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May 28, 2015
05/15
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KPIX
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i came home from yale university to watch this and i'm so happy they won. >> game was awesome. we enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. >> reporter: fans feeling confident going into the finals. some of the hottest plays after the team really got going in the second half last night. next matchup of course the cavaliers. and their star is nba darling lebron james. so everybody waiting to see how he is going to face off with our steph curry one week from today. live at oracle arena, anne makovec, kpix 5. >> should be a great series. last time the warriors were in the finals you have to go back to 1975. they swept the washington bullets in four games to win the title. rick berry, nate thurmond and all that. fast forward here we go. >> i see a bet with the cleveland anchors. >> very good. >> i know. >> now you're talking my language, friend. nate thurmond. those were good times. so are these. we have a nice day for thursday in the bay area with low cloudiness as per usual but things will warm up inland. outside a look at the numbers as we overlook the beautiful ferry building and the bay br
i came home from yale university to watch this and i'm so happy they won. >> game was awesome. we enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. >> reporter: fans feeling confident going into the finals. some of the hottest plays after the team really got going in the second half last night. next matchup of course the cavaliers. and their star is nba darling lebron james. so everybody waiting to see how he is going to face off with our steph curry one week from today. live at oracle arena, anne...
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May 25, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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also being released this week yale university professor of philosophy jason stanley discusses the ability of propaganda to undermine democratic governments in "how propaganda works." and neurobiologist richard francis explores the history of animal and plant domestication and how human civilization affects the evolutionary process in "domesticated: evolution in a manmade world." look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for the authors in the near future on booktv. >> this was in 1979. craig was graduating from high school. he was a very talented basketball player. he had an offer from the university of washington that was going to pay his way, and he had been invited -- he had been accepted as princeton where he, the family would have to pay some of the bills. he would have to earn some money on the side to get to go to princeton, and he had a conversation with his father who was sitting at the kitchen table and his mother who was washing dickers and he was talking -- dish cans, and he was talking it over with his dad and he said, well dad i think i might go the univ
also being released this week yale university professor of philosophy jason stanley discusses the ability of propaganda to undermine democratic governments in "how propaganda works." and neurobiologist richard francis explores the history of animal and plant domestication and how human civilization affects the evolutionary process in "domesticated: evolution in a manmade world." look for these titles in bookstores this coming week and watch for the authors in the near future...
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May 28, 2015
05/15
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KPIX
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you know, me and my brother came here, i came all the way home from yale university to watch this and i'm so happy they won. >> game was awesome. we really enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. go warriors. >> fans confident going into the finals. it's a hot matchup with the cavaliers their star lebron james. a lot of people looking forward to the matchup of lebron james and steph curry. anne makovec, kpix 5. >> when the warriors were last in the finals, 40 years ago, they beat the washington bullets four games to none. >>> last night's win was a family affair for the curries. steph got a kiss from his wife and hugs from his daughter after the win. his parents were on hand. steph took the girl to the post- game news conference again. >> talking to them. >> uhm -- hold on. try i 2011 -- try it again. i'm going to let her go. >> huh? >> going to take you, babe. >> think she's taking advantage of the moment for sure. [ laughter ] >> she's way too comfortable. >> she is a ham. he and his teammates will get ready for the ultimate series against the cavs. >> she is a little darling. >> clearly. >> t
you know, me and my brother came here, i came all the way home from yale university to watch this and i'm so happy they won. >> game was awesome. we really enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. go warriors. >> fans confident going into the finals. it's a hot matchup with the cavaliers their star lebron james. a lot of people looking forward to the matchup of lebron james and steph curry. anne makovec, kpix 5. >> when the warriors were last in the finals, 40 years ago, they beat the...
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May 18, 2015
05/15
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ALJAZAM
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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 worth
. >> 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....
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May 28, 2015
05/15
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KPIX
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i came all the way from yale university to watch this. >> the game was awesome. we really enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. go warriors! >> i love you! >> we are ready for lebron! >> come on lebron james. you can't beat up klay thompson! come on! >> looking way forward to watching lebron go down. >> we will beat cleveland. sorry lebron. >> god bless the warriors. >> reporter: next game is thursday june 4 right here against the cavaliers. it will be another sell-out crowd. christin ayers, kpix5. >> and of course, our own dennis o'donnell inside to witness the historic event. dennis, warriors got a little banged up toward the end of the game. >> reporter: it is a good thing they have over a week to rest for the nba finals. this was a very physical game tonight and it took its toll on a couple of players. one in particular. two plays in the fourth quarter. trevor ariza caught klay thompson. he has concussion like symptoms tonight. needed three stitches. and dwight howard laid an elbow to andre iguodala. the pain was eased once they celebrated their first nba final. >> we
i came all the way from yale university to watch this. >> the game was awesome. we really enjoyed it. i'm glad i came. go warriors! >> i love you! >> we are ready for lebron! >> come on lebron james. you can't beat up klay thompson! come on! >> looking way forward to watching lebron go down. >> we will beat cleveland. sorry lebron. >> god bless the warriors. >> reporter: next game is thursday june 4 right here against the cavaliers. it will be...
