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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.eed warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ >> this is "lunch money" on bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson. mark messier was an idol to many new yorkers growing up in the 1990's, captain of the new york rangers' stanley cup championship team and was inducted into the hall of fame in 1997. -- 2007. he is taking on the role of brand ambassador for the harvard-yale game taking place at madison square garden this weekend. >> it is one of the best forms of amateur hockey we have in the u.s. rivals amateur leagues in canada, many great players are being drafted into the nhl. there is a long history of rivalry in the ivy league schools, i have a lot of cousins who have gone to harvard an
the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.eed warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ >> this is "lunch money" on bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i...
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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that was his plan. >> on his way to yale, hinckley stops off in d.c. up and goes for a fast-food breakfast. >> it was just by chance that that morning he got up at 10:00, read the paper and saw the president was going to the hilton, to talk to the afl-cio, saw the president's schedule on page a4. i'll see how close i can get to the president with my gun. he writes foster a note. takes a cab up to the hotel. gets there. behind the rope line as reagan is approaching. pulls out his .22 caliber revolver. [ gunfire ] >> he thought something magical was going to happen that didn't have anything to do with ronald reagan, it had to do with some union that he was going to have with jodie foster. >> by the spring of 1982, a year after the presidential assassination attempt, the four victims are all healing. jim brady's recovery is painfully slow but positive. but using both use of the left side of his body, he retains cognitive thinking and great sense of humor. agent tim mccarthy makes a full recovery and continues his career with the secret service. d.c. polic
that was his plan. >> on his way to yale, hinckley stops off in d.c. up and goes for a fast-food breakfast. >> it was just by chance that that morning he got up at 10:00, read the paper and saw the president was going to the hilton, to talk to the afl-cio, saw the president's schedule on page a4. i'll see how close i can get to the president with my gun. he writes foster a note. takes a cab up to the hotel. gets there. behind the rope line as reagan is approaching. pulls out his .22...
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Jan 10, 2014
01/14
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the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.d warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ money" on "lunch bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson. mark messier was an idol to many theyorkers growing up in 1990's, captain of the new york rangers' stanley cup championship team and was inducted into the hall of fame in 1997. he is taking on the role of brand ambassador for the harvard-yale game taking place at madison square garden this weekend. >> it is one of the best forms of amateur hockey we have in the u.s. a rivals amateur leagues in canada, many great players are being drafted into the nh;. there is a long -- into the nhl. a long history of rivalry in the ivy league schools, i have a lot of cousins who have gone to harvard and
the harvard-yale showdown at madison square garden. that is coming up in sports.d warm clothes for the super bowl in new york. nike has you covered. do you think running of the bulls is crazy? check out this race in japan. the winner is first to get blessed. it brings a full year's worth of good luck and a barrel of sake. this tradition goes back to the 14th century. look at these guys go. ♪ money" on "lunch bloomberg television, streaming live on bloomberg.com. i am adam johnson....
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pee my pants or start crying and it was one of the the next was always yeah with college i went to yale graduate draw it in english actually but i took a lot of drama classes and i did improv comedy critics call list show smart funny groundbreaking brilliantly will i even break through you know this week takes all i certainly hoped it would and when i read the pilot script which was the only thing i had to read when i went into the audition it felt to me like it was profound in its simplicity and also lena lena dunham who's the creator writer she's the star of the show she's our director most of the time. she can write so uncannily accurately in the voice of people our age and i'm just one character she wrote in so many different voices that sounded all and real and realized even though they were still just on the page and i knew then and there that she was extraordinary in some way and i was like it's hard for you imagine the show being anything less than wonderful and so i'm very yeah and even if he's you know working on something else or if he's in california he visits us whenever he
pee my pants or start crying and it was one of the the next was always yeah with college i went to yale graduate draw it in english actually but i took a lot of drama classes and i did improv comedy critics call list show smart funny groundbreaking brilliantly will i even break through you know this week takes all i certainly hoped it would and when i read the pilot script which was the only thing i had to read when i went into the audition it felt to me like it was profound in its simplicity...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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COM
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>> i went to yale. >> jon: so a safety scoosm and you had a degree in what?>> mathematics. >> jon: so you had a job offer at what was the name of company? >> goldman sachs. >> jon: you went to yale hillary rodham clinton a degree in math mat micks why and had a job offer add goldman sachs and you called your mother and said, you know what? i think i'm going to move to the congo. >> and she cried. >> jon: she cried. she wept with happiness. >> with happiness. >> jon: did you have a job lined up in the congo? >> no, i bought a one-way ticket and showed up there. no one paid for me. i just showed up. >> jon: let me ask you this -- let me see if i can frame this correctly: why? >> if you want to know, the real reason i had read that three million people, now it's five million people had died. no one was reporting about it. >> jon: you were 22. >> yes. >> jon: and you had the presence of mind, the perception and empathy to think this is where i need to go to bring this situation to light. it's remarkable. [ applause ] >> i felt the instinct -- [cheers and applause
>> i went to yale. >> jon: so a safety scoosm and you had a degree in what?>> mathematics. >> jon: so you had a job offer at what was the name of company? >> goldman sachs. >> jon: you went to yale hillary rodham clinton a degree in math mat micks why and had a job offer add goldman sachs and you called your mother and said, you know what? i think i'm going to move to the congo. >> and she cried. >> jon: she cried. she wept with happiness....
