter: shiller's chart shows that, leaving out the housing slump during the great depression and the housing bubble before the great recession, home prices historically have only risen at about the rate of inflation. >> so i don't know why people are all thinking when is the housing recovery coming? i don't plan on that at all. >> one more! >> reporter: which leaves families like the scotts underwater and out of options. >> it's not that we hate where we're at, it's just, at this point we really can't do anything else but be here. >> reporter: the scotts worry that another recession could knock even more value off their home. robert shiller says that rather than a recovery in house prices, the best to hope for would be just stability. >> pelley: anthony, there are a lot of people out there like the scotts and
>> reporter: yale economist robert shiller, co-founder of the case shiller index, has tracked home values back to 1890. >> home prices are not high anymore but they're not low, either, by historical standards. so if confidence were to slip more, home prices could fall further. >> reporter: shiller's chart shows that, leaving out the housing slump during the great depression and the housing bubble before the great recession, home prices historically have only risen at about the...
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Sep 18, 2011
09/11
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and they're -- >> reporter: yale, columbia -- >> michigan, stanford, a big deal.nto how many degrees, you know, do you want to get? i got a job right now, i'm a little busy. >> reporter: and he wants to win the super bowl. >> it is still my goal here, you know, doing my best no matter what is expected of me. >> reporter: regardless, he's already a champion in the cause that matters most. jenna bush hager, nbc news, philadelphia. >>> that's "nbc nightly news" for this sunday. coming up next, "football night in america" followed by "sunday night football," the eagles and the falcons. brian williams will be here tomorrow. i'm lester holt reporting from new york. for all of us here at nbc news, good night. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com but i like having a lot more a lot more than having a lot less. and the more more i have, the more i like having more. and that's exactly what i get at embassy suites. more post-meeting celebrations, more complimentary drinks, more for my money... mmm, more bar snacks. ♪ more olives. definitely. i want so much more it's more mor
and they're -- >> reporter: yale, columbia -- >> michigan, stanford, a big deal.nto how many degrees, you know, do you want to get? i got a job right now, i'm a little busy. >> reporter: and he wants to win the super bowl. >> it is still my goal here, you know, doing my best no matter what is expected of me. >> reporter: regardless, he's already a champion in the cause that matters most. jenna bush hager, nbc news, philadelphia. >>> that's "nbc...
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Sep 1, 2011
09/11
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he attended stanford university, oxford in england and then yale law school before teaching constitutional law at berkeley. lu will join the seven-member high court to hear a key issue on proposition 8 next week. >>> parents with a cold can no longer send their children to the drug store for a bottle of cough syrup. governor jerry brown has sign add law making illegal to sell cough syrup like robitussin or nyquil to kids. the practice kids are using is called robeo tripping. side effects mirror that of pcp. >>> the u.s. has taken preliminary steps to monitor space junk. scientists estimate there are millions of pieces of debris 5milimeters or longer in orbit. they were left by shuttle's apollo mission. they pack enough kinetic energy to disengage a slat. it is now working on a radar system called space sense. the current detection system dates back to the 1960s, however, scientists say monitoring space junk will be much easier than actually removing it. >>> 4:48 is the time right now. a shocking case of animal abuse. the effort under way this morning to help a duck that has been shot with
he attended stanford university, oxford in england and then yale law school before teaching constitutional law at berkeley. lu will join the seven-member high court to hear a key issue on proposition 8 next week. >>> parents with a cold can no longer send their children to the drug store for a bottle of cough syrup. governor jerry brown has sign add law making illegal to sell cough syrup like robitussin or nyquil to kids. the practice kids are using is called robeo tripping. side...
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americans are still unconvinced and not too worried about global warming according to a you june poll from yale university only forty seven percent of americans believe that global warming is man made and just slightly more than half of the country is worried about the effects of what we're gone. so now former vice president al gore is trying to boost those numbers on thursday or this week he'll launch a twenty four hour webcast broadcast across the planet to make the case that manmade global warming is occurring and it's the reason for the freak weather that we've been experiencing for more on this project i'm joined by maggie el fucks president and c.e.o. of al gore's reality project maggie welcome. all right tom thanks so much for having me thanks for joining us twenty four hours twenty four countries what countries and why. well first of all we start tomorrow night at seven pm central time in mexico city and every hour on the hour for twenty four hours ending at seven pm in new york on the thursday the fifteenth we will be stopping and doing a presentation so first in mexico city and then o
americans are still unconvinced and not too worried about global warming according to a you june poll from yale university only forty seven percent of americans believe that global warming is man made and just slightly more than half of the country is worried about the effects of what we're gone. so now former vice president al gore is trying to boost those numbers on thursday or this week he'll launch a twenty four hour webcast broadcast across the planet to make the case that manmade global...