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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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the following fall, 80,000 people filled the yale bowl for the yale-harvard football game. that was more than the entire population of nevada at the time and about 1/15 of connecticut's population at the time. so it would take over 225,000 people today to have a comparable crowd. while in new london actually at a training compound along the river a 19-year-old sophomore who was an assistant manager for the crew team, frederick truby davidson known as truby, the son of j.p. morgan's senior partner, he told his teammates about what he had seen the summer before as an ambulance driver in paris. a terrible war had been raging in europe. it was an ocean away, but it involved every industrialized nation on earth except the u.s. in two years that war had already decimated a generation of young men who charged out of their trenches in the stalemated battle lines to be moan down by machine gun fire, artillery, and poison gas. it was the first truly mechanized war and the results for frail humanity were horrific. there had already been more deaths than all previous wars combined. in
the following fall, 80,000 people filled the yale bowl for the yale-harvard football game. that was more than the entire population of nevada at the time and about 1/15 of connecticut's population at the time. so it would take over 225,000 people today to have a comparable crowd. while in new london actually at a training compound along the river a 19-year-old sophomore who was an assistant manager for the crew team, frederick truby davidson known as truby, the son of j.p. morgan's senior...
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Oct 4, 2015
10/15
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KNTV
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. >>> and the former president of the yale sits down with me to discuss the future of education in an internet world. our reporters joe mann of reuters and hannah kutchler of london's financial times this week on "press: here." >>> good afternoon, i'm scott mcgrew. we were debating the other day what industry has seen the most disruption. the easy answer is taxicabs because of uber, but the winning answer in my mind is college. traditional clejts are facing all kinds of disruption, parents and students are balking at high costs and resulting massive student loans. state governments are cutting funding at state cools schools. the president is pushing for free enrollment in community colleges and on top of all that the internet is bringing college courses to millions. no one knows more about the business of college than rick levin, he is an economist, he was the president of the yale for 20 years, the longest tenure in the school's history and now serves as the carl edwards for cera-a for profit education company that offers open online college courses in a dozen languages in partnershi
. >>> and the former president of the yale sits down with me to discuss the future of education in an internet world. our reporters joe mann of reuters and hannah kutchler of london's financial times this week on "press: here." >>> good afternoon, i'm scott mcgrew. we were debating the other day what industry has seen the most disruption. the easy answer is taxicabs because of uber, but the winning answer in my mind is college. traditional clejts are facing all kinds...
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Oct 4, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN3
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harvard and yale played in 1875. in 1876, four ivy league institutions formed the intercollegiate football association to standardize the rules, and rugby won out. football followed more the rules of rugby rather than soccer. the new rules might be familiar to some of us in this class. blocking, alternating ball possessions, and fixed numbers of downs that made american football unique. by the 1880's and 1890's, football was a central feature of college life. and it had become a really important sport. the ivy league and western conference that was established, bringing in such public school universities as the university of michigan, they were well-established, rivalries had formed, and teams traveled long distances for games. as football's popularity increased, the alumni gained more and more power over college sports. universities saw that football was a machine for making money. for example, yale football receipts average $100,000 a year, almost 1/8 of that institution's total income in the gilded age. the annual
harvard and yale played in 1875. in 1876, four ivy league institutions formed the intercollegiate football association to standardize the rules, and rugby won out. football followed more the rules of rugby rather than soccer. the new rules might be familiar to some of us in this class. blocking, alternating ball possessions, and fixed numbers of downs that made american football unique. by the 1880's and 1890's, football was a central feature of college life. and it had become a really...
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Oct 13, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN2
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send your kid to this school. >> it's not just yale. >> it's not just yale. it's my example but you're absolutely right. it's everywhere. >> william? >> until we october of these things in structural terms and not individual terms we won't have the change we need. i think it is important that people struggle, as you explained, with your own situation, and how you live your life. that is important for each and every one of us. but change comes when people get together, organize, demand that the sim change, and that that's really the issue. i would endorse the suggestions that you made on education and -- there are thousands of these changes that would make a difference. the freedom budget, black lives matter now has an economic program that some people are working on, which i think is very good. we know what needs to change. the question is how to change. so, i was thinking, your genie coming here and granting us the wish, anybody here -- probably not as old as i am but remember ozzie davis' play, pearlie victorious, you remember the genie, and he turns that r
send your kid to this school. >> it's not just yale. >> it's not just yale. it's my example but you're absolutely right. it's everywhere. >> william? >> until we october of these things in structural terms and not individual terms we won't have the change we need. i think it is important that people struggle, as you explained, with your own situation, and how you live your life. that is important for each and every one of us. but change comes when people get together,...
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Oct 19, 2015
10/15
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KQED
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you know because it was yale, right. it wasn't hitler, it was yale. and so this felt this is yale, this is a yale experiment, they must know what's going on. when it seems like the other person was being injured they thought well this is on you. >> rose: lots of people look at this and they ask themselves do we understand how people followed orders, as you suggested. among the nazis. >> absolutely. it's no accident that stanley milgram was a jew in the bronx, grew up in the 40's in the strongs and went to the same high school who did the stanford experiments. they were the same year, i believe. so this idea of trying to understand this thing that was not understandable, was certainly in the air. >> rose: what did you do about playing him. >> for me as an actor, i'm always, i'm questioning the nature of reality. what is the truth of what's going on in any given moment. something i've always been interested in as a kid what's the reality of this moment, you know. it's like whenever you walk out on stage and you're scared any good acting teacher says loo
you know because it was yale, right. it wasn't hitler, it was yale. and so this felt this is yale, this is a yale experiment, they must know what's going on. when it seems like the other person was being injured they thought well this is on you. >> rose: lots of people look at this and they ask themselves do we understand how people followed orders, as you suggested. among the nazis. >> absolutely. it's no accident that stanley milgram was a jew in the bronx, grew up in the 40's in...
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Oct 9, 2015
10/15
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FOXNEWSW
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. >>> well a teach were at yale defends looting. kind of chaos we saw in baltimore after the death of freddie gray an a activist in the black lives matter move lit was hired to speak at yale and talk about this protest. july -- julie is here and tom sullivan as well. what about the comparison to the boston tea party? >> if you look at what he said, rand paul came out and criticized yale for having this class, he had if he is against free speech and examining the causing of looting, which is what the lecture is about, he is also against examining tings like the tea party and the revolution which did have looting. i don't think it is an unfair analogy. let people make their own academic decision after hearing what they have to say. >> the danger is this guy leads a movement, black lives matter, and people might mistake his remarks as looting. i went to a public law school so it was free but last time i checked looting was a crime. >> julie, you left your purse in the green room and i took your wallet but that is okay i want it. >> if
. >>> well a teach were at yale defends looting. kind of chaos we saw in baltimore after the death of freddie gray an a activist in the black lives matter move lit was hired to speak at yale and talk about this protest. july -- julie is here and tom sullivan as well. what about the comparison to the boston tea party? >> if you look at what he said, rand paul came out and criticized yale for having this class, he had if he is against free speech and examining the causing of...