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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mentality, you ought to go to yale. and as a result of that, she went to yale, she met bill clinton. had she not done that, he would never have been president. so this professor changed history -- [laughter] and we found who it was, he was ultimately on the international court of justice. but harvard was loaded in those days with sexist professors who didn't think women were able to think like lawyers. so when i went to dinner at the dean's house, he came to me afterwards and said how come you didn't eat your wife's roast beef? i said, well, i'm kosher. he said, you're still kosher? don't you think you ought to have your people change? i said -- i thought he was vocking. i said, i'll talk to my people. [laughter] about a week later, i saw him in the hall, and i spoke to my people and shay said we've been doing this for 3,000, and i think that kept me kosher for an additional four or five years. eventually, my religious observance changed into, you know, political support for soviet jewelry, for israel, though i disagree
mentality, you ought to go to yale. and as a result of that, she went to yale, she met bill clinton. had she not done that, he would never have been president. so this professor changed history -- [laughter] and we found who it was, he was ultimately on the international court of justice. but harvard was loaded in those days with sexist professors who didn't think women were able to think like lawyers. so when i went to dinner at the dean's house, he came to me afterwards and said how come you...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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it is quite another thing to go to yale and say you want to be in a graduate program. their standards -- it is not just writing a novel. you have to meet high standards. you have to get admitted and then you have to stay up with i assume a certain program. otherwise their reputation is damaged. >> i'm sure some people will argue that james franco went to yale -- >> it is a lot of work for me. that is also something i had to be very clear with myself that i wanted to do it. fortunately i am past the coursework stages. >> you are writing a dissertation? >> before i do that i have to take my oral exams. in the english department you have to read books on a variety of subjects and professors will sit around and ask you questions about them. i read a book a day. >> you have enough time for acting and directing? >> there is a lot of down time on movie sets. i use it to my potential. i read almost a book a day. >> do you speed read? >> i read pretty fast. i also listen to audio books and i put it on the double speed setting. it sounds -- >> this is what a writer from slate sa
it is quite another thing to go to yale and say you want to be in a graduate program. their standards -- it is not just writing a novel. you have to meet high standards. you have to get admitted and then you have to stay up with i assume a certain program. otherwise their reputation is damaged. >> i'm sure some people will argue that james franco went to yale -- >> it is a lot of work for me. that is also something i had to be very clear with myself that i wanted to do it....
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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he got his ba degree from amherst, masters from harvard and gestures doctor from yale law school. on graduation of law school he clerked for the fifth circuit judge jerry smith. in addition by the way to "a conspiracy against obamacare," i will gladly put in another plug, ilya is the author of another book, democracy and political ignorance. his articles have also appeared in many scholarly journals. ill you will discuss competing constitutional visions that were at play in the case and also about the role of the volokh conspiracy in terms of influencing the debate that surrounded the case. after ilya we will hear from orin kerr. orin is the fred c. stephenson research professor law at george washington law school. a masters from stanford and gestures doctor from harvard. he clerked on the third circuit and then on the supreme court for justice anthony kennedy. orin is a nationally recognized scholar in areas of criminal procedure and also computer crime law. he worked for a while in fact at the department of justice computer crime and intellectual property section. is argued many
he got his ba degree from amherst, masters from harvard and gestures doctor from yale law school. on graduation of law school he clerked for the fifth circuit judge jerry smith. in addition by the way to "a conspiracy against obamacare," i will gladly put in another plug, ilya is the author of another book, democracy and political ignorance. his articles have also appeared in many scholarly journals. ill you will discuss competing constitutional visions that were at play in the case...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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i think he would be proud. >> but you want to go to yale? >> i remember reading this tweet. it's still there. i urge anyone to read it. what is your address? >> billy under score baker. >> you will understand why it gripped everyone. you have filled as have emmett into the void of not having a father. buying them christmas gifts and prom tickets. you have been a pair surrogate fathers. >> where are the uncles and aunts? and they are not. there you are going to be close to us, then. there was an intense relationship with us. when this guy came along, we have to put him to work. >> a dream thing. you are a journalist you hope to find a magical story and i walked into this. >> what are you doing at u mass? >> studying chemical engineering. >> what about you? >> thinking about studying biomedical engineering. >> what do you want to do? >> a journalist. >> you talked yourself out of a job. >> we would welcome you into our profession. whatever decisions you take, best of luck to you guys. this is an amazingly heart warming story. a great way to start the year. and here's to many m
i think he would be proud. >> but you want to go to yale? >> i remember reading this tweet. it's still there. i urge anyone to read it. what is your address? >> billy under score baker. >> you will understand why it gripped everyone. you have filled as have emmett into the void of not having a father. buying them christmas gifts and prom tickets. you have been a pair surrogate fathers. >> where are the uncles and aunts? and they are not. there you are going to be...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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you are writing what you know about. >> i have a professor at yale. he is a specialist in american literature between the revolutionary and civil war. he is also a highly regarded queer theorist. his first book is called "letters of the republic." he said, when i realized that i could put my two worlds together, i generated so much energy. that is when i became michael warner. that's when i became who i am. what happened to my first book, i was very happy with it, but i was spending a lot of energy on keeping out this other part of my life. i thought, i will put them both together. i will put them both together and i think a lot of energy will be generated by it. i know that people will use this material and pull lines from it and use it against me or read it as nonfiction. but that was the case with my other books. whether i write about acting or not, people will pull lines from my work and say that it is the real me. it is not a memoir. it is not a confessional. it is just using what i know to create an atmosphere. to create characters. >> a lot of
you are writing what you know about. >> i have a professor at yale. he is a specialist in american literature between the revolutionary and civil war. he is also a highly regarded queer theorist. his first book is called "letters of the republic." he said, when i realized that i could put my two worlds together, i generated so much energy. that is when i became michael warner. that's when i became who i am. what happened to my first book, i was very happy with it, but i was...