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May 20, 2015
05/15
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LINKTV
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he gave $150 million to universityyale --yale -- yale university, one of the big against the university of gotten, pocket change for mr. schwartzman, but for most of you, probably would not be. it is also very nice for ylae but -- yale, but to give $150 million to yale is to give a few pennies to a gentleman like mr. schwartzman. what is going to be done with this? yale is converting a huge building. for reasons of objectivity, i should explain i went to school and taught at yale. this is the commons, a beautiful old construction. much of the buildings are beautiful and looks like cambridge and oxford, which it was meant to replicate. it was not, of course, built at the time of cambridge and oxford, if you know your history you can figure out why that was. it was ashley built in the 1930's, -- it was actually built in the 1930's, mostly by italian craftsman who were desperately unemployed and willing to work for nothing and this was an opportunity yale did not wish to let pass, so it built replicas of what it wished it had of its own origin and this was a cheap way to replicate this eve
he gave $150 million to universityyale --yale -- yale university, one of the big against the university of gotten, pocket change for mr. schwartzman, but for most of you, probably would not be. it is also very nice for ylae but -- yale, but to give $150 million to yale is to give a few pennies to a gentleman like mr. schwartzman. what is going to be done with this? yale is converting a huge building. for reasons of objectivity, i should explain i went to school and taught at yale. this is the...
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May 27, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN3
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uriah was a 21-year-old junior at yale university he could not wait to get into the war. he enlisted in a new york calvary regimen because there was not one ready yet. he dropped out of yale the junior year. he grew up on a farm in connecticut, grown up in -- made him unusual in the yun your an a army, grown up in an during abolitionist family. he wrote to his brother in the war, quote, i'm more an abolitionist than ever now, right up to the handle. if i had money enough to raise a few hundred contrabands, means escaped slaves, and arm them, i would get up an insurrection among the slaves.t." i told the captain i would desert to do it. that is bravado i suspect. he did not lead any mutiny that o we know of. -- organizers of a contraband to kept have an insurrection but letters kept flowing. and in 1861 and 1862 he denounces lincoln and the lincoln administration. he's impatient. he's angry that the war is not es officially a war to free the slaves. he does not get it. the thinks the war is caused by slavery, why not fight to free the slaves? he writes home in early 1862 i
uriah was a 21-year-old junior at yale university he could not wait to get into the war. he enlisted in a new york calvary regimen because there was not one ready yet. he dropped out of yale the junior year. he grew up on a farm in connecticut, grown up in -- made him unusual in the yun your an a army, grown up in an during abolitionist family. he wrote to his brother in the war, quote, i'm more an abolitionist than ever now, right up to the handle. if i had money enough to raise a few hundred...
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May 18, 2015
05/15
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WPVI
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. >>> a bit of advice from joe buyen to the graduating class of yale university. the vice president told 1200 seniors to be careful about judging others and questioning their motives. he also discussed his support over the years for gay marriage and the work he's done to fight racial profiling. >> if you're a brother that can't marry the man he loves, you are lessened and if your best friend has to worry about being racially profile you live in a circumstance not worthy of us. >> the vice president also urged students to find the thing that allows them to pursue what they love and think it still matters even 40 or 50 years from now. >> did you like the glasses? >> stylish. >> top gun thing there. >>> new this morning a first look at the trailer for the new steve jobs movie. >> and flames shooting from a building with people trapped inside. the survivors jumping to safety into the arms of firefighters. >>> high-tech lifeline. rescuers use a drone to reach people trapped by floodwaters. >>> the summer travel season is just about here and the airline industry says it
. >>> a bit of advice from joe buyen to the graduating class of yale university. the vice president told 1200 seniors to be careful about judging others and questioning their motives. he also discussed his support over the years for gay marriage and the work he's done to fight racial profiling. >> if you're a brother that can't marry the man he loves, you are lessened and if your best friend has to worry about being racially profile you live in a circumstance not worthy of us....