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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according to a report by yale university law school obtained exclusively by al jazeera.he government from crimes against around a million rorohingya who live in the westf the country. >> reporter: this baby is malnourished but there is plenty of food in the nearby town this. woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but a local hospital wouldn't treat her this. woman was an undiagnosed illness but can't afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the row rinrohingya. about 104,000 are prisoners in their own country. >> people here knee need so see medical professionals but they can't get it because of the policy. when you confine people to displacement camps and deprive them of basic for survival it has a destructive impact. >> reporter: the conditions here are deplorable. but perhaps much like other refugees camps around the world, the difference here is that these conditions are avoidable and the result of government policy. in 20 delve. violence erupt ed in this region of myanmar forcing the rohingya to force to camps. their homes w
according to a report by yale university law school obtained exclusively by al jazeera.he government from crimes against around a million rorohingya who live in the westf the country. >> reporter: this baby is malnourished but there is plenty of food in the nearby town this. woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but a local hospital wouldn't treat her this. woman was an undiagnosed illness but can't afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the...
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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. >> it will lead to the death of the victims. >> reporter: over the last eight months a clinic at yale law school has been analysing event in myanmar. in order to establish guilt. a court would need to prove that government officials showed an intent to destroy the rohingya. >> given the scale of atrocities committed, and the way that people and politicians talk about row hicka, we think it's hard -- row hinga, it's hard to avoid a conclusion that intend. >> reporter: aung san suy kyi has ignored the plight of leaders, they prefer to engage with military rulers, rarther than stand up for the rights of a powerless people >>> al jazeera has made several requests for comment from the myanmar government but received no response and you can see of the investigative unit full documentary "gown side agenda "here at 0600, and online at aljazeera.com/genocide agenda. why now, in one of the world's fastest aiming societies, a man is trying to help elderly people, by taking photographs to be used at their funerals. he says it's a way of preserving the memories of people facing dying alone, discon
. >> it will lead to the death of the victims. >> reporter: over the last eight months a clinic at yale law school has been analysing event in myanmar. in order to establish guilt. a court would need to prove that government officials showed an intent to destroy the rohingya. >> given the scale of atrocities committed, and the way that people and politicians talk about row hicka, we think it's hard -- row hinga, it's hard to avoid a conclusion that intend. >> reporter:...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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according to the yale law school in the u.s. obtained by al jazeera's investigative unit. >> this baby is malnourished but there's plenty of food in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. this woman has an undiagnosed illness but can't afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the rohingya of western myanmar, about 130,000 are prisoners in rchg camps in their own home refugee camps in their own home land. >> there are people here who need access but policy deprives them of health care. if you deprive them of basic needs for survival it has a destructive impact. >> reporter: difference here these conditions are avoidable and the result of government policy. in 2012, violence erupted in this region of myanmar forcing the rohingya to flee to camps. their homes were bulldozed and burned. while they were born and grew up here, the government considers rohingya a refugee group from nearby indonesia. should be placed in camps or sen
according to the yale law school in the u.s. obtained by al jazeera's investigative unit. >> this baby is malnourished but there's plenty of food in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. this woman has an undiagnosed illness but can't afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the rohingya of western myanmar, about 130,000 are prisoners in rchg camps in their own home refugee camps in...
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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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WCVB
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a safety investigation at yale university. the worker killed on campus. frank: another look at the head of the charles right now. river. chilly but beautiful start to we'll be right back. very beautiful. right back after this break. stay with hand-crafted...layer by layer. r the new macchiato from dunkin' donuts. experience the flavor of fall you get a cold. through your nose. suddenly, you're a mouthbreather. a mouthbreather! well, just put on a breathe right strip and pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than cold medicine alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and say goodnight mouthbreathers. pcan i get a medium coffee, cream, two sugars? v medium hot coffee, cream, two sugars -- see you at the window. t at dunkin', we make your coffee just the way you like it. p if not, we'll make it again on the spot. that's the dd commitment. >> now on newscenter 5's "eyeopener." this morning. when we'll see temperatures head the other way. sera: unraveling the story behind an amber alert. the reason police in pennsylvania issued the urgen
a safety investigation at yale university. the worker killed on campus. frank: another look at the head of the charles right now. river. chilly but beautiful start to we'll be right back. very beautiful. right back after this break. stay with hand-crafted...layer by layer. r the new macchiato from dunkin' donuts. experience the flavor of fall you get a cold. through your nose. suddenly, you're a mouthbreather. a mouthbreather! well, just put on a breathe right strip and pow! it instantly opens...
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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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WMUR
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police say a man fell off a lader while working inside a chimney at yale' s power plant . fire officials have not released his name but say he was from oregon. emergency crews had to cut through stainless steel to get to him. he was stuck inside the chimney for an hour. some people in texas are returning home after a wild fire burned their neighborhoods. firefighters are still trying to battling the blaze that has destroyed dozens of homes. the hidden pines fire has scorched more than 7 miles. today, authorities said it' s about 40% contained. officials say the worst of the fire is likely over. >> the fire is consigned inside of a footprint. we have a solid line around it. now we' ve got to go inside and put out the hotspot and ultimately we will get to total control. stephanie: no one has died or been seriously hurt in the fire. roads are still a mess after a massive mudslide in california. mudslides could happen again. abc' s aditi roy is in southern california with how crews are trying to clean up. >> crews clearing mud-blocked roads in southern california are racing ag
police say a man fell off a lader while working inside a chimney at yale' s power plant . fire officials have not released his name but say he was from oregon. emergency crews had to cut through stainless steel to get to him. he was stuck inside the chimney for an hour. some people in texas are returning home after a wild fire burned their neighborhoods. firefighters are still trying to battling the blaze that has destroyed dozens of homes. the hidden pines fire has scorched more than 7 miles....
