Every episode that has occurred that has caused commotion in the city has been ived a m ive admitted to my mistakes and said it would not happen p again and it has not happened again at the air canada centre. Of all things that we could start the show with. Good morning. Were in washington. It is thursday, november 14th. And with us onset, we have senior Political Editor sam stein. I cant stop laughing. Former treasury official and morning joe economic analyst Steve Rattner. White house correspondent for the Associated Press julia pace. And al hunt, met your producer last night at politico. Nice guy. We started the day in politics and proez prose, you had a sold out packed house. They not sam stein was going to be there. And there were a lot of republicans there. Youre drawing a republican crowd. This is politics and prose. Usually when i tell people, use my marxist joke, they all laugh. Last night, they stood up and applauded. So youre reaching out to a new Republican Party. It was am
And muscular dystrophy, and a noninvasive test for colon cancer. [ticking] Elissa Montanti is unlike almost anyone weve ever met. With the help of some very charitable american doctors, shes changed the lives of more than 100 kids like this one, a boy from iraq who needed an arm, a leg, and an eye. I love you, waad. Youll follow his transformation. Look at him. He looks beautiful. Which is a wonder to watch. [ticking] welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im morley safer. In this edition, we look at the Serious Business of philanthropy. Bill and Melinda Gates take us inside their foundation, we examine the unintended legacy of Howard Hughes, and meet a Staten Island woman helping children maimed by war. We begin with bill and Melinda Gates. With their plan to give away 60 billion, theyre the most generous philanthropists in the world. They want to make American Kids among the besteducated on earth. And while theyre doing that, they also intend to save millions of lives worldwide. The gates sh
Responsible for Cystic Fibrosis and muscular dystrophy, and a noninvasive test for colon cancer. [ticking] Elissa Montanti is unlike almost anyone weve ever met. With the help of some very charitable american doctors, shes changed the lives of more than 100 kids like this one, a boy from iraq who needed an arm, a leg, and an eye. I love you, waad. Youll follow his transformation. Look at him. He looks beautiful. Which is a wonder to watch. [ticking] welcome to 60 minutes on cnbc. Im morley safer. In this edition, we look at the Serious Business of philanthropy. Bill and Melinda Gates take us inside their foundation, we examine the unintended legacy of Howard Hughes, and meet a Staten Island woman helping children maimed by war. We begin with bill and Melinda Gates. With their plan to give away 60 billion, theyre the most generous philanthropists in the world. They want to make American Kids among the besteducated on earth. And while theyre doing that, they also intend to save millions
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