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May 27, 2015
05/15
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WPVI
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. >> police identified the attackerrer in a stabbing and suicide near yale university. tyler carlisle. the recent grad had returned to an off campus apartment and stabbed 21-year-old student alexander mushar. he's in stable condition. then police believe carlisle jumped to his death. police say the men were acquaintances but declined to elaborate. >> 5:47 now. police in montgomery county didn't have to go far to arrest two suspected drunk drivers. >> we know who will be partying on the parkway for this year's wawa welcome america celebration. karen. >> love that. let's take a look now. if you're dressing the kids the shorts and t's will do it. we've got a warm one today and it's sticky, too. details in that accuweather forecast coming up. >> the wawa welcome america celebration will include miguel and sugar land's jennifer nettles plus philadelphia's own the roots will take the stage. 6abc is proud to once again be the official broadcast spart interof the eight day celebration. the free family fun runs from june 27th through july 4th. festivities include movie screening
. >> police identified the attackerrer in a stabbing and suicide near yale university. tyler carlisle. the recent grad had returned to an off campus apartment and stabbed 21-year-old student alexander mushar. he's in stable condition. then police believe carlisle jumped to his death. police say the men were acquaintances but declined to elaborate. >> 5:47 now. police in montgomery county didn't have to go far to arrest two suspected drunk drivers. >> we know who will be...
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May 31, 2015
05/15
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CNBC
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potency, purity, and the missing-link ratio between epa and dha that researchers affiliated with yale university have discovered, which is the key to unlocking all of the health benefits of omega-3 fish oil. you'll also be introduced to a specific formula called omax3 ultra-pure, used by pro
potency, purity, and the missing-link ratio between epa and dha that researchers affiliated with yale university have discovered, which is the key to unlocking all of the health benefits of omega-3 fish oil. you'll also be introduced to a specific formula called omax3 ultra-pure, used by pro
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN
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he went to yale university and colombia law school. he first won elected office in 1981 as mayor of his hometown. he was later a state senator and served three terms as the 53rd governor of new york. pataki has been a longtime advocate of tax reform, welfare reform, and the protection of open space through the brownfield program, which he founded. as governor, he led new york through the september 11 attacks and their aftermath. he is married with four children and one grandson, and lives in garrison, new york. governor george pataki, great to see you. gov. pataki: good being with you. josh: you have dabbled with this idea a couple of different times. you have looked at the presidency, never taken the formal steps. a lot of people might question your sincerity. why is it different? gov. pataki: first of all, the world is a more dangerous place. second i think the change for washington is the largest i have seen in my lifetime. as you mention, i was governor of new york 12 years and did follow washington closely. now, i see washington e
he went to yale university and colombia law school. he first won elected office in 1981 as mayor of his hometown. he was later a state senator and served three terms as the 53rd governor of new york. pataki has been a longtime advocate of tax reform, welfare reform, and the protection of open space through the brownfield program, which he founded. as governor, he led new york through the september 11 attacks and their aftermath. he is married with four children and one grandson, and lives in...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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he is giving to yale university. opec reduced its global demand outlook for oil, we will take a look and bring you all the numbers for the commodities close. kerry,et back to john the u.s. secretary of state speaking in sochi with his russian counterpart. towe rarely have the chance be able to speak for as long as we did today, as uninterrupted as it was today, and obviously, there are a number of critical issues president obama wanted me to be able to share with president putin and the foreign minister. know, we have, just in the last days, celebrated the 70th anniversary of the day the united states, defeatednd our allies the scourge of nazi-ism. earlier today, i had the privilege of attending with the for thousand of the millions of courageous soviets who died in world war ii are buried. and ia beautiful memorial was moved by the young children they're taking part in the ceremony. surrogate and i both came away from this ceremony with a very powerful reminder of the sacrifices we shared to bring about a safer worl
he is giving to yale university. opec reduced its global demand outlook for oil, we will take a look and bring you all the numbers for the commodities close. kerry,et back to john the u.s. secretary of state speaking in sochi with his russian counterpart. towe rarely have the chance be able to speak for as long as we did today, as uninterrupted as it was today, and obviously, there are a number of critical issues president obama wanted me to be able to share with president putin and the foreign...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> it will hundred $50 million gift to yale university and how does the multibillionaire decide whotune. olivia: access to banks to keep growing, but must banks say they don't want to get burned. olivia: good morning and welcome back to "bloomberg market day." i am olivia sterns. pimm: i am pimm fox. the big story is in bonds. they erased most of their selloff but you can see they have a 30 year yield of 3.02%.
. >> it will hundred $50 million gift to yale university and how does the multibillionaire decide whotune. olivia: access to banks to keep growing, but must banks say they don't want to get burned. olivia: good morning and welcome back to "bloomberg market day." i am olivia sterns. pimm: i am pimm fox. the big story is in bonds. they erased most of their selloff but you can see they have a 30 year yield of 3.02%.