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Oct 4, 2015
10/15
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here i want to thank yale because yale university paid for one of my former law clerks, sarah solo, who is from philadelphia, and she went there as a research associate, a fellow, and they produced who law students, and she directed them, and my goodness they dade lot of research and did very, very good research, and sarah was fabulous. so, still, i did something. nonetheless i do appreciate what yale did, and those students, and i certainly appreciate what she did. >> host: so the controversy about using foreign law, not so much about the case which required a court to reconcile american and for law, but the indication of foreign cases in you have a chapter where you acknowledge these criticisms and respond to them. you yourself cited foreign decisions in a very important dissent in a death penalty case last june. tell us about that dissent and how you thought foreign law was svelte what your response was to justice schoolie who side you're crazy to make those citations. >> guest: much of the political controversy -- there is a political controversy -- most grows out of two or have to
here i want to thank yale because yale university paid for one of my former law clerks, sarah solo, who is from philadelphia, and she went there as a research associate, a fellow, and they produced who law students, and she directed them, and my goodness they dade lot of research and did very, very good research, and sarah was fabulous. so, still, i did something. nonetheless i do appreciate what yale did, and those students, and i certainly appreciate what she did. >> host: so the...
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Oct 3, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN3
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. >> joining the discussion, yell yale law school professor akhil reed -- the plaintiffs, lawyers, and cases.s in these "landmark cases" premieres live at 9:00 p.m. eastern on c-span, c-span3, and c-span radio. while you watch, order the copy of "landmark cases" at c-span.org/landmarkcases. long, american history tv is featuring santa rosa, california, the seat of sonoma county, famous for its wine industry. cableer with our comcast partners, c-span cities tour staff recently visited many side the city's rich history. learn more about santa rosa all weekend here on american history tv. charles: jack london was one of the highest-paid writers. he is one of the authors that was right throughout the world, including the soviet union and russia at the time, japan -- he was translated into language after language. people found his writing compelling. he was deeply concerned about the human condition, and much of what he wrote about, while it may have seen on the surface like stories about dogs or the yukon, were often about the states of humanity and his concern for humankind. on jack londo
. >> joining the discussion, yell yale law school professor akhil reed -- the plaintiffs, lawyers, and cases.s in these "landmark cases" premieres live at 9:00 p.m. eastern on c-span, c-span3, and c-span radio. while you watch, order the copy of "landmark cases" at c-span.org/landmarkcases. long, american history tv is featuring santa rosa, california, the seat of sonoma county, famous for its wine industry. cableer with our comcast partners, c-span cities tour staff...
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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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WCVB
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that man was working to upgrade yale's central power plant when he fell from a ladder. it took officials about an hour to get him out of the chimney. the man, who is from oregon, later died at a hospital. the incident is under investigation. sera: although belated, it was a warm welcome home in concord for the new hampshire national guard's detachment 18. governor maggie hassan and senator kelly ayotte were among family and friends who attended the special ceremony. the group returned in july from a nine-month deployment to the middle east. >> it's good for people to be able to know that people are still going and coming back. i think sometimes in the bigger population people don't realize that, hey, this is still happening. it's been going on for a long time. it's going to keep going on for a long time in my opinion. it's still happening. sera: the unit has been on a break for a few months and is now preparing to get back to work. frank: a unique approach to connecting with the community the police department here in concord, massachusetts says it plans to issue up to
that man was working to upgrade yale's central power plant when he fell from a ladder. it took officials about an hour to get him out of the chimney. the man, who is from oregon, later died at a hospital. the incident is under investigation. sera: although belated, it was a warm welcome home in concord for the new hampshire national guard's detachment 18. governor maggie hassan and senator kelly ayotte were among family and friends who attended the special ceremony. the group returned in july...
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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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WCVB
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a safety investigation at yale university. the worker killed on campus. frank: also a look at the beautiful skyline of boston. 34 degrees out there. we've been talking all morning. a chilly start to this sunday. bundle up before you head out. mike wankum has the full forecast coming up including a warm-up so there is some good that's amazing. it's amazing. this is amazing. that's amazing! real people are discovering surprising things at chevy. we're sold. it's so pretty. beautiful. it feels great. perfect. this is not what i would expect from a chevy at all. get more than you expect for less than you imagined. the 2015 models are going fast. find your tag and get cash back for 15% of the msrp on select 2015 vehicles in stock. or, get 0% financing for 72 months >> you're watching wcvb, boston's news leader. goodorning!
a safety investigation at yale university. the worker killed on campus. frank: also a look at the beautiful skyline of boston. 34 degrees out there. we've been talking all morning. a chilly start to this sunday. bundle up before you head out. mike wankum has the full forecast coming up including a warm-up so there is some good that's amazing. it's amazing. this is amazing. that's amazing! real people are discovering surprising things at chevy. we're sold. it's so pretty. beautiful. it feels...
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Oct 14, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN3
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and does go to yale and end up deciding to go to journalism.s not really clear why. he has a successful journalism career. like robert kellogg, it seems like he is unwell professionally. but clearly there are demons haunting him. he becomes alienated from his comrades, so much so that they don't invite him here in the early 1900s in 1907 to dedicate the monument here, which is very dramatic but he's not included. he was a vital member of the unit, he helped save the flag of the unit at plymouth. i would argue he is one of the true heroes of the unit. but he became estranged from his comrades, he was arguing with them about what really happened. just here in andersonville, but what happened when the. in a falling out with them. he will be committed to the hartford asylum for the insane. he will be declared mentally ill. he dies there when he is 68 years old. to me, those are two examples of ways, they in many are 18 years old, 19 years old, they start of same place but they veer off in different ways are in the cap prove, of course, that his men
and does go to yale and end up deciding to go to journalism.s not really clear why. he has a successful journalism career. like robert kellogg, it seems like he is unwell professionally. but clearly there are demons haunting him. he becomes alienated from his comrades, so much so that they don't invite him here in the early 1900s in 1907 to dedicate the monument here, which is very dramatic but he's not included. he was a vital member of the unit, he helped save the flag of the unit at...
