0
0.0
Feb 12, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
not all came from princeton. maxwell perkins.hink the next chapter is called editor maximus because he was probably the most famous editor of the 20th century. maxwell perkins. he got fitzgerald's manuscript. it was sent to him on recommendation of another author, shane leslie. fitzgerald at the time was in the army. he had left princeton before graduation. actually he flunked out. he flunked chemistry. it was called a romantic egotist . my great-grandfather turned it down and perkins kept working with fitzgerald and fitzgerald kept rewriting it. fitzgerald was a great rewriter. he was like a sculptor like bernini. he would polish, polish until it finally had the form that satisfied him. the second time it was turned down. but perkins did not give up and other did fitzgerald. the third time it was submitted, he gave it a very poetic title, this side of paradise, which comes from the beloved british poet rupert brooke. that was published to great acclaim and launched fitzgerald's fame as a very young writer. peter: was the great g
not all came from princeton. maxwell perkins.hink the next chapter is called editor maximus because he was probably the most famous editor of the 20th century. maxwell perkins. he got fitzgerald's manuscript. it was sent to him on recommendation of another author, shane leslie. fitzgerald at the time was in the army. he had left princeton before graduation. actually he flunked out. he flunked chemistry. it was called a romantic egotist . my great-grandfather turned it down and perkins kept...
0
0.0
Feb 27, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i have a story about this from princeton. i did research on princeton in the middle of the 20th century and they set out in 1946 and the president wanted to fill a vacancy in velocity on this -- philosophy and they still had the idea that princeton was a christian institution at that time and another -- they should have another philosopher friendly to religion. they ran into resistance with members of the philosophy department and it took them nine years to fill the position. i'm the guy that ended up getting the spot was an ordained christian minister, very far to the left, his wife was a member of the communist party i believe, so that is a rather curious story that illustrates the issue. another response i would give your question is just thinking how do university leaders conceptualize the role of the humanities? looking at a very influential president at that university of california wrote the uses of the university in 1953. he was a labor economist and in the field of industrial relations and develop with colleagues and
i have a story about this from princeton. i did research on princeton in the middle of the 20th century and they set out in 1946 and the president wanted to fill a vacancy in velocity on this -- philosophy and they still had the idea that princeton was a christian institution at that time and another -- they should have another philosopher friendly to religion. they ran into resistance with members of the philosophy department and it took them nine years to fill the position. i'm the guy that...
0
0.0
Feb 3, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
not long ago and it was at princeton. they came in and they played a really nice game and we lost. gosh, i was fit to be tied and probably all of them were pretty sad. you know, this is hard to believe but really for the most part when we are on the floor we have one junior, a whole bunch of sophomores and a whole bunch of freshmen and that's what we've got. now, so last year a lot of them that were sophomores were freshmen then. but anyway, i'm on the way to charleston the next day and i can't get out of my mind, you know, how it went last night and it went terrible and we were out the whole deal then. we were just gone. it was over. for a lot of the kids they just feel like what in the world just happened? and i walked in my office and remember i said a minute ago, god always shows up. so i walked in my office and rebecca who gives me letter after letter after letter and lots of times it's hard to read letter after letter and we try to read everyone we can get. rebecca said, i don't have any idea who this is but you may
not long ago and it was at princeton. they came in and they played a really nice game and we lost. gosh, i was fit to be tied and probably all of them were pretty sad. you know, this is hard to believe but really for the most part when we are on the floor we have one junior, a whole bunch of sophomores and a whole bunch of freshmen and that's what we've got. now, so last year a lot of them that were sophomores were freshmen then. but anyway, i'm on the way to charleston the next day and i can't...
0
0.0
Feb 28, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
lined with the names of institutions like records, bell labs and princeton.i see a future in which new jersey's top minds harness ai to discover new cures for debilitating diseases. giving healthcare workers more opportunities and not fewer. i see a future which are ourinnovators use ai to discover new methods for combating climate change and caring for our ecosystems, creating jobs not killing them. and i see a future in which every student can receive a world-class education tailored literally to their unique needs instantaneously. uplifting educators and not replacing them. so, to every innovator out there to the visionaries who believe generative ai has the potential to improve the lives of billions. from the dreamers hungry to usher in a new age of hope and prosperity consider this your invitation. join us in new jersey. and to everyone in new jersey especially those who were understandably skeptical about what ai could mean for them and especially to our working families who are anxious about the future, who have been let down before, here is my message
lined with the names of institutions like records, bell labs and princeton.i see a future in which new jersey's top minds harness ai to discover new cures for debilitating diseases. giving healthcare workers more opportunities and not fewer. i see a future which are ourinnovators use ai to discover new methods for combating climate change and caring for our ecosystems, creating jobs not killing them. and i see a future in which every student can receive a world-class education tailored...
