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Jul 19, 2024
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university of texas 90% of our students are in-state students. most of her student body diversity flex university of texas purdue benefit in that way. think about ideologicalal diversity many college students do not identify ideologically. but not as i think about that way. they're wildly politically active when you're 18. you're honest with you jim on friday night maybe not everyone in the room. we have diversity of students has beene exposed to parents ad community. from all different perspectives. 90% students are in-state you're attracting students who come from conservative background. the challenge is students tend to be attracted to the field where there is a little bit more flash. so i worry some of students tend to want to be porsche journalists are tend to want to do something for the space it's not necessarily going to change the political news that we see in this country. high-tech the spark of being someone excited about journalism are really excited about court journalism you might imagine your taxes a lot of students interested in
university of texas 90% of our students are in-state students. most of her student body diversity flex university of texas purdue benefit in that way. think about ideologicalal diversity many college students do not identify ideologically. but not as i think about that way. they're wildly politically active when you're 18. you're honest with you jim on friday night maybe not everyone in the room. we have diversity of students has beene exposed to parents ad community. from all different...
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Jul 19, 2024
07/24
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university of texas plays a role. glaciers from the perspective of the project i'm working on now, which is about public policy, journalism schools and universities are playing important roles, not just in the formation of public policy but implementing. in new york city there is a policy that got the city to put half of its advertising money towards -- it was created and launched in watchdog by the community graduate school of journalism. california decided they wanted to put $25 million in two local reporting, they went to journalism school to administer it. there's a comfort call with state legislators towards universities. it is a different now because i think people are realizing you cannot just train reporters, you have to make the jobs there. let me ask about a really practical thing we have not -- we have been reluctant to talk about, which is how low the salaries are for starting reporters. at report for america we were shocked when we get applications in for newsrooms and routinely there would be 23 thousand
university of texas plays a role. glaciers from the perspective of the project i'm working on now, which is about public policy, journalism schools and universities are playing important roles, not just in the formation of public policy but implementing. in new york city there is a policy that got the city to put half of its advertising money towards -- it was created and launched in watchdog by the community graduate school of journalism. california decided they wanted to put $25 million in...
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Jul 18, 2024
07/24
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i think aboutwh it a lot in ters of being at the university of texas. he played a role in the state and it's a reframing that i've thought about different so how does the university affect an important role that import is in the state whether the border for a test el paso or dallas? we talked about programs like it is there, programs for students who stay in the state and practice journalism so i do think journalism plays an important role speaking about the ecosystem and an easy way in private journalism schools will have to think about their role i think it's very fair. >> from the perspective of the project i'm working one now, journalism school playing an important role implementing so new york city is a policy which of the city to do half of its advertising. it was created in california but 25 million in and they went to the journalism school to administer it. it is a different role and we have to make the jobs there so let me ask about a practical thing we been reluctant to talk aboutlk which is how low salaris are. we were shocked when we get app
i think aboutwh it a lot in ters of being at the university of texas. he played a role in the state and it's a reframing that i've thought about different so how does the university affect an important role that import is in the state whether the border for a test el paso or dallas? we talked about programs like it is there, programs for students who stay in the state and practice journalism so i do think journalism plays an important role speaking about the ecosystem and an easy way in private...
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Jul 19, 2024
07/24
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university of texas plays a role. glaciers from the perspective of the project i'm working on now, which is about public policy, journalism schools and universities are playing important roles, not just in the formation of public policy but implementing. in new york city there is a policy that got the city to put half of its advertising money towards -- it was created and launched in watchdog by the community graduate school of journalism. california decided they wanted to put $25 million in two local reporting, they went to journalism school to administer it. there's a comfort call with state legislators towards universities. it is a different now because i think people are realizing you cannot just train reporters, you have to make the jobs there. let me ask about a really practical thing we have not -- we have been reluctant to talk about, which is how low the salaries are for starting reporters. at report for america we were shocked when we get applications in for newsrooms and routinely there would be 23 thousand
university of texas plays a role. glaciers from the perspective of the project i'm working on now, which is about public policy, journalism schools and universities are playing important roles, not just in the formation of public policy but implementing. in new york city there is a policy that got the city to put half of its advertising money towards -- it was created and launched in watchdog by the community graduate school of journalism. california decided they wanted to put $25 million in...