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May 23, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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the professor of law and political science at yale university takes a look at the way geography impacts the way the american constitution is interpreted and the way state constitutions have been shaped. [inaudible conversations] [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the national constitution center. i am jeffrey rosen the president of this wonderful institution which, as one or two of you may be aware is the only institution in america chartered by congress to disseminate information about the u.s. constitution on a nonpartisan basis. beautiful. you can all sing along to our glorious mission statement and we've now encapsulated this as well which is to say this is the only place in america in these polarized times where people of different perspectives can come together to learn about celebrate and debate the greatest vision of human freedom ever invented, the u.s. constitution. how's that? great. [applause] well as you know, those of you who have been here before know, there are many evenings of great excitement here in constitutional heaven. but you're in for a real treat and
the professor of law and political science at yale university takes a look at the way geography impacts the way the american constitution is interpreted and the way state constitutions have been shaped. [inaudible conversations] [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the national constitution center. i am jeffrey rosen the president of this wonderful institution which, as one or two of you may be aware is the only institution in america chartered by congress to disseminate...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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. >> it will hundred $50 million gift to yale university and how does the multibillionaire decide who gets the fortune. olivia: access to banks to keep growing, but must banks say they don't want to get burned. olivia: good morning and welcome back to "bloomberg market day." i am olivia sterns. pimm: i am pimm fox. the big story is in bonds. they erased most of their selloff but you can see they have a 30 year yield of 3.02%. more than two and a quarter percent -- more than 2.2 5%. the losses over the past hour that have been recouped in this follows the biggest drop in 30 year bonds since 2013. also, in europe, the u.k. guild spanish tenure bonds, there you go. take a look. yielde seeing the market move higher and prices go lower. people still selling bonds. olivia: interesting to see yields peek up on the perfume. -- on the personal. -- on the peripherals. you can see there is a risk off mood around the globe. s&p 500 index benchmark index off by one 4/10 of 1%. the dow jones off by 50 points and the nasdaq down by about 24 points. we are off session lows. let's get a look at the to
. >> it will hundred $50 million gift to yale university and how does the multibillionaire decide who gets the fortune. olivia: access to banks to keep growing, but must banks say they don't want to get burned. olivia: good morning and welcome back to "bloomberg market day." i am olivia sterns. pimm: i am pimm fox. the big story is in bonds. they erased most of their selloff but you can see they have a 30 year yield of 3.02%. more than two and a quarter percent -- more than 2.2...
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May 9, 2015
05/15
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CNNW
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miles away, another bomb arrived at the office of david gelernter a computer science professor at yale universityt heard a very loud explosion and then we heard a man screaming. >> gelernter survived. but was seriously injured. >> why would anyone want to blow up a professor who specializes in the languages used to program computers? >> the unabomber was back in action, and investigators were no closer to finding him than they'd been when he started 15 years earlier. >> the unabomber, he was obsessed with ensuring that he threw us off the trail forensically. so he would do a number of things. the return addresses on the unabomb devices were real names of real people at real addresses of, say, their home or place of business. others were a location that actually existed, but actually a phony address. there was no such business at that particular address. and still others were meant to mock the fbi. for example, on one of the letters the unabomber sent, the address was 9th and pennsylvania avenue northwest in washington, d.c. which, of course, is the address of the j. edgar hoover fbi building. in
miles away, another bomb arrived at the office of david gelernter a computer science professor at yale universityt heard a very loud explosion and then we heard a man screaming. >> gelernter survived. but was seriously injured. >> why would anyone want to blow up a professor who specializes in the languages used to program computers? >> the unabomber was back in action, and investigators were no closer to finding him than they'd been when he started 15 years earlier. >>...
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May 26, 2015
05/15
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MSNBCW
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you now teach leadership at yale university. what could you teach the iraqi army about leadership and trying to instill the will to fight. they outnumbered isis seven to one. >> yeah andrea. apparently they d. clearly it wasn't a question of who had the most ammunitions, best weapons. clearly they're hurting there. i don't think it's necessarily the iraqi soldier in the trench or fox hole. i think it goes up to the top part of the nation. they have not been able to build a sense of confidence in people around the country in them as a government or them as a larger team. i think that really gets to it. if they are going to mount a credible effective resistance to something as resilient and frightening as isis they are going to bring themselves together into a team. that means shia sunni and kurds as well. it's easy for me to say. that that's very hard to do. we're going to have to be part of that team in some form or fashion. >> one of the people taking credit criticizing iraq and u.s. are now moving in. first of all, does iran n
you now teach leadership at yale university. what could you teach the iraqi army about leadership and trying to instill the will to fight. they outnumbered isis seven to one. >> yeah andrea. apparently they d. clearly it wasn't a question of who had the most ammunitions, best weapons. clearly they're hurting there. i don't think it's necessarily the iraqi soldier in the trench or fox hole. i think it goes up to the top part of the nation. they have not been able to build a sense of...