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Jan 18, 2014
01/14
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. >> reporter: last year, hession joined the smoking cessation program at yale cancer center. it uses individual counseling sessions to emphasize the benefits of quitting. he wears a nicotine patch helping him quit his addiction. it's not impossible. since the first surgeon general's report came out in 1964, smoking rates have declined from 42% to 18%. dr. roy herbst is chief oncologist at yale. >> clearly we need new methods because the old methods took us from 40% to 18%, how are we going to go lower? >> reporter: a major strategy concentrates on stopping young adults from smoking the first cigarette. about 90% of smokers start by age 18, 99% by age 26. >> pelley: jon, when you look at this report, you have to ask how can smoking cause so many diseases that seem to be unrelated. >> reporter: they may seem to be unrelated, scott, but they actually are. scientists are discovering the underlying molecular basis for all the problems cigarettes cause. for example, we mentioned in the piece it has an effect on insulin. in addition, you've heard a lot about inflammation. that's ass
. >> reporter: last year, hession joined the smoking cessation program at yale cancer center. it uses individual counseling sessions to emphasize the benefits of quitting. he wears a nicotine patch helping him quit his addiction. it's not impossible. since the first surgeon general's report came out in 1964, smoking rates have declined from 42% to 18%. dr. roy herbst is chief oncologist at yale. >> clearly we need new methods because the old methods took us from 40% to 18%, how are...
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Jan 26, 2014
01/14
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he said, -- instead of yale.e said, would you want to go to a place where people having you in effigy? this didn't happen in texas. you would see them at games. you would see them walking around. it is really a place they came to frequently. >> lynn, what is your question? >> the question is we are on dr. king's anniversary of his birth. the bushes were big opponents of dr. kings birthday celebration. i wonder if you want to talk about the fact that reagan didn't want to sign the legislation, but the bushes were in favor of it and were there throughout the presidency, even the vice presidency, showing up at the king center. i want to talk about the fact that they were involved in commemorating dr. king. >> thanks very much. >> president bush came up in texas politics at a time when segregation was a crucial issue, but he was not from texas. this is something his critics would never let him forget. he was from connecticut and had a different sense of racial politics and racial morality than many of his fellow sout
he said, -- instead of yale.e said, would you want to go to a place where people having you in effigy? this didn't happen in texas. you would see them at games. you would see them walking around. it is really a place they came to frequently. >> lynn, what is your question? >> the question is we are on dr. king's anniversary of his birth. the bushes were big opponents of dr. kings birthday celebration. i wonder if you want to talk about the fact that reagan didn't want to sign the...