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Jul 5, 2024
07/24
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all campaigns go through cycles, says university of texas history professor jeremy suri. but the question of biden's health will remain relevant in the future. he can still win this election. in fact, he could still be the favorite for this election if he stays, but his team hoped the debate would put an end to concerns about his health. these concerns about his health will not go away, they will be with us if he stays in the race, everyone. day of the campaign this week, trump's staff held no public events, saying in a statement that they will, quote, continue to build on the momentum president trump has created to grow our movement, raise the money we need to win and enter the fall determined to win a historic victory. on july 4, on independence day, trump, in a video posted on his choov social platform, said that america is one of the greatest stories that ever... we will never forget that we are americans and the future is ours. the spirit of american independence will never be extinguished, never defeated, but will reign forever and ever. happy independence day to ev
all campaigns go through cycles, says university of texas history professor jeremy suri. but the question of biden's health will remain relevant in the future. he can still win this election. in fact, he could still be the favorite for this election if he stays, but his team hoped the debate would put an end to concerns about his health. these concerns about his health will not go away, they will be with us if he stays in the race, everyone. day of the campaign this week, trump's staff held no...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the u.s. to return to his homeland. at first he held discussions and forums about palestine. in one of these discussions he revealed. he asserted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fata movement. he planned a series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around, he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claimed responsibility for. for it, when he was asked to retreat, he responded the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going to resist, even it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arafat's victory, 5,000 people asked to join the fatah movement. arafat's popularity grew by day, so israelis decided to immediately take him out. arafat became so popular that everyone called him leader of the palestinian nation. they said he's come to shine the ray of hope in the heart of the palestinian nation. fatah grew b
he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the u.s. to return to his homeland. at first he held discussions and forums about palestine. in one of these discussions he revealed. he asserted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fata movement. he planned a series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around, he planned an operation in the heart of...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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PRESSTV
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he applies for visa to study the university of texas in the us. took few months for his request to beetly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around, he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claimed responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, "the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going." to resist, even if it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arafat's victory, 5,000 people asked to join the fatal movement. arafat's popularity grew by the day, so israelis decided to immediately take him out. arafat became so popular that everyone called him leader of the palestinian nation. they said he's come to shine the way of hope in the heart of the palestinian nation. fatah grew bigger and bigger by the day. after year, the arab nations recognized fatah as the only official palestinian organization. gamal, as the most important arab leader, also backed it. the fata movement's successes arous the jordanian king's jealousy. and in no time, conflict started between fatah an
he applies for visa to study the university of texas in the us. took few months for his request to beetly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around, he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claimed responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, "the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going." to resist, even if it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arafat's...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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PRESSTV
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he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the us. the fatah movement. he planned. series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claimed responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going to resist. even if it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arafat's victory, 5,000 people asked to join the fatah movement. arafat's popularity grew by the day, so israelis decided to immediately take him out. arafat became so popular that everyone called him leader of the palestinian nation. they said he's come to shine the ray of hope in the heart of the palestinian nation. bigger and bigger by the day. after year, the air nations recognized fatah as the only official palestinian organization. gamal, as the most important arab leader, also backed it. the fatal movement's successes arous
he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the us. the fatah movement. he planned. series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claimed responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going to resist. even if it costs us...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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PRESSTV
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he applied for a visa to study the university of texas in the us.ealed his plans. he asserted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fata movement. he planned series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab. nations was heavy blow for him, this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claim responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going to resist, even if it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arafat's victory, 5,000 people asked to join the fatal movement. arafat popularity grew by the day, so israely decided to immediately take him out. arafat became so popular that everyone called him leader of the palestinian. nation, they said he's come to shine the ray of hope in the heart of the palestinian nation. fatah grew bigger and bigger by the day. after year, the arab nations recognized fatah as the only. the official pan organiz
he applied for a visa to study the university of texas in the us.ealed his plans. he asserted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fata movement. he planned series of operations, but everything should have been done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab. nations was heavy blow for him, this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claim responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the...
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Jul 13, 2024
07/24
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the scientists of behtashi science center of the university of texas created the world's first mouse model with a human emery system, which provides a platform for studies of the human emery system and the development of vaccines. provide human and therapeutic trials. the discovery of new ways for experiments inside the human body, including the development of immunological agents such as cancer inhibitors , human bacterial and viral vaccines, and prototyping. they open many human diseases. advances in dual biological systems. according to the daily website's athletic database, japanese researchers improved their appearance and performance by pasting engineered skin on robots. this innovative method improves self-healing mobility and sensory abilities of robots. ability to manipulate soft and wet biological tissues. new developments in medical research are using plastics to create more natural robots. scientists hope to improve robots' environmental awareness and interactive capabilities by using sensors. dear viewers, thank you for your attention. have a nice evening, god bless you.
the scientists of behtashi science center of the university of texas created the world's first mouse model with a human emery system, which provides a platform for studies of the human emery system and the development of vaccines. provide human and therapeutic trials. the discovery of new ways for experiments inside the human body, including the development of immunological agents such as cancer inhibitors , human bacterial and viral vaccines, and prototyping. they open many human diseases....