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May 7, 2015
05/15
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FOXNEWSW
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>> from that day on, arsoncarson says he was a changed man, went on to earn a scholarship at yale universityndy. together they raised three sons. after yale it was on to medical school and eventually a residency at one of the best hospitals in the world, johns hopkins. it was there carson made medical history. at age 33 becoming the youngest physician ever to head a major division at hopkins. in 1987 he and a team of doctors became the first to successfully separate twins joined at the back of the head. the story was later told in a film about his life starring cuba gooding jr. >> peter? >> ultrasound. >> doctor? >> which child would you like to see first? >> thank you. thank you. >> in addition to the countless lives he has saved, carson and his wife have changed the lives of thousands through their carson scholars fund a scholarship program that awards students who excel academically and who give back. in 2001 the library of congress named him a living legend. in 2004 president bush appointed him to the president's council on bioethics. two years later, the naacp paid tribute to him with i
>> from that day on, arsoncarson says he was a changed man, went on to earn a scholarship at yale universityndy. together they raised three sons. after yale it was on to medical school and eventually a residency at one of the best hospitals in the world, johns hopkins. it was there carson made medical history. at age 33 becoming the youngest physician ever to head a major division at hopkins. in 1987 he and a team of doctors became the first to successfully separate twins joined at the...
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May 24, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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conversations] is a >> tree into his next on booktv is a professor of law and political science at yale university takes a look at the way geography impact in the way state constitutions have been shaped. [inaudible conversations] [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen welcome to the national constitution center. i am president of this wonderful institution which has one or two of you may be aware is the only institution in america charter by corporis to disseminate information about the u.s. constitution on a nonpartisan basis. beautiful. you can all sing along to our glorious mission statement and we've now encapsulated this to say that this is the only place in america in these polarized times are people of different perspectives can come together to learn about celebrate and debate the greatest vision of human freedom up or invest it, the u.s. constitution. [applause] as you know those of you who have been here before, if they are an incredibly great excitement in constitutional heaven that you are in for a wheelchair he and im as well. i have a huge honor and pleasure of welcoming back to the sta
conversations] is a >> tree into his next on booktv is a professor of law and political science at yale university takes a look at the way geography impact in the way state constitutions have been shaped. [inaudible conversations] [applause] >> ladies and gentlemen welcome to the national constitution center. i am president of this wonderful institution which has one or two of you may be aware is the only institution in america charter by corporis to disseminate information about...
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May 6, 2015
05/15
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KQED
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sublime" a finalist for the pulitzer prize, and she's a professor of african american studies at yale universitywas in new haven that she met ficre, an immigrant from eritrea who fled war. one of the things that gives the story such resonance is such an american story, a black woman, a decentdant from slave families, immigrant man escaping war starting his life anew. >> well i'm so happy that you see it that way because i wasn't aware of it in the writing, but it is absolutely true the americanness of it, the americanness of, you know, immigrants at what stage in the american story and also many american marriages are mixed in some way that you wouldn't expect, you know, not just straightforward religious mixing or black person and white person coming together but mixing cultures with some kind of baseline of understanding that draws you to the person who is your partner. >> brown: in addition the his family ficre had two great passions. there was cooking, he was a chef and had a restaurant in new haven. >> this is an early water color. >> brown: and then there was his painting. >> and this pain
sublime" a finalist for the pulitzer prize, and she's a professor of african american studies at yale universitywas in new haven that she met ficre, an immigrant from eritrea who fled war. one of the things that gives the story such resonance is such an american story, a black woman, a decentdant from slave families, immigrant man escaping war starting his life anew. >> well i'm so happy that you see it that way because i wasn't aware of it in the writing, but it is absolutely true...
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105
May 21, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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i looked at the yield university radio website -- yale university radio website. nothing but podcast, where will they be in five years? >> nobody understood they were, it was a bad term, you had to be a geek to be able to connect your ipod and manage files. that changed with the smartphone, but the truth is it is a great way to listen to information. it is making that shift. tom: can it be a revenue producer? >> it is, people who listen our high engaged. brendan: i want to talk about the podcast from this american life. npr distributes it. i spoke to spot a fight and they said serial -- podcasts have been on the list, but farther down, serial changed how they thought about it how has the success of the podcast change your world? >> there was an amazing show that had intrigued and chapter rise cliffhangers and now has 7 million downloads per episode, an audience had never of it now streaming it. brendan: where do you see the money, brian? brian: there is a chance for advertising. audio is not as sexy as video to the point spotify is trying to have more video. brend