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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now a report from yale law school says the way rohingya is treated by myanmar's government is tantamount toends. >> this baby is malnourished but there's plenty of town in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. this woman has an undiagnosed illness but canned afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the rohingya of western myanmar, about 130,000 are prisoners in refugee campletion i camps in te land. >> there are people here who need to see medical professionals and unable to do that because of policy that essentially deprives them to access to health care. when you can find a group of people in these displacement camps and deprive them from basic needs for survival it has a destructive impact. >> conditions here are deplorable but much like other refugee camps around the world, the difference here is these conditions are avoidable and the result of government policy. in 2012, violence erupted in this region of myanmar. homes were burnt and bulldozed. while they were born and brought
now a report from yale law school says the way rohingya is treated by myanmar's government is tantamount toends. >> this baby is malnourished but there's plenty of town in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. this woman has an undiagnosed illness but canned afford to pay the bribes needed to get to a doctor. these are the stories of the rohingya of western myanmar, about 130,000 are prisoners in refugee campletion i...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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that's according to a report by the yale university law school. obtained exclusively biage's investigative unit. it blames the government for the crime against 1 million muslim rohingya who live in the west of the country. we have the exclusive report from myanmar. >> this baby is malnourished. but there is plenty of food in a nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby. but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. >>> this woman has an undiagnosed illness due can't afford to pay the bribes to get to the doctor. 130,000 rohingya are prisoners in their homeland. >> there are people who need to see medical professions, and they're unable to do that because of policy that deprives them of access to healthcare. when you can find a group of people--when you confine a group of people to displacement camps and deprive them of needs for survival, it will have its impact. >> the conditions are deplorable, but the difference here is that the conditions are avoidable and the result of government policy. in 2012 violence erupted in this region
that's according to a report by the yale university law school. obtained exclusively biage's investigative unit. it blames the government for the crime against 1 million muslim rohingya who live in the west of the country. we have the exclusive report from myanmar. >> this baby is malnourished. but there is plenty of food in a nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby. but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. >>> this woman has an undiagnosed illness due...
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Oct 23, 2015
10/15
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WBZ
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a researcher from yale said it's hard for kids to concentrate and do well in school if their brain is having a stress response. he says parents and educators should be alarmed by the findings. one way is to make learning a more engaging and interesting experience. so we put it out there. what do you think about this study? marie writes on our facebook page. wait until you have to get a job. wow. no rest for the weary in real life. another marie writes "my 17- year-old is frequently stressed about all of the testing, which at times, seems like what it's all about as opposed to learning for the sake of learning." you can comment on our "daily talker," web site, twitter page or facebook page. at 6:00. >>> bree, not much fun? >> no. i was stressed out. >> kids are, too. >> for sure. >>> it's friday so we're hitting the rewind button and revisiting the latest stories of the past five days. >> stay with us on wbz this people of the coffee drinking world, dunkin' has a dark roast coffee that's deliciously roasted just right for a bold start and smooth finish that's never bitter. put down the
a researcher from yale said it's hard for kids to concentrate and do well in school if their brain is having a stress response. he says parents and educators should be alarmed by the findings. one way is to make learning a more engaging and interesting experience. so we put it out there. what do you think about this study? marie writes on our facebook page. wait until you have to get a job. wow. no rest for the weary in real life. another marie writes "my 17- year-old is frequently...
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Oct 5, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN
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yale elites. caller: good morning.he supreme court, sometimes you wonder what country they are in. i think i read several times that it took the supreme court -- that the people versus , it took themment 1990 to rule in favor of the people. every case they had they ruled in favor of the government. it tells you where they are coming from. this thing about obamacare, when that case with roberts, supreme court justice, he turned it over to his he turned it over to his lawyers to reconstruct the law. obamacare was actually rewritten by the supreme court, which is totally illegal and should have been written by congress and the people. i would like to see if congress would do their job and start impeaching people like they are supposed to the should not be up there or have been up there too long and have gone nuts while up there, we need people represented. more impeachment. host: we will be taking your calls on the supreme court throughout today's show. we will show you like pictures as well today i was opening day of the
yale elites. caller: good morning.he supreme court, sometimes you wonder what country they are in. i think i read several times that it took the supreme court -- that the people versus , it took themment 1990 to rule in favor of the people. every case they had they ruled in favor of the government. it tells you where they are coming from. this thing about obamacare, when that case with roberts, supreme court justice, he turned it over to his he turned it over to his lawyers to reconstruct the...
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Oct 19, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 105
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he conducted experiments at yale university.indicated that those people will not refrain from inflicting pain on others in order to do so -- if ordered to do so. , here is the trailer for the experimenter. hair -- pillow, .> incorrect 165 vault strong shock. >> let me out of here. i will not be part of the experiment anymore. >> he says he does not want to continue. of the same.s they hesitate, sigh, tremble, and grown. they advance to the last switch because they are told to. this is an experiment. >> the man in the other room wasn't being shocked. >> let me out of here. >> we want to get true reactions from people. >> please continue. >> social relations, what is that mean? >> the way people talk and elevators. the study of formative societies. is the fines -- why is the fines the anomaly and not the norm. >> why don't i have a choice. >> have you done it? >> i would never do that. >> that really hurts. let me out. >> the experiment really begins. ♪ >> your father is turning into a fictional character. >> critics insist your c
he conducted experiments at yale university.indicated that those people will not refrain from inflicting pain on others in order to do so -- if ordered to do so. , here is the trailer for the experimenter. hair -- pillow, .> incorrect 165 vault strong shock. >> let me out of here. i will not be part of the experiment anymore. >> he says he does not want to continue. of the same.s they hesitate, sigh, tremble, and grown. they advance to the last switch because they are told to....
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Oct 5, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN
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at the same time, there are logical clinics at places like stanford and yale that balance this out a bit. in any case where the lower courts have divided on a significant legal issue, every good lawyers volunteer -- very good lawyers volunteer those thes for free because chance to argue before a supreme court is a prestigious thing for any lawyer. host: i want to ask you about several cases that can come before the court issue of the death penalty. guest: on the very last day of the term in a case about lethal injections, two members of the more or less announced they want to get out of the business of deciding death cases. they think it is almost certainly unconstitutional and they would like to hear in big major challenge. that has not arrived yet although i think people are afraid of something like that. prosecutorse about in a capital case that excludes all that jurors from a case or whether that amounts to is discrimination. on the death penalty case, who else might join them in allowing a case to be heard? you mentioned the two justices. who oppose the death penalty are hopeful
at the same time, there are logical clinics at places like stanford and yale that balance this out a bit. in any case where the lower courts have divided on a significant legal issue, every good lawyers volunteer -- very good lawyers volunteer those thes for free because chance to argue before a supreme court is a prestigious thing for any lawyer. host: i want to ask you about several cases that can come before the court issue of the death penalty. guest: on the very last day of the term in a...
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Oct 5, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN2
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yale, harvard and columbia being the three schools from which the nine justices come from. has there have been any movement in the circle that watches the supreme court to try to get that extended beyond just. >> i think a lot of people in the justices themselves are little wary of what a narrow band of american legal culture they represent and in the last go-round it seemed one of the candidates would die diane wood who had gone to the university of texas and that seemed to count in her favor not enough to get her to nomination but i would think the next time around the presence of a lot -- with broadly and not just to go to these few elite schools because it does send a message to the mac in public and the american legal culture into law students in particular that unless you happen to go to one of those law schools you are not going to make it. >> host: what are the law schools that have a chance next time around? >> guest: there lots and lots of good law schools. columbia by the way barely squeaks and because every single one of the justices went to harvard or yale. jus
yale, harvard and columbia being the three schools from which the nine justices come from. has there have been any movement in the circle that watches the supreme court to try to get that extended beyond just. >> i think a lot of people in the justices themselves are little wary of what a narrow band of american legal culture they represent and in the last go-round it seemed one of the candidates would die diane wood who had gone to the university of texas and that seemed to count in her...
