from federal regulators and the tech marketplace. washington is the government and therefore they can screw us up, and that s the simple starting point and historically the tech industry has largely ignored washington. woodruff: and we close with a profile of poet philip shultz and his new memoir on overcoming the challenges of dyslexia. that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to the heart of local communities, providing jobs, keeping people at work. they depend on us. the economy depends on them. and we depend on them. and by the alfred p. sloan foundation. supporting science, technology, and improved economic performance and financi
brown: gwen ifill talks with google s executive chairman, eric schmidt about growing pressure on the internet giant from federal regulators and the tech marketplace. washington is the government and therefore they can screw us up, and that s the simple starting point and historically the tech industry has largely ignored washington. woodruff: and we close with a profile of poet philip shultz and his new memoir on overcoming the challenges of dyslexia. that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to the heart of local communities, providing jobs, keeping people at work. they depend on us. the economy depends on them. and we depend on them
from federal regulators and the tech marketplace. washington is the government and therefore they can screw us up, and that s the simple starting point and historically the tech industry has largely ignored washington. woodruff: and we close with a profile of poet philip shultz and his new memoir on overcoming the challenges of dyslexia. that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth. like electricians, mechanics, carpenters. they strengthen our communities. every year, chevron spends billions with small businesses. that goes right to the heart of local communities, providing jobs, keeping people at work. they depend on us. the economy depends on them. and we depend on them. and by the alfred p. sloan foundation. supporting science, technology, and improved economic performance and financi
woodruff: from liberia, kira kay examines the struggle to provide mental health care in a country ravaged by years of civil war. despite the dangers a traumatized population presents in a still fragile country, liberia has only one psychiatrist and a single mental hospital with a total of 80 beds. brown: gwen ifill talks with google s executive chairman, eric schmidt about growing pressure on the internet giant from federal regulators and the tech marketplace. washington is the government and therefore they can screw us up, and that s the simple starting point and historically the tech industry has largely ignored washington. woodruff: and we close with a profile of poet philip shultz and his new memoir on overcoming the challenges of dyslexia. that s all ahead on tonight s newshour. major funding for the pbs newshour has been provided by: i mean, where would we be without small businesses? we need small businesses. they re the ones that help drive growth.