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the us.serted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fatah movement. he planned a series of operations, but everything should have been. done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claim responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the palestinian people have always been fleeing, but this time we are going to resist, even if it costs us our lives. only 48 hours after arfat's victory, 5,000 people ad to join the fatam movement. arafat popularity grew by the day, so israelis decided to immediately take him out. arafat became so popular that everyone. called him leader of the palestinian nation, they said he's come to shine the ray of hope in the heart of the palestinian nation. fatah grew bigger and bigger by the day after year the arab nation. recognized fata as the only official palestinian organization. gamal as the mo
he applies for a visa to study the university of texas in the us.serted that armed resistance was the only way to save palestine and founded the fatah movement. he planned a series of operations, but everything should have been. done secretly, but the second defeat for the arab nations was heavy blow for him. this time around he planned an operation in the heart of tel aviv and immediately claim responsibility for it. when he was asked to retreat, he responded, the palestinian people have...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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affairs and history at the university of texas.professor, thank you for the time. it's good to see you here. we want you to sort of put this in some context for us. i know that you have written that it is an american tradition for presidents to give up power for the good of the country. what do you think when historians look back at this moment we're in, how do you think they will view the significance of president biden's decision to step aside? >> i think historians will see this as an act of statesmanship, whether we think his policies were effective or not. the truth of the matter is that what keeps american democracy going is the willingness of powerful people to give up power. if george washington, if thomas jefferson, if harry truman and others had decided that when they had power, they were going to hold on to it till the last minute and run as often as they could, we would have had a history of very few presidents serving for very, very long terms. we did not have until 1951 any limitation on how long one could be presiden
affairs and history at the university of texas.professor, thank you for the time. it's good to see you here. we want you to sort of put this in some context for us. i know that you have written that it is an american tradition for presidents to give up power for the good of the country. what do you think when historians look back at this moment we're in, how do you think they will view the significance of president biden's decision to step aside? >> i think historians will see this as an...
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Jul 1, 2024
07/24
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so the first thing was a lawsuit against the university of texas.r, abigail fisher. - fisher claimed she was not admitted because she is white. now, abigail fisher did not file her lawsuit out of the blue. she was handpicked by conservative activist edward blum. [edward] her case went to the supreme court the first time in 2013. and we won an important element in this long term legal strategy. it's a nuanced decision. it's a vintage kennedy. basically, he said you can still consider race for purposes of diversity, but you have to satisfy a higher burden. fisher made it much harder for schools to defend their admissions policies. you could see from the language that the supreme court started using around 2013 that affirmative action was vulnerable. with that bar now being reset much higher, a decision was made to sue harvard as a private university. we ended up suing the university of north carolina as the public school. - jose, forgive the interruption. brian williams here with you from new york. we have had a decision just handed down. [edward] the
so the first thing was a lawsuit against the university of texas.r, abigail fisher. - fisher claimed she was not admitted because she is white. now, abigail fisher did not file her lawsuit out of the blue. she was handpicked by conservative activist edward blum. [edward] her case went to the supreme court the first time in 2013. and we won an important element in this long term legal strategy. it's a nuanced decision. it's a vintage kennedy. basically, he said you can still consider race for...
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Jul 22, 2024
07/24
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a group of researchers from the university of texas made this invention to increase faith and productivity. researchers believe that artificial intelligence and human intelligence can be combined and that artificial intelligence may replace humans by improving the ability to perform tasks. this is a misplaced fear. artificial intelligence through future data analysis. by anticipating maintenance needs and automatically identifying violations. it will improve safety. however , the approach of enhancing intelligence using human decision-making reduces the amount of accidents, operational costs and increases reliability. the next section 2 o'clock news. hello and respect to all the viewers of the economic table program, we heard in the news that the ministry of energy has made a new decision for subscribers who consume electricity more than two and a half times the pattern we talked about in the programs, their electricity will be warned and their electricity may be to cut it off , another news was that compared to the same period last year, the country's electricity consumption has increased
a group of researchers from the university of texas made this invention to increase faith and productivity. researchers believe that artificial intelligence and human intelligence can be combined and that artificial intelligence may replace humans by improving the ability to perform tasks. this is a misplaced fear. artificial intelligence through future data analysis. by anticipating maintenance needs and automatically identifying violations. it will improve safety. however , the approach of...