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109
Oct 7, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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the ad includes his speech that he delivered at yale university, recalling how his life was shaped by the accident. sources say he may make the decision as early as this weekend. it may be the summer of donald trump, but wall street is shrugging their shoulders. they are placing bets on mainstream presidential hopefuls like jeb bush, marco rubio and hillary clinton and showing little enthusiasm for trump, ben carson, and bernie sanders. another indicator of donor preference will be revealed next month when campaigns disclose fundraising results for the latest quarter. that's a look at the first word headlines right now. you can always find the latest news on bloomberg.com. >> we want to turn back to stocks. you have biotech and energy but where are we in a technical level. i want to bring in scott redler. hi scott. we have been talking quite a bit about the s&p and what kind of range we are in, where are we? >> we are in the upper end of the range. one of the fastest,. it's moves we've had in a wild. the staff said the biggest outside reversal in four years and the market has not stop
the ad includes his speech that he delivered at yale university, recalling how his life was shaped by the accident. sources say he may make the decision as early as this weekend. it may be the summer of donald trump, but wall street is shrugging their shoulders. they are placing bets on mainstream presidential hopefuls like jeb bush, marco rubio and hillary clinton and showing little enthusiasm for trump, ben carson, and bernie sanders. another indicator of donor preference will be revealed...
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Oct 9, 2015
10/15
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WTXF
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college rankings are out, high school seniors, consider this, penn high on the list among harvard, and yale, we will break down those rankings. >> the ivy league. >> good day everybody. it is friday october 9th, 20 156789 we are asking townsend your military pictures using the hashtag fox 29 solutes. >> can i show my military man again. >> we would love to see him. >> that is my daddy. >> that is don johnson. >> eighteen years old. he decided he will join the air force. look at him all suited up. >> i have to tell you he looks the same today. >> that is what my friends said earlier. they said he looks exactly the same n2 weeks, he will turn 70. >> that is a big one. >> i can't talk bit. >> let me guess you will go out of town. >> can you put a side by side on your facebook page. >> is what your work facebook page. >> lauren johnson fox 29. >> how original. >> yes. >> you won't believe it. guy has in the aged and he will be 7o lets go to scott the will yams as we are getting ready for military day. weather will be great, right scottie. >> we are starting off mild, little muggy but that rain
college rankings are out, high school seniors, consider this, penn high on the list among harvard, and yale, we will break down those rankings. >> the ivy league. >> good day everybody. it is friday october 9th, 20 156789 we are asking townsend your military pictures using the hashtag fox 29 solutes. >> can i show my military man again. >> we would love to see him. >> that is my daddy. >> that is don johnson. >> eighteen years old. he decided he will...
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Oct 18, 2015
10/15
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WABC
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a deadly accident fall at yale university, a man working at yale central power plant fell from a ladder inside a smokestack yesterday. a university spokeswoman says the victim fell about 50 feet. it took rescuers an hour to cut through the side of the smokestack to rescue him. he was rushed to the hospital where he was pronounced dead just a short time later. >>> in suffolk county, police are trying to figure out how a and a drugstore in central islip. islip avenue was closed when that truck rammed into the pharmacy last night. police are still looking for the driver who left the scene. >>> an armed suspect is in custody after being shot by police in the parking lot of a pennsylvania wal-mart. eyewitnesses say the gunman was firing shots from a semiautomatic rifle in that afternoon. the gunfire. no one else was hurt. eyewitnesses ducked for cover and called police. >> i heard gunfire, and i came down and people were hiding behind their vehicles. >> like nine cop cars pulled up and someone started shooting, started ducking. they said nobody's getting hurt. >> the suspect is accused of fi
a deadly accident fall at yale university, a man working at yale central power plant fell from a ladder inside a smokestack yesterday. a university spokeswoman says the victim fell about 50 feet. it took rescuers an hour to cut through the side of the smokestack to rescue him. he was rushed to the hospital where he was pronounced dead just a short time later. >>> in suffolk county, police are trying to figure out how a and a drugstore in central islip. islip avenue was closed when that...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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strong evidence of genocide in myanmar against its rohingya minority according to a report by the yale university law school obtained exclusively by al jazeera's investigative unit. it blames the government for the crime against around 100 million muslim rohingya who live in the west of the country. we have this exclusive report. >> this baby is malnourished, but there is plenty of food in the nearby up to. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but the local hospital wouldn't treat her. this woman has an undiagnosed illness but can't afford the bribes needed to pay a doctor. these are the stories in western my an more. 100,000 prisoners are prisoners and refugees in their own homeland. >> there are people who are unable to see pedestrian medical professionals, but are ununable because of policy that deprives them health care. >> when you deprive them of basic needs for survival, it has a destructive impact. >> the conditions here are deplorable, but perhaps much like other refugee camps around the world, the difference here is that these conditions avoidable and the result
strong evidence of genocide in myanmar against its rohingya minority according to a report by the yale university law school obtained exclusively by al jazeera's investigative unit. it blames the government for the crime against around 100 million muslim rohingya who live in the west of the country. we have this exclusive report. >> this baby is malnourished, but there is plenty of food in the nearby up to. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but the local hospital wouldn't...
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Oct 10, 2015
10/15
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WMUR
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they play yale. chan stanford. tom: want to check in with hayley for the weekend weather. hayley: temperatures will be noticeably cool and a breeze kicking up. in the 50' s for highs. sunday we will see temperatures creeping up and topping it off on monday with bright sunshine, up near 70 nea before temperatures cool off again next week. shelley: monday looking great. enjoy it if you have it all. thank you for joining us at through the mill yards to make some noise for all the real possibilities we're providing right here in our community because if you don't think greater manchester when you think aarp then you don't know "aarp" maybe you've caught our movies for grownups series or heard about how our fraud watch network protects families from being we're also helping people achieve their goals with life reimagined get to know us and see all the real possibilities at at aarp.org/manchester i had no idea snhu had this amazing campus. even the walk to class is amazing. i love the sense of community. people actually hold the doors open for you here. all my professors really
they play yale. chan stanford. tom: want to check in with hayley for the weekend weather. hayley: temperatures will be noticeably cool and a breeze kicking up. in the 50' s for highs. sunday we will see temperatures creeping up and topping it off on monday with bright sunshine, up near 70 nea before temperatures cool off again next week. shelley: monday looking great. enjoy it if you have it all. thank you for joining us at through the mill yards to make some noise for all the real...
