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Jul 22, 2014
07/14
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KGO
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two years ago, dave hoover lost his nephew, a.j. boik, at this aurora movie theater. a.j. was one of the 12 people killed that night. hoover has been in law enforcement for three decades. he worries that when shots ring out, more guns equals more confusion for police. >> i don't know which one is the bad guy. which one is the good guy. i know i'm going to engage the one that's closest to me. and i hope to god that's the bad guy. but you never know. >> reporter: lauren says all of her employees have to take classes and know how to handle their weapons. even the local police chief says in rifle, things are different. >> i understand why people from the outside may see this as odd. but for here, it's normal. they really stress the classes. no alcohol is served. so this business model they have really fits in with the community. >> reporter: and the burgers are good. >> the burgers are great. >> reporter: lauren and her shooters' grill plan to keep on serving seconds right along with the second amendment. i'm clayton sandell, for "nightline" in rifle, colorado. >> do you know
two years ago, dave hoover lost his nephew, a.j. boik, at this aurora movie theater. a.j. was one of the 12 people killed that night. hoover has been in law enforcement for three decades. he worries that when shots ring out, more guns equals more confusion for police. >> i don't know which one is the bad guy. which one is the good guy. i know i'm going to engage the one that's closest to me. and i hope to god that's the bad guy. but you never know. >> reporter: lauren says all of...
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Jul 9, 2014
07/14
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WHYY
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reporter: the job of actually putting these ideas into practice in the classroom falls to educators a.j. webster and tedd wakeman. both have taught in more traditional schools, but they were drawn to the playmaker approach because they grew disillusioned with how students were forced to learn. >> when we talk about the area of the trapezoid or when king tut died or the third stage of the frog cycle, might these be important to a small sliver of the population? sure. but data in the 21st century, i can look on my phone and in 20 seconds get the answer to pretty much anything i want. so shouldn't we be teaching broader skill sets? shouldn't we be encouraging curiosity and creative thinking? >> reporter: creative thinking becomes apparent when the sixth graders are tasked with designing, coding and promoting their own video games. they essentially form mini- companies that are judged by market forces, mainly seventh and eighth graders at new roads, who provide feedback as to why they like the games. >> this is a good game. >> reporter: or constructive criticism about what's wrong and needs
reporter: the job of actually putting these ideas into practice in the classroom falls to educators a.j. webster and tedd wakeman. both have taught in more traditional schools, but they were drawn to the playmaker approach because they grew disillusioned with how students were forced to learn. >> when we talk about the area of the trapezoid or when king tut died or the third stage of the frog cycle, might these be important to a small sliver of the population? sure. but data in the 21st...
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Jul 20, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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. >> so, a.j., basically one day jim gets an e-mail in the middle of the night, and aj's agreeds were skittish, and aj wanted to brag to jim he has an a-minus. but my point is that jim ignited the right side of aj's bridge, the aspiration, hope, opportunity, the sense of, i believe in you. it was aj's confidence that turned around. derrick's confidence that turned around, and once they had a vision for themselves they tried to figure out what die do with that? when i was growing up, i didn't notice all the drama around me. i was on fire with this idea of becoming an up a trend knew. i didn't know what it was. didn't know about banker financing, and i think that if we can get every kid to ignite that right side of their brain, the hope side, the aspiration side, the excitement side -- >> i don't -- i'm going to ask the question again. that do you think the aspiration is? >> to succeed economically. either want a good job or a shot at economic opportunity. you want to crush the dropout rate, give kids a course in entrepreneurship, everybody tells them what they're bad at. we want to hel
. >> so, a.j., basically one day jim gets an e-mail in the middle of the night, and aj's agreeds were skittish, and aj wanted to brag to jim he has an a-minus. but my point is that jim ignited the right side of aj's bridge, the aspiration, hope, opportunity, the sense of, i believe in you. it was aj's confidence that turned around. derrick's confidence that turned around, and once they had a vision for themselves they tried to figure out what die do with that? when i was growing up, i...