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Jul 16, 2024
07/24
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have a difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professorions. why do you think a lot of young people are so supportive of unions right now? >> we see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them, and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand and sort of shifts on that power to a workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker amber sage oliver is part of the young and new to workplace group. all of her says that the same work would pay $200 a week less. >> currently i'm making $33 an hour, so that's pretty good in comparison who people just got out of college or university. >> reporter: erin davis valdez is a former union teacher, they let her down getting into public policy to oppose them. >> if you look at rates of unionization over time they remained flat or gone way down. so i don't view this as an overall long-term trend. report back to you think this is miss guided loyalty on the part of gen zs? >> i think they will be disappointed by what
have a difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professorions. why do you think a lot of young people are so supportive of unions right now? >> we see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them, and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand and sort of shifts on that power to a workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker...
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Jul 17, 2024
07/24
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difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professor adam why do you think a lot of young people are so supportive of unions right now? >> we see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them. and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand, and sort of shift some of that power to workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker amber sage oliver is part of that young and new to the workplace group. oliver estimates the same work in a nonunion shop would pay at least $200 a week less. >> currently i'm making about $33 an hour. so that's pretty good in comparison to people who just got out of college or university. >> i don't buy the overall trend. >> reporter: erin davis valdez is a former teacher. she says the teachers union led her down, motivating her to get into public policy to oppose them. >> if you look at rates of unionization over time, they either remain flat or have gone way down. so i don't view this as an overall long-term trend. >> repor
difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professor adam why do you think a lot of young people are so supportive of unions right now? >> we see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them. and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand, and sort of shift some of that power to workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker amber...
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we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world. i know coming one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, do government invest and if you find the oil and then we have so to solve and right . this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing in incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big we list them all the assumed responsibility to, to biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. we that 50 percent. we're to thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go to green hydrogen in a big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles a day. it will go up to even sav
we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world. i know coming one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, do government invest and if you find the oil and then we have so to solve and right . this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing in incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look for it. we're...
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we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier george was, you know, a new government invest and if you find the oil and then we a sort of solving, right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing to incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look forward. we're going into biofuels and a very big with list of all the assumed responsibility. our total biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. really 50 percent. we're to thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go to green hydrogen in a big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, we will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles of that. it will go
we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier george was, you know, a new government invest and if you find the oil and then we a sort of solving, right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing to incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look...
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of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming. one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, the government invest and if you find the oil and then we started to solve and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we're willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big we list them all the assumed responsibility to, to biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. we did 50 percent. we had a thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go with the green hydrogen in the big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles a day. it will go up to even
of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming. one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, the government invest and if you find the oil and then we started to solve and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we're willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big we list them all the assumed...
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we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming. one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, the government invest and if you find the oil and then reasserted us up and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look forward. we're going into biofuels and a very big we list them all the assumed responsibility to, to biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. we need 50 percent. we're to thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go to green hydrogen in a big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles of that. it will go up to even save
we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming. one thing to invest here in the job was, you know, the government invest and if you find the oil and then reasserted us up and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the obligation to look forward. we're...
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we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier george was, you know, a new government invest and if you find the oil and then we have so to solve and right. this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing to incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big list of all the assumed responsibility to, to biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent or that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. really 50 percent. we're to thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go to green hydrogen in a big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005 point $33000000.00 bottles, and then it w
we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier george was, you know, a new government invest and if you find the oil and then we have so to solve and right. this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason? now we are willing to incentivize the invest upcoming and we are willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for...
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Jul 5, 2024
07/24
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CSPAN
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of texas, university of florida, with special programs devoted to an older understanding of education. ethan: i would say another couple of factors are probably the dawn of the social media age and the way the changes perception of things as well as the pandemic and the experience of having college students go home and take courses online from home and parents perhaps being more involved in seeing what is going on on a more intimate and granular level or -- level. ben: right. this lady right here. >> this may sound too much like a statement that i will try to end it with the question. 1969i had -- i was a graduate student at the university of chicago and i had the occasion to read every catalog going back to the founding in 1892. what struck me was the malleability of the curriculum and not just the courses, but the departments in which things were offered, that it shifted and changed over times in a wide variety of ways. what prompted this was the vote on women at the university, the almost total exclusion from the intellectual offerings of the university. i will skip all the details
of texas, university of florida, with special programs devoted to an older understanding of education. ethan: i would say another couple of factors are probably the dawn of the social media age and the way the changes perception of things as well as the pandemic and the experience of having college students go home and take courses online from home and parents perhaps being more involved in seeing what is going on on a more intimate and granular level or -- level. ben: right. this lady right...