i looked at the yield university radio website -- yale university radio website. nothing but podcast, where will they be in five years? >> nobody understood they were, it was a bad term, you had to be a geek to be able to connect your ipod and manage files. that changed with the smartphone, but the truth is it is a great way to listen to information. it is making that shift. tom: can it be a revenue producer? >> it is, people who listen our high engaged. brendan: i want to talk...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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[applause] david teaches at yale university and is a member of the american academy of arts and sciences. responding to david tonight is mike sub vibe nationally syndicated columnist who appears twice weekly in the "washington post" and author of heroic conservatism as well is co-author with pete wainer of city of man. in addition he served as a senior adviser of a bipartisan organization dedicated to the fight to end extreme poverty and preventable diseases as well as a pastor to fellow at the denny hastert center for economics and government policy at wheaton pretty. as they service a senior fellow at the council on foreign relations and a senior editor at the "u.s. news and world report" as well as a top aide for president george w. bush for policy and strategic planning and the chief speechwriter. at the conclusion of david's remarks mike will provide a response and then we will go to audience questions. david, welcome. [applause] >> thank you. about 10 years ago i was driving home from work from the news hour and it was the summer afternoon or evening about 7:00. i pulled over to my
[applause] david teaches at yale university and is a member of the american academy of arts and sciences. responding to david tonight is mike sub vibe nationally syndicated columnist who appears twice weekly in the "washington post" and author of heroic conservatism as well is co-author with pete wainer of city of man. in addition he served as a senior adviser of a bipartisan organization dedicated to the fight to end extreme poverty and preventable diseases as well as a pastor to...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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david teaches at yale university and is a member have american academy of arts and sciences. responding to david tonight is mike a nationally cindy indicate columnist who appears twice weekly in the "washington post" and the author of "hero conservatism. and a fellow at the -- he previously served as a senior fellow at the council on foreign relations and is a senior editor at u.s. news and world report, as well as a top aide to president george w. bush, both for policy and strategic planning and a speech writer. david, welcome. [applause] >> thank you. about ten years ago i was driving home from work and it was a summer afternoon or evening, about 7:00, summer evening, and i pulled into my house in bethesda. we had a driveway that went around the side. and i pull in and i could see the backyard, and my kids, who are then 12, nine, and five, had gotten ahold of a ball, one of those cheap round balls and they were kicking it up in the air, and they were chasing it across the yard. and they were laughing and giggling and the ball was arcing through the air and the sun was comin
david teaches at yale university and is a member have american academy of arts and sciences. responding to david tonight is mike a nationally cindy indicate columnist who appears twice weekly in the "washington post" and the author of "hero conservatism. and a fellow at the -- he previously served as a senior fellow at the council on foreign relations and is a senior editor at u.s. news and world report, as well as a top aide to president george w. bush, both for policy and...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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he announced he is giving 150 million dollars to his alma mater, yale university, to establish culturalh and renovate the historic building there. it is one of the largest gifts of its kind ever. philanthropy is something you have made your name and. let's start with the l. why the gift to yell? -- with yale. why the gift to yale? stephen: i knew literally no one at yale. literally no one. they had 4000 graduates, plus faculty and administration. i had never been in a large place where i knew no one. erik: you feel indebted to the experience you had there? stepehen: more than indebted, i learned all kinds of things in terms of giving back. stephanie: how did you learn that it yell -- yale? stephen: it has a tradition. i was not aware that was an obligation for people who had done well so i internalized that and it teach to me how to think. stephanie: when you were in high school, was it your gene to go to yell -- yale? stephen: it was harvard, but i did not get in. i actually dialed the dean of admissions at harvard and got him on the phone. it was like dialing god. and suggested maybe
he announced he is giving 150 million dollars to his alma mater, yale university, to establish culturalh and renovate the historic building there. it is one of the largest gifts of its kind ever. philanthropy is something you have made your name and. let's start with the l. why the gift to yell? -- with yale. why the gift to yale? stephen: i knew literally no one at yale. literally no one. they had 4000 graduates, plus faculty and administration. i had never been in a large place where i knew...
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May 28, 2015
05/15
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ahead of the g-7 meeting in dresden, hans nichols sat down with yell university -- yale university professorwinner robert shiller. >> my new book is called "irrational exuberance." it is taken from a phrase that alan greenspan used to define the craziness of markets. i think it is very relevant now to finance ministers because we seem to have a bubble in the bond market. on prices are very high, i.e. interest rates are very low. not just short rates, but long rates, going out 30 years. near record lows. that represents a dramatic mispricing. it will eventually be corrected. we have to worry about how the transition will proceed. hans: when we look at the debate we will likely have in dresden, demand-side resolutions to some of europe's problems, what is your solution? >> i don't know if i have a solution. these problems are deep and fundamental. i think they are substantially psychological. there is not a quick fix. for me, financial markets are a cornerstone of modern civilization. they make things happen. it is called financing. just about anything important has to be financed. they do hav
ahead of the g-7 meeting in dresden, hans nichols sat down with yell university -- yale university professorwinner robert shiller. >> my new book is called "irrational exuberance." it is taken from a phrase that alan greenspan used to define the craziness of markets. i think it is very relevant now to finance ministers because we seem to have a bubble in the bond market. on prices are very high, i.e. interest rates are very low. not just short rates, but long rates, going out 30...