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Oct 29, 2015
10/15
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KCAU
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with the crimson, gornet will have a chance to go against former teammate joe snively who plays for yale now. congratulations to cam on the commitmentn time now to check out this week's abc9 rising star. our winner today is teagan eickholt from kingsley pierson. as you might guess, teagan loves playing baseball. he'll receive a t- shirt, a framed photo, and two passes to king's pointe courtesy of the education station anansign prpr chris: not only is itplayoff football time, but regional volleyball is rolling right along in iowa as well with teams closing in on state tournament berths. tonight, classes 3a, 4a, and 5a take the court in regional semifinals, meaning two more wins clinch a spot in cedar rapids. sportszone will be in sioux city, le mars, and sioux center for the action this evening and here's a look at the fullll rundown of in class 3a, 11th ranked sb-l travels to number 3 sioux center in a battle of warriors. sioux center swept sbl in the regular season. we'll have highlights of this game tonight. to round out a tough regionalal tenth ranked spirit lake hosts pocahontas area
with the crimson, gornet will have a chance to go against former teammate joe snively who plays for yale now. congratulations to cam on the commitmentn time now to check out this week's abc9 rising star. our winner today is teagan eickholt from kingsley pierson. as you might guess, teagan loves playing baseball. he'll receive a t- shirt, a framed photo, and two passes to king's pointe courtesy of the education station anansign prpr chris: not only is itplayoff football time, but regional...
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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. >> reporter: now that young man who discovered the bible went to yale, and became a gifted neurosurgeons a leading republican presidential candidate. and in iowa, one poll suggests that carson leads donald trump 28% to 19. a 10-point jump in just two months. another poll shows he is ahead 28% to 20, and 84% said they had a favorable opinion of carson with just 10% unfavorable. >> it really shows the power of social media. because a lot of the media has it in for me, but many people listened to them, i would be polling at less than zero. >> reporter: he is known for blunt style. >> i have a strong desire to get rid of programs that create dependency in able-bodied people. >> reporter: carson began his rise two years ago at a prayer breakfast by hammering the president's reform law as the president sat a few feet away. >> obamacare is, really, i think the worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery. >> reporter: this weekend carson compared abortion rights to slavery, and said he would outlaw the procedure even in cases of rape and incest. >> during slavery, a lot of the sl
. >> reporter: now that young man who discovered the bible went to yale, and became a gifted neurosurgeons a leading republican presidential candidate. and in iowa, one poll suggests that carson leads donald trump 28% to 19. a 10-point jump in just two months. another poll shows he is ahead 28% to 20, and 84% said they had a favorable opinion of carson with just 10% unfavorable. >> it really shows the power of social media. because a lot of the media has it in for me, but many...
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Oct 20, 2015
10/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 59
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he conducted experiments at yale university.s indicated that those people will not refrain from infecting pain on others, in order to do so. peters are scarred -- aarsgaard place them in a new film. >> rock, pillow, hair -- >> incorrect. 165 volt strong shock. >> let me out of here. i will not be part of the experiment anymore. >> he says he does not want to continue. >> he says he does not want to go on. >> the results of the same. they hesitate, sigh, tremble, and ground. they advance to the last switch because they are told to. this is an experiment. >> the man in the other room wasn't being shocked. >> let me out of here. >> we want to get true reactions from people. >> please continue. >> social relations, what is that mean? >> the way people talk and elevators. the study of formative societies. >> human beings participate in destructive and inhumane acts. anomalys defiance the instead of the norm? >> why did you stop? >> utility to continue. >> why don't i have a choice. >> have you done it? >> i would never do that. >> th
he conducted experiments at yale university.s indicated that those people will not refrain from infecting pain on others, in order to do so. peters are scarred -- aarsgaard place them in a new film. >> rock, pillow, hair -- >> incorrect. 165 volt strong shock. >> let me out of here. i will not be part of the experiment anymore. >> he says he does not want to continue. >> he says he does not want to go on. >> the results of the same. they hesitate, sigh,...
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Oct 30, 2015
10/15
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WJLA
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joce: a recent yale study looked findingr tire infill, 96 chemicals, known carcinogens, and chemicals with risks. >> the government at both federal and state levels have toowed a cancer experiment affect a whole generation of children and athletes. >> it's enough to make you cry. the first reaction is we missed it, we do not fight hard enough. joce: the fight is changing. in a congressional hearing this summer, the consumer products safety administration stepped back from statements on crumb bber, stepping back and saying it is ok to play on. >> i don't think we should have conveyed that. joce: the cpsc once more testing, but it has not been done. >> why should any county be left to their own devices. this is science. that is beyond what we can do. joce: montgomery county recently announced it will no longer provide public funding for crumb rubber fields. fairfax county schools went all-in, installing synthetic turf at every high school in the district. although they would not talk why,7 on your side about referring us instead to scientific studies. >> we need to take a hard look at t
joce: a recent yale study looked findingr tire infill, 96 chemicals, known carcinogens, and chemicals with risks. >> the government at both federal and state levels have toowed a cancer experiment affect a whole generation of children and athletes. >> it's enough to make you cry. the first reaction is we missed it, we do not fight hard enough. joce: the fight is changing. in a congressional hearing this summer, the consumer products safety administration stepped back from statements...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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. >> over the last eight months the clinic at yale law school has been studying me air man in the context of genocide. the court would need to prove that government officials have shown a deliberate intent destroy the rohingya. >> we believe we have strong evidence that genocide is occurring, given the scale of atrocities are happening and the way government talks of the rohingya we believe that genocide is present. >> like many world leaders they prefer to engage former military rulers rather than stand up for the rights of a powerless people. >> for those accused to face justice the international criminal court would have to get involved. >> the international criminal court does have jurisdiction over the crime of den jude and typically would come from a charge that one individual or nation makes against another. there is an international criminal court prosecutor. that's one way to convince the prosecutor at the international criminal court to initiate a case. if there is a possibility that culprits travel to another country, that country, if there is substantial evidence of genocide,
. >> over the last eight months the clinic at yale law school has been studying me air man in the context of genocide. the court would need to prove that government officials have shown a deliberate intent destroy the rohingya. >> we believe we have strong evidence that genocide is occurring, given the scale of atrocities are happening and the way government talks of the rohingya we believe that genocide is present. >> like many world leaders they prefer to engage former...