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Jul 5, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN3
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his name was a.j. downing. it's very easy to know his name because he was named for andrew jackson. he grows up in the hudson river valley. his father is a gardener. his father is a great -- is a gardener to the great estates. he sees the hudson river valley industrializing. he sees this beautiful valley being polluted. he begins to ask himself, what is the relationship of the built environment to the natural environment? what do we talk about today? green this, green that. this is what he is talking about. he is basically america's first ecologist. the way he made a living? he practiced what we call today landscape architecture, but back then there was no name for it. he had all different names for it. when we think of landscape our tax the less architects, we think of flowerbeds for the wealthy. he was a city planner, a metropolitan planner. he was all about landscaping the whole environment. a brilliant man, and this is the fellow who understood that the bigger the cities got -- and they were getting bigger and bigger -- they were like a whale. the trouble is, city dwellers today
his name was a.j. downing. it's very easy to know his name because he was named for andrew jackson. he grows up in the hudson river valley. his father is a gardener. his father is a great -- is a gardener to the great estates. he sees the hudson river valley industrializing. he sees this beautiful valley being polluted. he begins to ask himself, what is the relationship of the built environment to the natural environment? what do we talk about today? green this, green that. this is what he is...
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Jul 31, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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a.j. and i will continue with our agenda. what are you looking at? >> it is really what we just talked about with ethan, that is, the pivot that seems to be happening. at citigroup, stephen englander, the foreign-exchange strategist, said no change in form policy from the fed yet, but preparing for a shift by the dollar. it is up 2% is month alone. you look at the yield on the two-year treasury, that has gone to the highest now, 57 basis points higher in 30 -- 39 months. and stocks are higher. it makes me wonder whether there is a pivot. >> i think the pivot is that the markets are starting to believe in the economic recovery. that gdp number is very important in that respect. by revisions of the data and the it willecond quarter, he underscored -- it really underscored the fact that the first quarter was a fluke and we can look past it. maybe growth is here now. >> and it is not just qe driven gains. on my agenda, exxon mobil. he will overcome put ash the oil company will be report -- the oil company will be reporting earnings in just minutes. >> th
a.j. and i will continue with our agenda. what are you looking at? >> it is really what we just talked about with ethan, that is, the pivot that seems to be happening. at citigroup, stephen englander, the foreign-exchange strategist, said no change in form policy from the fed yet, but preparing for a shift by the dollar. it is up 2% is month alone. you look at the yield on the two-year treasury, that has gone to the highest now, 57 basis points higher in 30 -- 39 months. and stocks are...
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Jul 30, 2014
07/14
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BLOOMBERG
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this is "surveillance," tom, a.j. and i will be right back. >> this is "bloomberg surveillance" in new york city. coming up later this morning, betty lui and i will interview alan greenspan. i want to ask him about are we going to see interest rates go up quickly or will they be up in a measured manner? 9:00 a.m. this morning on bloomberg television and bloomberg radio, worldwide, greenspan as we can do it with some tough, tough questions. this is "bloomberg surveillance." good morning. i'm tom keene. lots to talk about. let's get to russia. sanctions only work when they effect the foundation of an economy. the european union and the united states coordinate sanctions and go after russia's very heart and soul, russia's energy future. ian bremer is the author of "every nation for itself." is russia now a nation isolated and for itself? >> for itself, yes, but that's not new. isolated, absolutely not. markets went up on this. i kind of see germany, britain and france a little bit like those three monkeys, you know, the
this is "surveillance," tom, a.j. and i will be right back. >> this is "bloomberg surveillance" in new york city. coming up later this morning, betty lui and i will interview alan greenspan. i want to ask him about are we going to see interest rates go up quickly or will they be up in a measured manner? 9:00 a.m. this morning on bloomberg television and bloomberg radio, worldwide, greenspan as we can do it with some tough, tough questions. this is "bloomberg...
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Jul 9, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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diligence whatsoever does no due diligence whatsoever were do well the country and i should note that a.j. just does no due diligence whatsoever to ensure that the people they are placing them with our here legally and so the net effect is when a child goes to a legal guardian or a parent it's very unlikely that they will then show up later for deportation hearings and so in effect you are telling big cartels and the human smugglers and others, keep doing what you are doing because it works. when these unaccompanied minors get here they will be able to stay. they will be taking care of and as senator mccain said that's the least humane thing we can do is to encourage parents and relatives in these countries to send their children or put them in the care of smugglers and others and if we wants to stem the tide here the way to stem the tide is to have parents and relatives in these countries saying these children come back to these countries like we do to children in mexico or canada who come across the border. so i think the gentleman from arizona for arranging this colloquy and we have go
diligence whatsoever does no due diligence whatsoever were do well the country and i should note that a.j. just does no due diligence whatsoever to ensure that the people they are placing them with our here legally and so the net effect is when a child goes to a legal guardian or a parent it's very unlikely that they will then show up later for deportation hearings and so in effect you are telling big cartels and the human smugglers and others, keep doing what you are doing because it works....