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we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier the job was you will do government invest and if you find the oil and then we start to solve and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we're willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're going into biofuels and a very big list of all the assumed responsibility to, to biofuel blending in our energy mix was 1.4 percent of that about today we are doing 15 percent last month. we that 50 percent. we had a thought of april 20 percent by 2030. we're going to do it by 2025. we're going to go with the green hydrogen in a big way. but having said all this, it's my understanding that at least for 20 years from now, you will also be dependent on fossil fuels, which is, i mean, they got got into if you're doing 5 and 5000005330000 bottles of that. it will go up to even
we've taken all the data and put it on a repository in the university of texas. all the major oil companies in the world are now coming, wanting to invest here in the earlier the job was you will do government invest and if you find the oil and then we start to solve and right, this is us. so the investor would say, why should i come in reason now we're really in incentivize the invest upcoming and we're willing to even go finance the the, the, the, you know, the operation to look for it. we're...
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Jul 17, 2024
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difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professor adam see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them, and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand and sort of shifts some of that power to workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker amber sage oliver is part of that young and new to the workplace group. oliver estimates the same work in a non-union job would pay at least $200 a week less. >> currently i'm making about $33 an hour, so that's pretty good in comparison to people who just got out of college or university. >> i don't buy the overall trend. >> reporter: erin davis valdez says the teachers union let her down, motivating her to get into public policy to oppose them. >> if you look at rates of unionization over time, they've either remained flat or gone way down. so i don't view this as an overall long-term trend. >> so do you think this is misguided loyalty on the part of gen-zs? >> i think what will happen is they will be disap
difficult time making inroads in the south. >> reporter: university of texas associate professor adam see a really heavy concentration of power among big corporations and the elites that run them, and unions are a counterbalance to the strength of corporate power on the one hand and sort of shifts some of that power to workers. >> this is our shop. >> reporter: sheet metal worker amber sage oliver is part of that young and new to the workplace group. oliver estimates the same...
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Jul 12, 2024
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he is a co-owner of the austin soccer club and a professor at the university of texas in austin. in 2020 he released his first book green lights that has sold millions of copies worldwide. he currently resides in austin, texas with his wife and three kids. you should read the book and also listen to the audible version to get the full matthew mcconnaughhay experience. please join governor polis and i in welcoming matthew mcconnaughhay. ♪ matthew: good morning. 6:30 a.m. tennis match up. nonnegotiable. i was definitely going to miss it. gov. cox: he declined the 6:30 tennis match. governor green was practicing with the hawaii university tennis team. let's come to austin and play a little bit. matthew: we have a few -- let's do it. gov. cox: we have a few questions and then we will open up to our fellow governors. we had 21 governors. we have many more that are modeling this in the way they are running their state. we talked about how to get other people involved in uniting americans and bringing them together, cultural icons. i know there is hesitancy amongst people in your line o
he is a co-owner of the austin soccer club and a professor at the university of texas in austin. in 2020 he released his first book green lights that has sold millions of copies worldwide. he currently resides in austin, texas with his wife and three kids. you should read the book and also listen to the audible version to get the full matthew mcconnaughhay experience. please join governor polis and i in welcoming matthew mcconnaughhay. ♪ matthew: good morning. 6:30 a.m. tennis match up....
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Jul 19, 2024
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there is a similar educational program at the university of texas, but it mainly focuses on the agriculturalfee, its effect on the human body, and imagine, then if you work for borista, for example, you raise the prices for your services, put a certificate like this, next to your coffee machine, and it says there, i don’t know, some candidate of coffee sciences, or something similar? and therefore the price tag may be different, perhaps, but we remember that in everything there is good measure, i sell business ideas, inexpensively, continuation of the coffee theme: a swiss startup has released coffee in a tube, you can spread it for toast, brew in mugs or percentage arabica coffee, by the way, you can use coffee paste. there is even one from a tube, so that an astronaut would think about it, this was not the initial goal of the startup, but when tastings began, the versatility of the product became obvious, well , to those who tried it, naturally, the manufacturers assure that the concentrate tastes just as good as with bread , so with fruit, so you get caffeine for a snack in a teaspoon of
there is a similar educational program at the university of texas, but it mainly focuses on the agriculturalfee, its effect on the human body, and imagine, then if you work for borista, for example, you raise the prices for your services, put a certificate like this, next to your coffee machine, and it says there, i don’t know, some candidate of coffee sciences, or something similar? and therefore the price tag may be different, perhaps, but we remember that in everything there is good...