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Oct 24, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN3
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in the tapes, actually there ares at yale, really interesting debates within the inner circle. i was on the wrong side of that, he would be the first to tell you. he was against organizing undocumented workers, so was caesar, but there were enough people who are also saying that we should because of our relationship with mexico. say, thathing i will is a generous thing to say, he is a man of his time and place, he was in union man, but i think one of the difficult things as a historian is that we ultimately pass judgment, and i would say that great leaders also transcend their time and place, and on this particular issue, caesar did not. you can say, well, who else amongst the people who were thinking about this and who were active did take that great step? there was another leader who we need tos -- organize. we need to embrace our mexican brothers as equals. duringe were examples that time, young people at the college's organizing community and groups. they said that we need to embrace that approach. it eventually came true. there also was a big debate captured on tape after
in the tapes, actually there ares at yale, really interesting debates within the inner circle. i was on the wrong side of that, he would be the first to tell you. he was against organizing undocumented workers, so was caesar, but there were enough people who are also saying that we should because of our relationship with mexico. say, thathing i will is a generous thing to say, he is a man of his time and place, he was in union man, but i think one of the difficult things as a historian is that...
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Oct 4, 2015
10/15
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CSPAN
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. >> joining the discussion is yale law school professor and author. whooring the life and times were the plaintiffs, lawyers, and justices in these cases. from live this monday at 9:00 p.m. eastern on c-span, c-span3, and c-span radio. for background on you watch, order your copy of the companion book. it is available for $8.95 and shipping. now we will hear from former vice president al gore from this week's washington ideas forum. it explores a range of topics, including race and culture, violence injustice, and health and technology. [applause] james: good morning. margaret very much emma thank you all for coming. thank you all for coming. thanks so much to vice president al gore for joining us. he has done a lot of traveling so thanks for making the effort. as i promised yesterday, the vice president has nothing to talk about you might not be expecting. there are things you probably will expect, given his political expertise, the things you know about what he has been doing in the years since by presidency. the nobel peace prize, the two oscars, t
. >> joining the discussion is yale law school professor and author. whooring the life and times were the plaintiffs, lawyers, and justices in these cases. from live this monday at 9:00 p.m. eastern on c-span, c-span3, and c-span radio. for background on you watch, order your copy of the companion book. it is available for $8.95 and shipping. now we will hear from former vice president al gore from this week's washington ideas forum. it explores a range of topics, including race and...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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. >> reporter: over the last eight months a clinic at yale law school has been examining the events to establish genocide. the court would have to probleme that the government has genocide in mind. >> getting in the scale of the atrocities are committed and the way people and politicians talk about rohingya we think it's hard to avoid a conclusion that intent is present. >> as the first elections in a quarter of a century, aung san suu kyi, standing up for rights of a powferl powerless people. phil reese, al jazeera, myanmar. >> you can see the investigative unit's full program, genocide agenda on monday. >>> process ed meats such as ham and sausage can lead to colon and other cancers, according to an investigative group. >> for some people, the perception of meat may have changed forever. that's because the international agency for research on cancer, which is part of the world health organization, has classified processed meat as a cancer-causing substance. it says, if you eat 50 grams of processed meet a day it will increase the chances of you developing cancer of the colon by 18%.
. >> reporter: over the last eight months a clinic at yale law school has been examining the events to establish genocide. the court would have to probleme that the government has genocide in mind. >> getting in the scale of the atrocities are committed and the way people and politicians talk about rohingya we think it's hard to avoid a conclusion that intent is present. >> as the first elections in a quarter of a century, aung san suu kyi, standing up for rights of a powferl...
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Oct 26, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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the strong evidence of genocide in myanmar against its rohingya minority according to a report by yale university law school. we have the story from western myanmar. >> this baby is mall nourished but there plenty o in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but the local hospital would not treat her. this woman has an illness but she does not have the money to pay the bribes to get to the doctor. many areries necessary in refugee camps in their own homeland. >> there are many who need to see medical professionals but they're unable to do that because of policy that deprives them from healthcare. when you contain them in displacement camps and then deprive them of needed services, the conditions are deplorable. >> the difference here is these conditions are avoidable and the result of government policy. >> in 2012 violence erupted in this region of myanmar forcing rohingya to flee to camps. their homes from burned and bulldozed. while they were born and brought up here, the government considers them immigrants from bangladesh. they say those who cannot produc
the strong evidence of genocide in myanmar against its rohingya minority according to a report by yale university law school. we have the story from western myanmar. >> this baby is mall nourished but there plenty o in the nearby town. this woman is hemorrhaging after losing her baby, but the local hospital would not treat her. this woman has an illness but she does not have the money to pay the bribes to get to the doctor. many areries necessary in refugee camps in their own homeland....
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Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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eye 62
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. >> that young man who discovered the bible went to yale and became a gifted neurosurgeon and now is a leading republican presidential candidate. he leads donald trump 28% to 19. a ten-point jump for carson in two months. a poll indicates carson is ahead 28-20. in that survey, they have a favorable opinion of carson with 10% unfavorable. >> it really shows the power of social media and of word of mouth. because as you know, you know, a lot of media has it in for me, but you know, if people listen to them, i would be polling less than zero. >> carson is known for a blunt style and strong anti-government conservatism. >> i have a strong desire to get rid of programs that create dependency in able-bodied people. >> and he's a master of attack lines. carson began two years ago by hammering president obama health reform law as the president sat a few feet away. since then carson has added this. >> obamacare is really i think the worst thing that has happened in this nation since slavery. >> this weekend carson compared abortion rights to slavery. and said he would outlaw the procedure eve
. >> that young man who discovered the bible went to yale and became a gifted neurosurgeon and now is a leading republican presidential candidate. he leads donald trump 28% to 19. a ten-point jump for carson in two months. a poll indicates carson is ahead 28-20. in that survey, they have a favorable opinion of carson with 10% unfavorable. >> it really shows the power of social media and of word of mouth. because as you know, you know, a lot of media has it in for me, but you know,...
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54
Oct 27, 2015
10/15
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ALJAZAM
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eye 54
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. >> now, that young man who discovered the bible went to yale and became a gifted neurosurgeon is a leading republican presidential candidate. and an iowa the latest register poll suggestions carson leads donald trump 28%-19, a 10-point jump in just two months. 84% said they have a favorable opinion of carson, with just 10% unfavorable. >> it shows the power of social media because as you know, a lot of the media had it in for me. he is known for a blunt style and a strong antigovernment conservativism. >> i have a strong desire to get rid of programs that creator dependency on ablebodied people. >> and he is a master of attack lines. carson began his rise two years ago at a prayer breakfast by hammers president obama health reform law as the president sat a few feet away. since then, carson has added this. >> obama care, is really i shut the worst thing that has happened in this nation, since slavery. >> this weekend carson compared abortion rights to slavery, and said he would outlaw the procedure even in cases of rape and incest. >> during slavery, a lot of the slave owners thoug
. >> now, that young man who discovered the bible went to yale and became a gifted neurosurgeon is a leading republican presidential candidate. and an iowa the latest register poll suggestions carson leads donald trump 28%-19, a 10-point jump in just two months. 84% said they have a favorable opinion of carson, with just 10% unfavorable. >> it shows the power of social media because as you know, a lot of the media had it in for me. he is known for a blunt style and a strong...