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Jan 18, 2014
01/14
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yale law school was cheap compared to now. and salaries were lower not as much as yale law school is more expensive. i see it with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to great with six-figure debt. the highest debt locate for a student was $400 ,000. i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach but pricey private undergraduate and graduate institutions attended prior to law school. but, you know, you get out $400 ,000 it almost doesn't matter how much you make. the job that pays the salary, it's a brutal burden. the federal reserve if a study of the impact of the student debt. they found students are putting off marriage, car purchase, home purchases, and all sorts of things we normally think of as the kind of thing young and middle-age adults do and sort of align to drive our economy. they can't afford it. can't buy a car when you're already making a big freaking ca
yale law school was cheap compared to now. and salaries were lower not as much as yale law school is more expensive. i see it with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to great with six-figure debt. the highest debt locate for a student was $400 ,000. i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach but pricey private undergraduate and...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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but it's quite another thing to go to yale and say "i want to be in your graduate program." because their standards are different. it's not just write your novel and see if anybody buys it. here's a case where you have to meet high standards. first of all you've got to get admitted and then you have to stay up with-- i assume-- a certain program. otherwise their reputation is damaged. >> i'm sure some people still argue that, well, we let james franco -- do we want him associated with yale? and et cetera. but i could buy that maybe if it was the undergraduate program. ph.d. programs are different. i mean, i'm -- they're paying know go to school. so that's a big commitment from them. and it is a lot of work. so -- for me to kind of keep up with. so that was also something i had to be very clear with myself that i wanted to do it. fortunately, i'm passed the course work phase. there's two years of courses. >> rose: now you're writing a dissertation or -- >> before i do that i have to take my oral exams. so in the english department you have to read 30 books in five subjects. s
but it's quite another thing to go to yale and say "i want to be in your graduate program." because their standards are different. it's not just write your novel and see if anybody buys it. here's a case where you have to meet high standards. first of all you've got to get admitted and then you have to stay up with-- i assume-- a certain program. otherwise their reputation is damaged. >> i'm sure some people still argue that, well, we let james franco -- do we want him...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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you went to yale.out it every five seconds. >> i never mention it. >> when you were in the secret society -- >> i was not in -- >> -- of yale who else was in skull and bones with you? >> i was not in -- >> what's interesting, i looked it up online. when you were attending yale no other famous person was in skull and bones. did your mother, in fact buy out all of yale so you could attend it by yourself therefore not ever have to be social? >> i don't even understand that question. >> i mean would you admit that all through college, you were so anti-social you would have preferred to just attend yale and have it be empty? >> oh i had -- yeah i was anti-social. no i was very anti-social. yeah i totally admit i've never been to none of my reunions. don't know anybody. all my roommates were all anti-social. >> when you think of your yale comrades and think, oh my gosh i can't face this person because -- >> they were all these really smart people will and i felt like -- >> which brings me to anderson cooper
you went to yale.out it every five seconds. >> i never mention it. >> when you were in the secret society -- >> i was not in -- >> -- of yale who else was in skull and bones with you? >> i was not in -- >> what's interesting, i looked it up online. when you were attending yale no other famous person was in skull and bones. did your mother, in fact buy out all of yale so you could attend it by yourself therefore not ever have to be social? >> i don't...
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Jan 23, 2014
01/14
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you teach at yale and you have something called the mcchrystal group and writing another book that is going to capture the essence of some of these ideas i think. tell me wha what this is all ab. >> they are all related because i a am just fascinated with leadership in the current scrairment and what i will tell you my experience in iraq and reinforced in afghanistan was that for many, many years, really since frederick winslow taylor came up with scientific management, we worshipped at the altar of efficiency, really good assembly lines, rereductionism until we could break everything down to individual tasks and if we did those tasks to a high standard we would be very efficient and if we are very efficient we will be very effective. what i think happened is, you can only get the most efficient solution, you can solve for y for how much x you need, only if you really know what y is, and we are in a world now where things are changing so fast we no longer know what the requirement is for tomorrow so we can't build a perfect process because we don't know what the output has to be. so t
you teach at yale and you have something called the mcchrystal group and writing another book that is going to capture the essence of some of these ideas i think. tell me wha what this is all ab. >> they are all related because i a am just fascinated with leadership in the current scrairment and what i will tell you my experience in iraq and reinforced in afghanistan was that for many, many years, really since frederick winslow taylor came up with scientific management, we worshipped at...
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Jan 10, 2014
01/14
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i ended up at yale. some of my brothers, who i grew up with, and it up in jail.ot literal brothers. they were not different from maine. i got some lucky great. -- rakes. i had a mom who had gone to college. she knew the importance of education. i have the services that i need. the important thing is that if we could get other kids, including men and women in chicago who are in dire straits now, if we could get them the same quality education that i had, they could end up in college and law school and here on c-span. host: harvard law. and then prosecutor. guest: i work for a judge for one year. thisw school, i was brother who no one thought would be a prosecutor. they would have predicted i would've worked for a civil rights organization or for legal aid. the 90's, you could see this massive human rights issue coming. by massive human rights issue, i mean how many young black men were being punched. i knew both sides. i became a prosecutor because i hated bullies. i also stopped being a prosecutor because i hated bullies. every day, i would set up in the courtroo
i ended up at yale. some of my brothers, who i grew up with, and it up in jail.ot literal brothers. they were not different from maine. i got some lucky great. -- rakes. i had a mom who had gone to college. she knew the importance of education. i have the services that i need. the important thing is that if we could get other kids, including men and women in chicago who are in dire straits now, if we could get them the same quality education that i had, they could end up in college and law...
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Jan 18, 2014
01/14
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to think about this is i have the page of the book on my desk the same time i had an article about yale, some are familiar, and a professor at the university of michigan, a real giant in my academic field of criminal procedure, and then in the 1960s, when he was a young academic, he wrote a series of law review articles rethinking the basic understanding of the nature of constitutional criminal procedure narrow up until that point, came along and said, hey, we're reading cases wrong, the history wrong, we need a new rule for the supreme court and laid down in the series of articles published in traditional journals and in chapters and books, new ways of thinking about constitutional possibilitieses, for example, the mir randy rights, the miranda decision in the 1960s in part reflecting the idea that yale had that the fifth amendment should not be limited not courthouse, and also by indication touring interrogations, and that was the organization that he had laid out, and there was a sense you have going back looking at the articles from the 19 *6 0 #s and the supreme court decision that
to think about this is i have the page of the book on my desk the same time i had an article about yale, some are familiar, and a professor at the university of michigan, a real giant in my academic field of criminal procedure, and then in the 1960s, when he was a young academic, he wrote a series of law review articles rethinking the basic understanding of the nature of constitutional criminal procedure narrow up until that point, came along and said, hey, we're reading cases wrong, the...