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Jul 2, 2024
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he is also a constitutional law professor at the university of texas school of law here with me as cnn's kaitlan, poland's kaitlan. let's start. first of all, with the new york development tell us about that. yeah. so the district attorney's office in new york, they are open to moving the sentencing, so it might not happen next thursday when donald trump was set to be sentenced because everybody needs to hash out where they stand on this immunity decision and how it affects that case. in that case, there was evidenced that was presented to the jury about things donald trump was doing while he was president, things like tweets, some testimony from hope hicks, his team wants to argue all of that to be throughout and thus, thus the whole case should be thrown out. the district attorney's office say we don't think the whole case should be thrown out. but let's write about this to the judge and we are open to moving the sentencing, but of course, data, as you know, it's going to come down to what the judge says. and when that date will actually be yeah. no, soap. the supreme court case is so
he is also a constitutional law professor at the university of texas school of law here with me as cnn's kaitlan, poland's kaitlan. let's start. first of all, with the new york development tell us about that. yeah. so the district attorney's office in new york, they are open to moving the sentencing, so it might not happen next thursday when donald trump was set to be sentenced because everybody needs to hash out where they stand on this immunity decision and how it affects that case. in that...
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Jul 12, 2024
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michael webber, a professor of energy resources at the university of texas at austin, says climate changerating the problem in texas and for the national energy grid, too. >> a lot of our grid was built up decades or a century ago, when the weather was milder and the weather is becoming more intense and frequent with its storms, which includes wind and water and drought and freeze, the heat wave, and everything. and so we have to build that grid of the future. reporter: centerpoint is proposing a $2 billion resiliency plan to improve the grid. webber says steps like strengthening transmission poles with steel or concrete or moving some power lines underground may be necessary. but to do that, he says, voters and politicians have to acknowledge and confront the realities of climate change in a state where that's not always popular. >> the investments to harden the grid are expensive. they cost billions of dollars, but they save lives and they avoid outages, and they save money in the long run. and we have to choose between paying money upfront to make this system better, or paying money la
michael webber, a professor of energy resources at the university of texas at austin, says climate changerating the problem in texas and for the national energy grid, too. >> a lot of our grid was built up decades or a century ago, when the weather was milder and the weather is becoming more intense and frequent with its storms, which includes wind and water and drought and freeze, the heat wave, and everything. and so we have to build that grid of the future. reporter: centerpoint is...
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Jul 5, 2024
07/24
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this was in the late eighties and he was a student, the university of texas, austin. he discovered for his partly eyeglass that there was a amendment that james madison wrote way back when the first ten amendments came out. but this one was not passed. it didn't get enough votes in the state legislatures. but it's he he it's still alive. it's still a zombie amendment. and it was a good amendment. said congress cannot give itself a raise until the next congress. so you can't just say, now, pay me. $10 million. and he wrote it up and handed it in. his teacher said, this is stupid and gave him a c and. he said, oh boy, he is not happy about that. so he went on crusade and letter crusade. back then you did letters and he he got the state legislature charters to pass. and finally, after ten years, hundreds of letters, he got a 33 or 34 states, which is the required two thirds, and it became 27th amendment because of gregory watson and i love this, that this one man made a difference. but i talked to him and he's great. he's totally idiots socratic delightful but he's worri
this was in the late eighties and he was a student, the university of texas, austin. he discovered for his partly eyeglass that there was a amendment that james madison wrote way back when the first ten amendments came out. but this one was not passed. it didn't get enough votes in the state legislatures. but it's he he it's still alive. it's still a zombie amendment. and it was a good amendment. said congress cannot give itself a raise until the next congress. so you can't just say, now, pay...
