Its all right here on medical discoveries. Welcome to medical discoveries. Im thrilled to be here today with dr. Joseph maroon. Dr. Maroon, welcome. Thank you very much, dr. Jampolis. Im excited to be here. Now, as a practicing neurosurgeon, why do you believe so strongly in omax3 that youre willing to put your reputation behind it . Several years ago, i had a major midlife crisis. My father, a relatively young man, died suddenly of a heart attack. A marriage came apart, and i ended up, because of the stress, leaving neurosurgery, quitting my job. Wow. Thats big. It was big, and it really caused me to go into a pretty steep and deep depression that lasted for quite a few months. I strongly believe that physical activity is the best antidepressant. But what happened is i continued to run, run, run, and i was like forrest gump running through wheeling, west virginia, until my knees and my ankles and my joints really started to hurt. I started taking nonsteroidal antiinflammatories. Of co
To be part of such an organization. A zero tolerance policy will help everybody up at the school and help all them coexist in there. Reporter the d. A. Says that both the white and black student will face a probationlike program in juvenile court. Live in easton, randy gyllenhaal, nbc 10 news. Turning to the weather and our soggy stretch is rolling on. We were out on kirkwood highway in newark today as that rain fell. To pennsylvania and a live look in the poconos. Skiers are hitting the slopes at camelback mountain. If the temperatures had been colder, todays rain could have been ice and a lot of snow. Theyve been enjoying fresh powder out there. In new jersey a dreary day at the shore. A live look in cape may tonight where the drizzle continues to fall. Weve already seen the heaviest of the rain today. We will dry it later tonight. Kind of gray behind us. Glenn hurricane schwartz with a first look at the forecast. Yeah, its going to be slow process of drying out tonight. Were cloudy
People could harvest their own salt and there was a kind of doityourself to it, but its like purple and yellow and [inaudible] my friend that wears a kind of clerical somebody made her a hat anhalf and it was all some f like catwoman. [applause] [inaudible] thank you so much for coming out. [applause] [inaudible conversations] senator Sheldon Whitehouse offers his thoughts on how the government is impacted by corporate money into special Interest Groups in his book captured the corporate infiltration of american democracy. He is interviewehes interviewew york times investigative reporter, eric lilpton. Host i want to start by asking why did you write this book, simple question. Guest the simple answer is i was really getting discouraged all the criticism and antagonism, suspicion and frustration about the federal government which generations of americans have fought and bled to protect and preserve when the real problem i think is not the government, but its infiltration by corporate f
When the real problem i think is not the government but its infiltration by corporate forces. If we could get those corporate forces where the Founding Fathers thought they should be, which is out of elections and out of politics, everybodys frustration with government would decline a lot. Host to go way back to your beginnings, and a c you went to yale. Your dad went to yale. Her dad was informed service, laos and thailand. Tell me about your upbringing and your worldview and how you think to the process of living through the experiences that you lived through, you sort of developed your worldview of it. Guest growing up in the foreign service, i saw two things. One, we were always in pretty dangerous and impoverished places. So i saw around me everywhere American Families who had chosen to go where, if the kid was seriously hurt, there was not a good hospital or there were not medicines where you couldnt go to the movies where the water wasnt safe to drink, what if somebody got bit b
Its all right here on medical discoveries. Welcome to medical discoveries. Im thrilled to be here today with dr. Joseph maroon. Dr. Maroon, welcome. Thank you very much, dr. Jampolis. Im excited to be here. Now, as a practicing neurosurgeon, why do you believe so strongly in omax3 that youre willing to put your reputation behind it . Several years ago, i had a major midlife crisis. My father, a relatively young man, died suddenly of a heart attack. A marriage came apart, and i ended up, because of the stress, leaving neurosurgery, quitting my job. Wow. Thats big. It was big, and it really caused me to go into a pretty steep and deep depression that lasted for quite a few months. I strongly believe that physical activity is the best antidepressant. But what happened is i continued to run, run, run, and i was like forrest gump running through wheeling, west virginia, until my knees and my ankles and my joints really started to hurt. I started taking nonsteroidal antiinflammatories. Of co