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Jan 25, 2014
01/14
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eye 79
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yale law school was cheap back then by comparison to now. and salaries then were lower but not as much low or as yale law school is more expensive. and i see this with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strap ised. strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for a student i have personally known was $400,000, which i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach, but rather at pricey, private undergraduate and graduate institutions attended prior to law school. but, you know, when you get out and you owe $400,000, it almost doesn't matter how much you make. and a job that pays a salary, that's a brutal burden. and the federal reserve recently did a study of the impact of student debt, and they found that students are putting off marriage, putting off car purchases, putting off home purchases and all sorts of things we normally think of as the kinds of things young and mid
yale law school was cheap back then by comparison to now. and salaries then were lower but not as much low or as yale law school is more expensive. and i see this with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strap ised. strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for a student i have personally known was $400,000, which i stress to add was not accrued at the university of...
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Jan 14, 2014
01/14
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KGO
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says they have video showing the other driver identified as a 35-year-old, punching the off duty fame yale officer in the face the officer drew a gun and fired once. he was hit in the leg by a freg fragment and later arrested. the officer is now on routine paid administrative leave. she was not in uniform driving a personal car. police say the officer identified herself before she was punched. >> a suspected murderer learned he will stand trial for the murder of a girl killed while answering a door in july. police believe darnel williams wounded two other children and their grandmother. prosecutors say williams was trying to avenge murder of his friends killed in berkeley. >> a lot more to bring you here. it's annoying when someone pulls out a cell phone to text during a movie but shouldn't be deadly. >> why some cars were attacked in san francisco. >> also, why snap chat is apologizing. >> developers say it will be the only project in the country of its kind of massive new mall come together bay area. abc7 news t jennie-o w where every ta where every thursday people ride 10 miles for taco
says they have video showing the other driver identified as a 35-year-old, punching the off duty fame yale officer in the face the officer drew a gun and fired once. he was hit in the leg by a freg fragment and later arrested. the officer is now on routine paid administrative leave. she was not in uniform driving a personal car. police say the officer identified herself before she was punched. >> a suspected murderer learned he will stand trial for the murder of a girl killed while...
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604
Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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CNNW
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obviously you went to yale.es. >> i looked it up online. when you were attending yale, no other famous person was in skull and bones. did your mother in fact buy out all of yale so you could attend it by yourself, therefore not ever have to be social? >> i don't even understand that question. >> i mean, would you admit that all through college you were so anti-social you would have preferred to attend yale and have it be empty? >> oh, yeah. i was anti-social. i was very anti-social. i totally admit i've never been to any of my reunions, i don't know anybody. and all my roommates were all anti-social. >> when you think of your yale comrades and think oh, my gosh, i can't face this person. >> they were all really smart people there. and i felt like you know -- >> which brings me to anderson cooper will now name every member of the supreme court. go. >> no. i'm not playing this game. >> oh. if you don't know this -- >> can i tell you? do you know who's dropping the ball this year? do you know who's pressing the but
obviously you went to yale.es. >> i looked it up online. when you were attending yale, no other famous person was in skull and bones. did your mother in fact buy out all of yale so you could attend it by yourself, therefore not ever have to be social? >> i don't even understand that question. >> i mean, would you admit that all through college you were so anti-social you would have preferred to attend yale and have it be empty? >> oh, yeah. i was anti-social. i was very...
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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theodore holford with the yale school of public health, thank you for your time today?my pleasure. >> all right. let's turn to weather with rebecca because i walked out earlier today in shirt sleeves. it wasn't bad at all. five, six days earlier, we were at record low temperatures? yes. new york 507 degrees. the pacific northwest is getting slammed with wind gusts, 56 miles an hour, up to 60 miles an hour, even at great falls montana. see the storm right now. it is moving on shore. if you were at the divisional playoffs with the seahawks and new orleans saints in seattle, you are getting hammered with rain and wind and the wind is now gusting about 30, 35 miles an hour, and we will get, eventually, a break in the way of the rain. it will turn to rain showers but the snow is coming down for the mountains. it's going to continue pushing eastward. the snow, the rain, the wind. right now, we have 37 mile per hour gusts. 4 for hquan. the went gusts have died down. now, we've got wind gusts between 35 to 40 miles an hour, howling through seattle and portland, both seattle and
theodore holford with the yale school of public health, thank you for your time today?my pleasure. >> all right. let's turn to weather with rebecca because i walked out earlier today in shirt sleeves. it wasn't bad at all. five, six days earlier, we were at record low temperatures? yes. new york 507 degrees. the pacific northwest is getting slammed with wind gusts, 56 miles an hour, up to 60 miles an hour, even at great falls montana. see the storm right now. it is moving on shore. if you...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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be that yanukovych takes step to ensure a fair and free election a year from now, he releases from yale. anjail.and he removed all of ths that he signed last week, and he does all of those things, and those are serious gestures. so far he has done nothing, he's unwilling to talk, and he has steps that he could take short of leaving power, leading to compromise, but it would need international help. and maybe the past ukrainian presidents who stood up for democratic processes. >> anna lynn, you just heard the ambassador talk about how president yanukovych hasn't done anything, and is that what's pushing these protests beyond and into other parts of the country? >> i must say that on november 30th, all of the people, the students and the people demonstrating, they have beaten them, and this was i think the first big push, because then people came not for immigration, but for dignity against the beating of innocent people. >> we're told that ukraine is a divided country, and that not all ukrainians feel the same way about these issues. as the protesters begin to go to other provinces, will
be that yanukovych takes step to ensure a fair and free election a year from now, he releases from yale. anjail.and he removed all of ths that he signed last week, and he does all of those things, and those are serious gestures. so far he has done nothing, he's unwilling to talk, and he has steps that he could take short of leaving power, leading to compromise, but it would need international help. and maybe the past ukrainian presidents who stood up for democratic processes. >> anna...