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May 24, 2015
05/15
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he's taught at union theological seminary yale, harvard and the university of paris appears often on the bill maher show, "the colbert report" and cnn was featured in the film "the matrix," and, i guess n his spare time produced a spoken word album that in france won best jazz album of the year. [laughter] george is the author of books such as "in defense of natural law" and "conscience and its enemies." he's the vice chairman of the united states commission on international religious freedom has served on president's council on bioethics, has received honors such as presidential citizens' medal and has given honorific lectures at harvard, yale the university of st. andrews and cornell university. his students report that sometimes he will miss class but his absence is excused because more own than not it's to travel to the vatican to chat with the pope. [laughter] given their huge success, both in the academy and as public intellectuals these two thinkers could very well consign themselves to their own intellectual and political enclaves. they could live easy lives as pundits, havin
he's taught at union theological seminary yale, harvard and the university of paris appears often on the bill maher show, "the colbert report" and cnn was featured in the film "the matrix," and, i guess n his spare time produced a spoken word album that in france won best jazz album of the year. [laughter] george is the author of books such as "in defense of natural law" and "conscience and its enemies." he's the vice chairman of the united states...
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May 25, 2015
05/15
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distinguished fellow and grand strategy and senior lecturer in global affairs at the jackson institute of yale university. prior to joining yale, ambassador negroponte developed a distinguished career, followed by a number of years in the private sector. he held government positions a broad and in washington between 1960 and 1998. he has been ambassador to mexico philippines, and i rocked, among others. he served in vietnam under the nixon and administration, and also as deputy security advisor under reagan. he also held a cabinet level position as the first director of national intelligence, under george w. bush. carolyn eisenberg is a professor of u.s. history and foreign policy at hofstra author of a prize-winning book on the american occupation of germany. she has written and spoken widely on the u.s. operations in iraq. in 2004, she served on a task force for a bipartisan coalition for a realistic foreign policy. her articles have appeared in "the journal of american history," "radical history review." she is presently completing a book called "never lose and the illusion of national policy." stephe
distinguished fellow and grand strategy and senior lecturer in global affairs at the jackson institute of yale university. prior to joining yale, ambassador negroponte developed a distinguished career, followed by a number of years in the private sector. he held government positions a broad and in washington between 1960 and 1998. he has been ambassador to mexico philippines, and i rocked, among others. he served in vietnam under the nixon and administration, and also as deputy security advisor...
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May 27, 2015
05/15
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negroponte is a distinguished fellow in grand strategy and lecturer at the jackson institute of yale university joining yield ambassador negroponte had in a distinguished career followed by many years in the private sector. he held government positions abroad and in washington between 1960 and again from 2001 until 2008. he has been u.s. ambassador to honduras, mexico, the philippines, the united nations and the rack. he served twice on the national security council staff first as director for vietnam in the nixon administration and then as mpg national security adviser under president reagan. he also held a cabinet position as the first director of national intelligence under president george w. bush. carolyn eisenberg is a professor at hofstra, author of a prize-winning book on the american occupation of germany. she has written and spoken widely and has served as a consultant to several members of congress, and in 2004 chaired a task force on the u.s. occupation of iraq for a bipartisan coalition for a realistic foreign policy. her articles have appeared in the journal of american history hi
negroponte is a distinguished fellow in grand strategy and lecturer at the jackson institute of yale university joining yield ambassador negroponte had in a distinguished career followed by many years in the private sector. he held government positions abroad and in washington between 1960 and again from 2001 until 2008. he has been u.s. ambassador to honduras, mexico, the philippines, the united nations and the rack. he served twice on the national security council staff first as director for...
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May 5, 2015
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. >> the person who went to yale and university of michigan for medical school because of affirmative action and social problems and didn't end up like many of the black men that we see in prison today in baltimore. >> carson has said before he believes affirmative action did help him get into yale but not into medical school or his residency that followed. kimberly? >> i'm so offended by this and by her stupidity and i think her statement was racist. i don't think she should have said that. what difference does it make if he had affirmative action or not? he's the one who studied and figured out a solution to a very complex medical problem and was able to separate conjoined ladies. really lady what have you done besides run your mouth? >> i think you're right. i think that she plays into the assumption somehow that black people aren't as smart. >> terrible. >> he's obviously a very smart, very talented man. >> as a minority woman who would be entitled to affirmative action i'm offended. >> eric? >> the gop now has a black surgeon running for president, a female ceo running for presid
. >> the person who went to yale and university of michigan for medical school because of affirmative action and social problems and didn't end up like many of the black men that we see in prison today in baltimore. >> carson has said before he believes affirmative action did help him get into yale but not into medical school or his residency that followed. kimberly? >> i'm so offended by this and by her stupidity and i think her statement was racist. i don't think she should...