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Jul 28, 2024
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first ladies in the fall of 1982 at the university of texas. i was in that class and did change my life. dr. gould moved beyond the intra male centered paradigm of that to teach about first ladies as women of intellect action. it was revelatory. dr. gould set all the students out into the various archives for our research paper, and i was lucky enough to study the professional relationship between roosevelt and a famous texan named anna pennebaker. in the process i turned up about a couple letters between pennebaker and roosevelt. and thanks to dr. gould, i got on an airplane and flew to the hyde park. franklin delano presidential library to hand carry copies to them where they told me they had not yet begun to catalog eleanor's papers. but hands down, as nancy suggested, the most memorable day in that class of dr. girls was day that lady bird johnson came. she arrived with secret service detail and what felt like army of cameramen and that course kicked off long lasting media interest in dr. in the class and in the topic. most of all. then two
first ladies in the fall of 1982 at the university of texas. i was in that class and did change my life. dr. gould moved beyond the intra male centered paradigm of that to teach about first ladies as women of intellect action. it was revelatory. dr. gould set all the students out into the various archives for our research paper, and i was lucky enough to study the professional relationship between roosevelt and a famous texan named anna pennebaker. in the process i turned up about a couple...
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Jul 25, 2024
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and i think i can match this is a paper with charlie silver from the university of texas and the title i gave him harkens back these articles started as 1 and thinking about the problem of how we might make medicaid expansion more appealing if that had not opted in by crafting a program differently and then subsequently and realized they promised for a medicare reform then traditionally was the case so we have these 2 articles with footnotes but i am happy to share them with anybody in the audience who is interested and then to lower the expectations this is to grade a long time policy analyst working in washington on the side of the divide over a prior article in 2007 but surprisingly readable paper for professor of law. the law professors were right accordingly you may want to lower your expectations about this idea the history of health reform and with those ideas sometimes they get deployed or ignored this is actually the graphic aei sent out but you did not choose it. it's a very important issue with lots of government policies. and where the aspects of the current healthcare syst
and i think i can match this is a paper with charlie silver from the university of texas and the title i gave him harkens back these articles started as 1 and thinking about the problem of how we might make medicaid expansion more appealing if that had not opted in by crafting a program differently and then subsequently and realized they promised for a medicare reform then traditionally was the case so we have these 2 articles with footnotes but i am happy to share them with anybody in the...
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Jul 13, 2024
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he's a professor of mechanical engineering at the university of texas, austin and focuses on energy issues. michael, good morning to you. let's start with texas and then we'll talk about the rest of the country. is texas going to be on this cycle? but because we've seen it with the derecho, we saw it with the intense cold several years ago that every time there's intense, whether there's going to be this, this challenge to the grid or this breakdown in some way? >> i think that's basically the preview of the future is that we built our grid for the weather in the past. and now we're going to have this, whether the future, which means more frequent and more intense storms, and that means heat waves and cold snaps and when storms and hurricanes, and each of those storms takes a big toll on the grid in anoxic power out during a freeze or even wave it goes from uncomfortable to dangerous pretty quickly. and that's what we're seeing right now and houston. >> all right. so let's expand this beyond texas first are other cities grids across the country. the larger national grid, as vulnerable as t
he's a professor of mechanical engineering at the university of texas, austin and focuses on energy issues. michael, good morning to you. let's start with texas and then we'll talk about the rest of the country. is texas going to be on this cycle? but because we've seen it with the derecho, we saw it with the intense cold several years ago that every time there's intense, whether there's going to be this, this challenge to the grid or this breakdown in some way? >> i think that's...
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Jul 2, 2024
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of texas law school. they got the court to say that case sweat be painter. right. yes. they got the court to say that separate, inherently unequal. so the principal was there and because there were people like the briggs family, lynda brown's family and others willing to put their children the line and contest they eventually got to brown. yeah. it's interesting that he graduate education first. it's interesting in the university texas case, the holding really was that the two institutions were unequal. texas had hastily stood a black law school, not having one in an effort to cure their problem. and the court ultimately said it wasn't equal. so we get to can i just interrupt you. this was this issue was really quite personal with justice marshall he was from baltimore, maryland. mm hmm. he goes to lincoln university predominantly, you know, historically black institution as an undergraduate. he comes back. he wants to be a lawyer. his family lived in baltimore. it would have been very easy for him to. ha
of texas law school. they got the court to say that case sweat be painter. right. yes. they got the court to say that separate, inherently unequal. so the principal was there and because there were people like the briggs family, lynda brown's family and others willing to put their children the line and contest they eventually got to brown. yeah. it's interesting that he graduate education first. it's interesting in the university texas case, the holding really was that the two institutions were...