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Jan 22, 2014
01/14
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COM
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lawyers from the yale law school filed a class action suit on the vets behalf.is was going to get me out of this pathetic state. this was an outrageous situation. we've seen many cases where records are not available and military says there's no evidence that.ted is from the medical records that -- that the ptsd from the medical records the military lost. >> i don't want to do this anymore. read the glib insensitive questions yourself. >> is ptsd one of those madeup diseases like peanut allergies? every kid in my son's class has a peanut allergy. when did this happen? >> it's a good tag but i'm not laughing. >> of course the vets do have one simple resource. >> what they need to do is get discharges upgraded. >> it's easy all they have to do is get the dod to recognize the disease existed before 1980. >> that's right. >> which would explain why their less than honorable discharges were actually honorable. >> that's exactly right. >> and fill out 600 forms on top after this. easy. >> it's a nightmare. i've been 13 years to get my upgrade and somebody marked disap
lawyers from the yale law school filed a class action suit on the vets behalf.is was going to get me out of this pathetic state. this was an outrageous situation. we've seen many cases where records are not available and military says there's no evidence that.ted is from the medical records that -- that the ptsd from the medical records the military lost. >> i don't want to do this anymore. read the glib insensitive questions yourself. >> is ptsd one of those madeup diseases like...
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Jan 12, 2014
01/14
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as many women as we need a and a deal is more suited to the feminine mentality, you ought to go to yale. as a result, she went and met bill clinton and if she hadn't come he would never have been president. so this professor changed history. we found out what it was and he was on the international court of the justice, but harvard was loaded in those days and didn't think that women were able to think like lawyers. when i had dinner at the dean's house, he came to me afterwards and said how come you didn't eat my wife's roast beef, didn't you like it? plus kosher? he said you are still, even the catholic has given this up, don't you think you ought to have your people change? i thought he was joking. i said i will talk to my people. [laughter] about a week later i saw him in the hall and i said i spoke to my people and they said we've been doing this for 3,000 years, maybe a few more and i to think that kept me kosher for an additional four or five years. but eventually, my religious observance changed into political support for the soviet newberry, israel all the way disagree you can s
as many women as we need a and a deal is more suited to the feminine mentality, you ought to go to yale. as a result, she went and met bill clinton and if she hadn't come he would never have been president. so this professor changed history. we found out what it was and he was on the international court of the justice, but harvard was loaded in those days and didn't think that women were able to think like lawyers. when i had dinner at the dean's house, he came to me afterwards and said how...
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Jan 15, 2014
01/14
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KQEH
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>> that is why the training at yale prepared me for. i had felt those feeling senate three years to deal with this -- do withn and those feelings and i had three years to deal with that intimidation. i remember having a classmate crying because they felt like a failure and in the evening, there was a production and my how fabulous they were. that is comfort and that self- doubt, that fear, that is what keeps us curious, and it keeps us searching for truth and with integrity. as actors. remembering that was helpful. then i have experienced those feelings. and then i get on the set and i get to louisiana and i have my first rehearsal with michael. michael turned to me after our first reading and said, you are my peer. that was so relieving, to come from his mouth. and yeah, you know. [laughter] tavis: you knew him well. >> and those things. the confidence of stephen michael and everyone else i meant who embraced me. had me moreely relaxed and focusing on what was important, which was her story. hopew did you expect or this career was goin
>> that is why the training at yale prepared me for. i had felt those feeling senate three years to deal with this -- do withn and those feelings and i had three years to deal with that intimidation. i remember having a classmate crying because they felt like a failure and in the evening, there was a production and my how fabulous they were. that is comfort and that self- doubt, that fear, that is what keeps us curious, and it keeps us searching for truth and with integrity. as actors....