0
0.0
Feb 8, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i am andrew appel from princeton university and my question is about best practices and trust in running early vote centers. traditional american precincts, you can say to the voter, well, your political party had a poll water there who could see that the people who signed the public were registered voters and they could check that off on their own list and see that nobody voted twice. when the voting machine printed out totals at the end of the day they could see what the totals were and there were not more votes than the number of people who voted. and if they are not sure about how the county clerk added up all the precincts, well, your party had challengers in every precinct back and see those numbers and add themselves. but with early vote centers that have to cover many ballot styles from across the whole county and with electronic poll books and with breakdown reporting of vote totals by different ballots now, the story is much more complicated and sometimes i think harder to trust. so where are the places that do this well and how do they do it well? i am really curious a
. >> i am andrew appel from princeton university and my question is about best practices and trust in running early vote centers. traditional american precincts, you can say to the voter, well, your political party had a poll water there who could see that the people who signed the public were registered voters and they could check that off on their own list and see that nobody voted twice. when the voting machine printed out totals at the end of the day they could see what the totals...
0
0.0
Feb 21, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
had skedaddle away and 70, 76 he knew that a forge he knew princeton and the delaware where he he knew all those colonies. he knew the potomac country and he knew you know, he he he knew williamsburg as a member of the house of another funny friend, thomas jefferson, not quite as broad where in his map. well, thomas jefferson. thomas jefferson is a man who has a background that similarities to washington. he's 11 years younger, not that much difference in age, but he's not military. thomas jefferson's, he had a father that was a robber man who was also a surveyor for lord fairfax and established the fairfax stone, which i visited at the western extremity of maryland and west virginia, served saying the western edge of large fairfax property, peter jefferson there's a map that peter jefferson and joshua fry make in 1751 that washington uses when he's going there. bounds so he was kind of a burly outdoors guy. he dies when thomas jefferson is 14 and basically thomas jefferson is a rich at age 14, washing up to son of a second marriage, totally different multiple brothers doesn't inherit
had skedaddle away and 70, 76 he knew that a forge he knew princeton and the delaware where he he knew all those colonies. he knew the potomac country and he knew you know, he he he knew williamsburg as a member of the house of another funny friend, thomas jefferson, not quite as broad where in his map. well, thomas jefferson. thomas jefferson is a man who has a background that similarities to washington. he's 11 years younger, not that much difference in age, but he's not military. thomas...
0
0.0
Feb 8, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> i'm andrew from princeton university. my question is about best practices for transparency and trust in running early vote centers. traditional american precinct. you can say to the voter, well, your political party had a poll watcher could see that people that signed the poll book are registered voters and can see that nobody voted twice. they can see that when the voting machine printed out its totals at the end of the day what the totals were and there were not more about than the number of people that voted. if they were concerned about how the county clerk added up all the precincts, well, your party had challengers in every precinct that could see those numbers and add them up for themselves. but with early vote centers that have to cover many ballot styles from across the whole county and with electronic poll books and with a breakdown of reporting of vote totals by different ballot styles and precincts, the story is much more complicated. and sometimes i think it's harder to trust. so where are the places that do
. >> i'm andrew from princeton university. my question is about best practices for transparency and trust in running early vote centers. traditional american precinct. you can say to the voter, well, your political party had a poll watcher could see that people that signed the poll book are registered voters and can see that nobody voted twice. they can see that when the voting machine printed out its totals at the end of the day what the totals were and there were not more about than the...
0
0.0
Feb 23, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
benjamin here at princeton coined the term garbage in and garbage out. and i wanted to know your thoughts on, you know, how would we eventually overcome that in terms of large data models moving forward. so the question, you know, if you if you have you have lots garbage in your dataset, how are you going to prevent lots of garbage coming out? and this is a active problem and it's easy to portray it as a kind of divide between those people who recognize these and those who don't. and how are those being resolved? well, that's a it's it's a major research issue. and there are some people who think the answers are going to be technical. and so there's an entire enterprise within computer science that is committed to making algorithms more fair. and some of the great work being done here. now, it turns out, and it's more technical than i could get in this class, you the the technical definitions of fairness are logically contradictory. so it always has to come down to a human policy decision. but it's very clear that the solutions to this are not going to b
benjamin here at princeton coined the term garbage in and garbage out. and i wanted to know your thoughts on, you know, how would we eventually overcome that in terms of large data models moving forward. so the question, you know, if you if you have you have lots garbage in your dataset, how are you going to prevent lots of garbage coming out? and this is a active problem and it's easy to portray it as a kind of divide between those people who recognize these and those who don't. and how are...