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Jul 7, 2024
07/24
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of texas at austin for many years, wrote as army officers, they the direct concern of the national government in the settling of the west. there's a type there, and that's true. right. so what they doing is being that representative of federal government on the frontier, they are bringing in, they are consolidating it and they are reporting directly back to washington. it might take weeks for letters to get there, but they, the federal government's representative in the west and they make lots of wonderful art and drawings. these are obviously a turtle and an alligator and these are produced in the 1830s at a place called fort pulaski, which is in the carolinas, on the carolina lowcountry, the coast of savannah. and they are drawn by robert de lee, who is in charge of building a fort pulaski. they're in the local tree. so army officers, regardless of what they're doing, have this incredible impulse to be document sitting, recording and making notes about the places they're going. and therefore provide an invaluable amount of testimony for understanding, aiding the early american west, and esp
of texas at austin for many years, wrote as army officers, they the direct concern of the national government in the settling of the west. there's a type there, and that's true. right. so what they doing is being that representative of federal government on the frontier, they are bringing in, they are consolidating it and they are reporting directly back to washington. it might take weeks for letters to get there, but they, the federal government's representative in the west and they make lots...
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Jul 9, 2024
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i was the last person that entered my class at the university of texas in 82, the last person by the third year i was 12 out of 214 students in the third year. i think merit is extraordinarily important. it is a skirt, a kilt is a skirt. i don't think william wallace was any less a hero because he wore a kilt nor do i think roman soldiers were any less fierce, intelligent or strategic because they were a skirt. now although i have had differences, political and a scientific differences, i have disagreed with her on infection acquired immunity and foreclosures and the lack of transparency. i am having a hard time understanding why in the 2020 when i would have expected it when i was in medical school in 1982, but why in 2021, and i understand the embarrassment of having personal e-mails shared while you were doing work related stuff on your personal e-mails that you would have commented in an e-mail doctor fauci got wilensky director by lobbying for her to run claim. well, she does wear a skirt. i poured a little cold water on her but she was undeterred and thinking she was the catch
i was the last person that entered my class at the university of texas in 82, the last person by the third year i was 12 out of 214 students in the third year. i think merit is extraordinarily important. it is a skirt, a kilt is a skirt. i don't think william wallace was any less a hero because he wore a kilt nor do i think roman soldiers were any less fierce, intelligent or strategic because they were a skirt. now although i have had differences, political and a scientific differences, i have...
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Jul 24, 2024
07/24
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of texas, and the title that i gave it harkens back, obviously, to some of the points that tom made and the sort of broader theme of these two articles. it actually started as one article on medicaid, and thinking about the problem of how we might make medicaid expansion more appealing to the states that had not to that point opted in by crafting a program somewhat differently, as has traditionally been the case, and when we subsequently realized that some of the ideas we were developing, not all of them, had promised for moving medicare reform forward in a different than was traditionally the case, so we now have these two articles with lots of footnotes that the students are digitally fixing up. but, i'm happy to share them with anybody in the audience that is interested to them. one of them is posted on ssi.com already, and the other should be there within a week. let me start by getting you to lower your expectations about these papers. this is greg scanlon, who is known to some of the people in the room, as a long time health policy analyst working in washington on the conserva
of texas, and the title that i gave it harkens back, obviously, to some of the points that tom made and the sort of broader theme of these two articles. it actually started as one article on medicaid, and thinking about the problem of how we might make medicaid expansion more appealing to the states that had not to that point opted in by crafting a program somewhat differently, as has traditionally been the case, and when we subsequently realized that some of the ideas we were developing, not...
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Jul 4, 2024
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doug brinkley is a professor at rice mill brands at the university of texas, joanne freeman, yale, howard university specialist in history and the medford in the national communications association has done a survey, and there are a lot of people that like you for, political reasons. the survey determined they studied 40 different universities, all tenure track professors. one republican, two 33.5 democrats teaching in colleges and the law schools. it's one, 28.61 republican to 8.6 democrats. here's another statistic, 60% of communication in professors, i mean, schools that they studied, employed, no registered republicans. what do you say to that for that are looking and listening and saying, i don't trust you guys, you're all on one side. but speaking for somebody who lives in texas, i don't trust statistic because in texas in texas there are no registered republicans are no registered democrats. you just go to the polls and you vote the way you want in primaries. you just show up and you say, all this time, i want to be a republican, this time i want to be a democrat. so i would really
doug brinkley is a professor at rice mill brands at the university of texas, joanne freeman, yale, howard university specialist in history and the medford in the national communications association has done a survey, and there are a lot of people that like you for, political reasons. the survey determined they studied 40 different universities, all tenure track professors. one republican, two 33.5 democrats teaching in colleges and the law schools. it's one, 28.61 republican to 8.6 democrats....