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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and i wanted to go to yale would i -- could i go? guest: not with 800. they use an academic index every year -- i think it requires this year 26 on the s.a.t. they require you to be in the top third of scores. host: you were talking about the university of maryland and ohio state. these are allstate schools. any d. rules for state schools and how much money they can either collect or use for the athletic program or the number of scholarships they can give? guest: division 1 limits scholarships to 85 per year. the university of alabama, they have 85 scholarships. that's the max mum they can use. most of the big programs use their maximum. the smaller programs that much money programs don't use their maximums. the max mum of 63 for division two. division three does in the hospital allow athletic scholarships but does allow athletic admission. host: when did the coaches' salaries in college skyrocket? guest: guest: it started about 20 years ago. the big money skyrocketed about 20 years ago. in 1984 the supreme court essentially deregular lated college footb
and i wanted to go to yale would i -- could i go? guest: not with 800. they use an academic index every year -- i think it requires this year 26 on the s.a.t. they require you to be in the top third of scores. host: you were talking about the university of maryland and ohio state. these are allstate schools. any d. rules for state schools and how much money they can either collect or use for the athletic program or the number of scholarships they can give? guest: division 1 limits scholarships...
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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ALJAZAM
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he studied at harvard, yale and paris. a political activist, his campaign against poverty, and african american youth. he supported president obama, but is a critic of the president on issues like the use of drones. >> they are running an empire and a killing machine. >> outspoken and controversial. what does he think of a hillary clinton bid. >> first woman president, symbolic. >> what would martin luther king think 50 years on from the "i have a dream." >> brother martin would have tears in his own. >> dr cornel west, practicing at the seminary in new york and professor at princeton. our special guest. >> dr cornel west, welcome to "talk to al jazeera". good to have you. >> might i say i salute al jazeera, to have high qualityism on the air is beautiful to behold. >> you are a world renowned academic, threologian, academic. you lectured around the globe. if there's one thing you want people to take away from your appearances, what would it be? >> it would be that it's worthwhile to engage in a quest for truth, understand
he studied at harvard, yale and paris. a political activist, his campaign against poverty, and african american youth. he supported president obama, but is a critic of the president on issues like the use of drones. >> they are running an empire and a killing machine. >> outspoken and controversial. what does he think of a hillary clinton bid. >> first woman president, symbolic. >> what would martin luther king think 50 years on from the "i have a dream."...
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Jan 27, 2014
01/14
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KPIX
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it's one of the best in the nation in psychiatry. >> geyser: we have 52 psychiatric beds here at yale all 52 are full. and so the seven kids that are here in the emergency room are waiting for an open bed. >> pelley: how long will they wait? >> geyser: five of them have been here three days already. >> pelley: most every day, the beds are full of patients in crisis. 17-year-old tyler wrightington was waiting in the e.r. he had just slashed his face with a knife. you hear voices? >> tyler wrightington: yes. a new voice came about a year ago. and he... well, i call it a "he" because it was more of a deeper voice. but he ended up telling me to hurt myself and making me find ways to hurt myself. >> pelley: do the voices ever tell you to hurt someone else? >> tyler wrightington: only once, and that was at school. and they... and that was when i got admitted into the hospital, because i was actually considering hurting the people around me. and i was... i was like, "this ain't me. this is not what i want to do." >> pelley: tyler's dad, ernie wrightington, had called a psychiatrist that week
it's one of the best in the nation in psychiatry. >> geyser: we have 52 psychiatric beds here at yale all 52 are full. and so the seven kids that are here in the emergency room are waiting for an open bed. >> pelley: how long will they wait? >> geyser: five of them have been here three days already. >> pelley: most every day, the beds are full of patients in crisis. 17-year-old tyler wrightington was waiting in the e.r. he had just slashed his face with a knife. you hear...
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Jan 24, 2014
01/14
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said, whenever i see his face, i have to laugh. [ laughter and applause ] could be the end of the yalee ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: one more laugh and it will be the end of you. >> you know who that was? that was marlena schmidt, she an engineer from erste deutschland. how do you say in english, east germany. and i had intensive german, nine times a week, so you learn german whether you wish to or not. and i made an awful mistake, went back to germany to be on television there, they found marlena, they brought her out, and i said -- "mein gott sie sind gewachst." i meant to say "sie sind gewachsen" which means "you have grown." >> jimmy: and what did you say? >> "sie sind gewachst," is "you have been waxed." [ laughter and applause ] >> jimmy: that's another way -- i think they did say that in germany. i can't wait for the new book to come out. and i can't wait for you to come back and join us on "the tonight show." >> do you have any fears of how a talk show wears you down? look what it did to me. i used to be a tall red-headed man. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: i'm so excited this i
said, whenever i see his face, i have to laugh. [ laughter and applause ] could be the end of the yalee ] [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: one more laugh and it will be the end of you. >> you know who that was? that was marlena schmidt, she an engineer from erste deutschland. how do you say in english, east germany. and i had intensive german, nine times a week, so you learn german whether you wish to or not. and i made an awful mistake, went back to germany to be on television...