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May 30, 2015
05/15
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there are two major collections, one at the sterling library at yale university and the other major collection at the college of william and mary. and we can learn pretty much everything about her life from the time that she marries john tyler in 1844 until just about the time that she dies in 1889. i mean these are very rich source that cover every aspect of her life and her children's lives. susan: now we've been spending in the past 45 minutes or so trying to paint a portrait of her. what would you like to add to that from your work with her papers? christopher: well, you know, i think that history tends to remember julia for the frivolity and for the fact that she was a very young first lady for eight months but i think that actually obscures her true character, i mean remember she lived 27 years after her husband died so she had another life -- literally another life after her husband passed away in 1862 and her papers reveal her to be a very strong woman, a practical woman, a very serious, self-possessed self-assured, adaptable and very devoted to her family. she could be quite tenacious
there are two major collections, one at the sterling library at yale university and the other major collection at the college of william and mary. and we can learn pretty much everything about her life from the time that she marries john tyler in 1844 until just about the time that she dies in 1889. i mean these are very rich source that cover every aspect of her life and her children's lives. susan: now we've been spending in the past 45 minutes or so trying to paint a portrait of her. what...
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May 29, 2015
05/15
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that he compiled has recently been acquired by yale university.ne of the best image collections of lincoln in the country. host: we have been live in springfield for several hours on american history tv. if you missed any of it, and want to view it, 10:00 p.m. eastern time, everything we have shown today will re-air on c-span 3 on the weekend. lisa from california, hi, lisa. caller: hello. host: go ahead, ma'am. caller: i wanted to know was it lincoln's -- what was lincoln's favorite food? host: what made you curious about that? calllerer: i don't know. they were talking about everything else. but what did he like to eat? host: let's see if michael burlingame knows the answer to that question. prof. burlingame: friend of mine,, his favorite food was chicken fricassee and mashed potatoes and strober shortcake. i've a friend who has written a book on what lincoln liked to eat. he of the sizes that is lincoln 's -- emphasizes that as lincoln 's favorite meal. he is famously not a foodie. his assistant presidential secretary said he was a man who was
that he compiled has recently been acquired by yale university.ne of the best image collections of lincoln in the country. host: we have been live in springfield for several hours on american history tv. if you missed any of it, and want to view it, 10:00 p.m. eastern time, everything we have shown today will re-air on c-span 3 on the weekend. lisa from california, hi, lisa. caller: hello. host: go ahead, ma'am. caller: i wanted to know was it lincoln's -- what was lincoln's favorite food?...
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May 3, 2015
05/15
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that he compiled has recently been acquired by yale university.ne of the best image collections of lincoln in the country. host: we have been live in springfield for several hours on american history tv. if you missed any of it, and want to view it, 10:00 p.m. eastern time, everything we have shown today will re-air on c-span 3 on the weekend. lisa from california, hi, lisa. caller: hello. host: go ahead, ma'am. caller: i wanted to know was it lincoln's -- what was lincoln's favorite food? host: what made you curious about that? calllerer: i don't know. they were talking about everything else. but what did he like to eat? host: let's see if michael burlingame knows the answer to that question. prof. burlingame: friend of mine,, his favorite food was chicken fricassee and mashed potatoes and strober shortcake. i've a friend who has written a book on what lincoln liked to eat. he of the sizes that is lincoln 's -- emphasizes that as lincoln 's favorite meal. he is famously not a foodie. his assistant presidential secretary said he was a man who was
that he compiled has recently been acquired by yale university.ne of the best image collections of lincoln in the country. host: we have been live in springfield for several hours on american history tv. if you missed any of it, and want to view it, 10:00 p.m. eastern time, everything we have shown today will re-air on c-span 3 on the weekend. lisa from california, hi, lisa. caller: hello. host: go ahead, ma'am. caller: i wanted to know was it lincoln's -- what was lincoln's favorite food?...
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May 4, 2015
05/15
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he graduated from yale and the university of michigan medical school.ector of pediatric neurosurgegy at johns -- neurosurgery at johns hopkins. he was encouraged to run precisely pause he's not a politician -- because he's not a politician. also this morning, carly fiorina announced her bid. she becomes the first female candidate to seek the nomination for 2016. she's never held public office. in 2010, she ran for the u.s. senate in california, losing to barbara boxer. she said her business background would make her an effective president. >> i think i'm the best person for the job because i understand how the economy works. i understand the world, who is it in. i understand bureaucracies. and that's what our country has become. >> tomorrower mike huck you can -- huckabee is scheduled to announce his bid. he won the caucuses in 2008. but he dropped out because he could not raise enough money to compete with john mccain. the. >>> european union approved $222 million in aid to help -- $22 million in aid to help the nepalese government. nepal is among the
he graduated from yale and the university of michigan medical school.ector of pediatric neurosurgegy at johns -- neurosurgery at johns hopkins. he was encouraged to run precisely pause he's not a politician -- because he's not a politician. also this morning, carly fiorina announced her bid. she becomes the first female candidate to seek the nomination for 2016. she's never held public office. in 2010, she ran for the u.s. senate in california, losing to barbara boxer. she said her business...