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68
Oct 23, 2015
10/15
by
COM
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he was a cheerleader at yale and people make fun of him for that he was just trying to have some schoolirit, you know? >> one of the greatest male cheerleaders this country's ever had. why doesn't the country acknowledge that. >> i think you're right. >> other than cheerleading and being a mother and nursing, how many other tra ditionzally female roles are. there like this is what we're stuck with? we might want to bust out and do something else. we might want to be c.e.o. of-- well, we won't talk about carly fiorina. >> or a night time talk show host. >> yeah. >> yes larry, let an american talk for a second. >> we have canada and the canada of australia here tonight. >> canada, and the canada of australia. >> i'm just kidding. i love canada. and i love new zealand. >> yes. >> being very nice. >> can i just say i think when he says-- when a guy says family time i think it's code for golf or. >> really? >> or in this case, p90x. >> maybe it's mistress or gay lover too, you never know. >> that is something. >> what do you think is harder on their own, like are men harder on guys who say t
he was a cheerleader at yale and people make fun of him for that he was just trying to have some schoolirit, you know? >> one of the greatest male cheerleaders this country's ever had. why doesn't the country acknowledge that. >> i think you're right. >> other than cheerleading and being a mother and nursing, how many other tra ditionzally female roles are. there like this is what we're stuck with? we might want to bust out and do something else. we might want to be c.e.o....
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404
Oct 21, 2015
10/15
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KQED
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as a result, i arrived at yale in 1974 far behind my male classmates.ailed my first physics midterm, and my parents urged me to switch majors. but i worked incredibly hard and didn't give up. four years later, i graduated with a nearly perfect g.p.a., an "a" in a graduate course in gravitational theory, and two original research papers. even so, i didn't go on. as ridiculous as it seems now, i assumed that if i were talented enough to apply to graduate school, one of my professors would have let me know. since then, i've done a lot of research on gender bias in the sciences, and i'm sorry to report not much has changed. when parents ask why there are still so few girls in advanced science and math classes in high school, i tell them: because girls still need way more encouragement than boys to take those courses. we still raise girls to look to other people for assurance they are attractive and smart, while boys are raised to determine their own value. many girls are still made to feel it's not feminine to be good at science or math. and if a girl compl
as a result, i arrived at yale in 1974 far behind my male classmates.ailed my first physics midterm, and my parents urged me to switch majors. but i worked incredibly hard and didn't give up. four years later, i graduated with a nearly perfect g.p.a., an "a" in a graduate course in gravitational theory, and two original research papers. even so, i didn't go on. as ridiculous as it seems now, i assumed that if i were talented enough to apply to graduate school, one of my professors...
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. >>> yale wrote so target featured a girl with a disability on their halloween ad as a person with a disability who used to model this makes me so happy. target responded by saying its advertising team tries hard to include all of its guests. >>> a levee breach north bay is spilling water everywhere. but as you'll see actually a good thing. john ramos on how this is going to help bring that part of the bay back to how it looks over a century ago. >>reporter: this morning hundreds of people hike down a sonoma county levee built generations ago. they came here with an unusual mission. >> what a great day to beach a levee. >>reporter: these levees were build 140 years ago to claim farmlands from san francisco bay. they were called wasted lands good we've viewed the marshes as impediment rather than as a resource. >>reporter: times have changed we understand importance of marsh lands to the environment and overall health of the bay. on this day man came here to return what he had taken. nearly two square miles of the sears point ranch property is being opened to the bay of it will take d
. >>> yale wrote so target featured a girl with a disability on their halloween ad as a person with a disability who used to model this makes me so happy. target responded by saying its advertising team tries hard to include all of its guests. >>> a levee breach north bay is spilling water everywhere. but as you'll see actually a good thing. john ramos on how this is going to help bring that part of the bay back to how it looks over a century ago. >>reporter: this...
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Oct 15, 2015
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in the country when somebody goes through a long process with college they go to harvard they go to yale they go to a great college. university of virginia. great college. right? great. it is. right next to our property. we love them. that's a great college. but they go to university of virginia. they do fantastic. they do, and they do just great. and they're so proud. and they're from another country but they want to stay here. and we tell them get out. you stayed here, you have to th great. and they're so proud. and they're from another country but they want to stay here. and we tell them get out. you go home. then the case in india where a man opened a company, wanted to stay here. he ends up opening the country in india. he now has 5,000 employees, one of the hottest companies in the world. and he would have been here. he would have been here. and that's what we want. we want to keep people here. we want people to come in -- legally. and i say -- [applause] i say, and so importantly and i'm saying it all the time, we want to have a big door. we want to have a big beautiful door. righ
in the country when somebody goes through a long process with college they go to harvard they go to yale they go to a great college. university of virginia. great college. right? great. it is. right next to our property. we love them. that's a great college. but they go to university of virginia. they do fantastic. they do, and they do just great. and they're so proud. and they're from another country but they want to stay here. and we tell them get out. you stayed here, you have to th great....
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Oct 2, 2015
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. >> shelly kagan is a moral philosopher at yale university and he teaches one of the school's most popular classes. it's called death. he says if science could really alter the upper bounds of human lifespan even by 50 years it would have major repercussions. >> that would be something we've never dealt with and have no idea at all what it would do, what kind of changes it would require in human society. >> even one of the biggest dreamers warns that we're not ready for this. >> professor kubota says that humans as a species have a fundamental flaw. as we chase longer lives, we're losing sight of our place in the world. and that maybe we need to learn how to live better today. >> most of us go through life, i think, discovering that we are making or have made choices but haven't really reflected hard on whether those were the right choices to make or what were our reasons, were those good reasons i think recognizing that death is really the end implies the finitude of existence, and then that has the implication then that it really behooves you to think hard, long and hard about what is wo
. >> shelly kagan is a moral philosopher at yale university and he teaches one of the school's most popular classes. it's called death. he says if science could really alter the upper bounds of human lifespan even by 50 years it would have major repercussions. >> that would be something we've never dealt with and have no idea at all what it would do, what kind of changes it would require in human society. >> even one of the biggest dreamers warns that we're not ready for this....