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Jan 13, 2014
01/14
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he studied at harvard, yale and paris. a political activist, his campaign against poverty, and african american youth. he supported president obama, but is a critic of the president on issues like the use of drones. >> they are running an empire and a killing machine. >> outspoken and
he studied at harvard, yale and paris. a political activist, his campaign against poverty, and african american youth. he supported president obama, but is a critic of the president on issues like the use of drones. >> they are running an empire and a killing machine. >> outspoken and
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Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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she worked for -- she had met him at yale when he was a judge. the congressional hotel is where the staff was working. her job was not the most exciting. a lot of the staffers were not getting into the grid of the scandal itself. her job was to look at the constitutionality of impeachment. one of her bosses was ernie nussbaum. it was really an examination of close of power and the manipulation of power and the abuse of power. you could not work in that office without learning a lot about that. >> were going to take you next to fayetteville and the house that bill clinton bought for hillary a as he proposed, and where they got married. let's watch. >> this is where the clintons lived when they were professors in fayetteville. bill was driving her down this road to go to the airport and they saw the house and it was for sale. hillary pointed at the house and said that is a cute house. bill took her to the airport and picked her up from the airport about a month later and said i bought your dream house, you have to marry me and live there with me. t
she worked for -- she had met him at yale when he was a judge. the congressional hotel is where the staff was working. her job was not the most exciting. a lot of the staffers were not getting into the grid of the scandal itself. her job was to look at the constitutionality of impeachment. one of her bosses was ernie nussbaum. it was really an examination of close of power and the manipulation of power and the abuse of power. you could not work in that office without learning a lot about that....
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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CNBC
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that clums looks like columbia rather than yale.veloper miami dolphins steven ross is giving $250 million to the university of michigan. other representants include stanford and columbia business school. and i kind of know about yale, ross, because that's where i went. >> well, you know, it's all about what you can do. isn't it? >> exactly. >> mark zuckerberg gave the most because he probably has the most. >> that's true. my stock isn't up as much as his. >> and i don't know whether my present to you yet has arrived via delivery percentageon or not. >> i will check the mailbox. >> do that. >> well, yeah. maybe it's the alternative mailbox you need to look at. bertha, good to see you. thanks for that. have a good day. >>> a recap of the headlines today, no fireworks or stocks in europe as indices start the year mostly in the red. fiat takes advance of chrysler is a $4 billion deal. >>> and a storm is heading to the u.s., expecting to cause major travel delays. welcome back. how is everything? there's nothing like being your own boss!
that clums looks like columbia rather than yale.veloper miami dolphins steven ross is giving $250 million to the university of michigan. other representants include stanford and columbia business school. and i kind of know about yale, ross, because that's where i went. >> well, you know, it's all about what you can do. isn't it? >> exactly. >> mark zuckerberg gave the most because he probably has the most. >> that's true. my stock isn't up as much as his. >> and i...
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Jan 11, 2014
01/14
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i ended up at yale. some of my brothers, who i grew up with, and it up in jail. not literal brothers. they were not different from maine. i got some lucky great. -- rakes. i had a mom who had gone to college. she knew the importance of education. i have the services that i need. the important thing is that if we could get other kids, including men and women in chicago who are in dire straits now, if we could get them the same quality education that i had, they could end up in college and law school and here on c-span. host: harvard law. and then prosecutor. guest: i work for a judge for one year. thisw school, i was brother who no one thought would be a prosecutor. they would have predicted i would've worked for a civil rights organization or for legal aid. the 90's, you could see this massive human rights issue coming. by massive human rights issue, i mean how many young black men were being punched. i knew both sides. i became a prosecutor because i hated bullies. i also stopped being a prosecutor because i hated bullies. every day, i would set up in the courtr
i ended up at yale. some of my brothers, who i grew up with, and it up in jail. not literal brothers. they were not different from maine. i got some lucky great. -- rakes. i had a mom who had gone to college. she knew the importance of education. i have the services that i need. the important thing is that if we could get other kids, including men and women in chicago who are in dire straits now, if we could get them the same quality education that i had, they could end up in college and law...
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Jan 28, 2014
01/14
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that's according to a new yale study released today. one of the reasons behind a new push to security guns and keep them out of the hands of criminals. ktvu's sal castanedo is live in san francisco with details. >> reporter: the challenging is to keep guns out of criminals. this afternoon, the challenge was kickoffed to help entrepreneurs find a way to secure guns. lock boxes and old-fashioned trigger lox may give way to radioactive trigger access and the smart tech challenge wants to give money to the best of these ideas. it's headed by noted silicon valley venture capitalist, ron conway. >> let's use innovation to bring about gun safety. let's not rely on washington. today's focus is about that. >> reporter: the inventor hopes to win the seed money. he recalls how he was shot as a 16-year-old boy and says concerns inspished him to come up with this and he's entering the challenge. >> so with the fingerprint, the correct gun owner gets access to the loaded gun in a second. >> reporter: one of the innovative ideas was to use a cell phon
that's according to a new yale study released today. one of the reasons behind a new push to security guns and keep them out of the hands of criminals. ktvu's sal castanedo is live in san francisco with details. >> reporter: the challenging is to keep guns out of criminals. this afternoon, the challenge was kickoffed to help entrepreneurs find a way to secure guns. lock boxes and old-fashioned trigger lox may give way to radioactive trigger access and the smart tech challenge wants to...