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Jul 30, 2014
07/14
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WTXF
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you know, a.j. burnett on trade block. he goes after, gets destroyed. now you have marilyn bird, who was benched last night, got night off. well, will they trade him? it depends. he doesn't -- see, they have a loft toxic contracts on the team that nobody wants. cole hamels doesn't have it. i don't think he goes, you can't trade him. do you have keep him and chasement can't get rid of everybody. >> if you trade coal it means it is over, we're reboot being. >> surely. >> real quickly, here is the the side from steven a smith. want your comment. >> i made what can only amount to the most aggregious error of my career following domestic dispute with rice's beyonce, beyond the scope of our discussion by allude g to a woman's role in such haneous matters, going sofas to use the word provoke in my die a to be. my words came across somehow a woman's fault, this was not my intent. >> i have listen to him for years, you know him so well over 20 years, he never talks like. >> this i think the word provoked was the problem. >> no doubt. one word. again, whether you
you know, a.j. burnett on trade block. he goes after, gets destroyed. now you have marilyn bird, who was benched last night, got night off. well, will they trade him? it depends. he doesn't -- see, they have a loft toxic contracts on the team that nobody wants. cole hamels doesn't have it. i don't think he goes, you can't trade him. do you have keep him and chasement can't get rid of everybody. >> if you trade coal it means it is over, we're reboot being. >> surely. >> real...
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23
Jul 25, 2014
07/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 23
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>> i would second yes, there are thousands all across the a.j., roughly 28,000 vacant positions. in some instances they are not all being actively recruited to fill we have been pushing particularly on clinical staff and direct support staff. >> one follow-up question there is, if you have 28000-x open slots and add 10,000 or so more open slots, are you ever going to even be able to fill those slots under current requirements the current productivity requirements you have, which i understand your testimony is different than the private sector. >> organizations will always have some measure of organic vacancy rates. turnover in staff, but what it allows us to do is raise the floor so that the fully incumbent position number rooms. i think that there will be staff that leave the organization. people leave to retire, move on to other jobs. our vacancy rate is about 10 percent which reflects the turnover rate. just turnovers occur you have a certain vacancy rate. the other thing we are looking at his precision management practices. herring to the requirement which may require in cert
>> i would second yes, there are thousands all across the a.j., roughly 28,000 vacant positions. in some instances they are not all being actively recruited to fill we have been pushing particularly on clinical staff and direct support staff. >> one follow-up question there is, if you have 28000-x open slots and add 10,000 or so more open slots, are you ever going to even be able to fill those slots under current requirements the current productivity requirements you have, which i...
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Jul 11, 2014
07/14
by
KGO
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eye 372
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. >> katherine webb, girlfriend of a.j. mccarron after commentators couldn't get enough of her beautiful face. >> look who's real happy about that. >> reporter: she landed in the 2013 "sports illustrated" swimstatute edition and perhaps the most famous face launched from the stands. pamela anderson was discovered in 1989 after being caught on the jumbotron at the british/colombia baseball game signing with labat beer. a life can change in an instant. >> all right. guys, so here in central park, what do you think? give me your best model faces. robin, what do you think? we got a few models here, what do you think? >> we're all ready for keith urban heading to the park real soon. come on back. >>> coming up "gma's summer concert series" presented by dreamwalk by dr. scholl's. naughty shoes. tame them with dreamwalk. ooh! it's time to tame the shoe with dreamwalk ultra-slim insoles... grrr... so you can wear the shoes you're in the mood for... ...without them changing your mood. dreamwalk by dr. scholl's. ♪ [ male announcer
. >> katherine webb, girlfriend of a.j. mccarron after commentators couldn't get enough of her beautiful face. >> look who's real happy about that. >> reporter: she landed in the 2013 "sports illustrated" swimstatute edition and perhaps the most famous face launched from the stands. pamela anderson was discovered in 1989 after being caught on the jumbotron at the british/colombia baseball game signing with labat beer. a life can change in an instant. >> all...