0
0.0
Feb 4, 2024
02/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
>> for two reasons the former professor at princeton and then vanderbilt is a conservative. colorblind equality she opposes affirmative action. so among left-wing scholars both black and white carol is an alpine state she is a defector from the ideology. she has to be put away. just be denied and ignored so it is totally justified in their view. for some it like claudine gay to still and in the second thing to be blunt about it the same kinds of principles you see in black on black violence and inter- cities you see black on black plagiarism at harvard. it's totally excused because it does not fit with the left-wing narrative that according to critical race theory only whites or whiteness can serve as an oppressive force in all crimes that take away from the power of the suppose it white power structure should not only be forgiven but should be encouraged, subsidized and justified. i am not surprised at all. we have seen it sacrificed its core principle on the altar of di. whoever it hurt. whether it's a great professor ronald sullivan or roland fryer these are black profess
>> for two reasons the former professor at princeton and then vanderbilt is a conservative. colorblind equality she opposes affirmative action. so among left-wing scholars both black and white carol is an alpine state she is a defector from the ideology. she has to be put away. just be denied and ignored so it is totally justified in their view. for some it like claudine gay to still and in the second thing to be blunt about it the same kinds of principles you see in black on black...
0
0.0
Feb 25, 2024
02/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he chose princeton, but not for basketball. >> princeton had more rhodes scholars then than any otherporter: what were your stats? >> she is asking my stats. of the game 50 years ago? let's see. what were the stats. 22 out of 29 from the field. >> here bill bradley -- >> 14 out of 15 from the free throw line. 12 rebounds. >> reporter: and tournament mvp. bill bradley was already a sensation, and more than a basketball star. he was just famous. >> comes with certain things. i found a strange woman in my bed. said, hi! i called the campus police. remember, i was evangelical. >> reporter: after graduation, turning down an offer from the new york knicks, he went to england. a rhodes scholar. and a church going christian, until a sermon preaching apartheid in racially segregated row autodish a. >> i walked out and never return to that church. >> reporter: when bradley finally appeared in madison square garden, knicks fans were delirious. >> my first game every time i touched the ball in warmups, eight 18500 people roared, right? i was their savior supposedly. >> reporter: but not for long.
he chose princeton, but not for basketball. >> princeton had more rhodes scholars then than any otherporter: what were your stats? >> she is asking my stats. of the game 50 years ago? let's see. what were the stats. 22 out of 29 from the field. >> here bill bradley -- >> 14 out of 15 from the free throw line. 12 rebounds. >> reporter: and tournament mvp. bill bradley was already a sensation, and more than a basketball star. he was just famous. >> comes with...
0
0.0
Feb 29, 2024
02/24
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the princeton, colombia, and cornell labs are bustling. surprising headlines with ai was jamie dimon saying that mayors in texas will phone him up and say, what can we do to get more business? officials in new york city are not as business friendly, according to jamie dimon. what is your boot on the ground experience from the host city perspective? grace: i have seen bustling innovation and have seen people choosing to live in new york because they want to live here, and going through what other hoops they need to live here. we saw a six time increase in applicants over the last five years when he to move here. see a lot of international talent, hooks coming from europe, from israel, having to new york city. caroline: what often will be said to some of the vcs that speak to us -- what new york has going for it, even if it is not comparable in terms of the sheer scale of money being deployed here, is diversity. we have different industry groups here. it is interesting that a lot of the companies you are backing seem to be in image generatio
the princeton, colombia, and cornell labs are bustling. surprising headlines with ai was jamie dimon saying that mayors in texas will phone him up and say, what can we do to get more business? officials in new york city are not as business friendly, according to jamie dimon. what is your boot on the ground experience from the host city perspective? grace: i have seen bustling innovation and have seen people choosing to live in new york because they want to live here, and going through what...
0
0.0
Feb 9, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i am david holtzman i'm a graduate of princeton university. but still questions for you. [laughter] >> i have connections to michigan and arizona as well. i'm also 2000 graduate of a law school and its public interest law, former poll worker, is at the league of women voters and redistricting commission for los angeles county. i wanted to ask about rogue poll workers and rogue election workers. what sort of simple remedies or administrative remedies or criminal penalties do you think people should be considering or you might consider to discourage election workers from failing to do their job in the critical moments? >> we dealt with this challenge head on and 2022. there were lively widely reported efforts to infiltrate polling places with rogue poll workers. saw a lot of pressure and counties all across our state due to the hiring of poll workers for the most part to pressure clerks into hiring individuals. we recognize two things. one, we have to and it is important to have balance when it comes a poll workers from both parties and all that under our law and in the pra
i am david holtzman i'm a graduate of princeton university. but still questions for you. [laughter] >> i have connections to michigan and arizona as well. i'm also 2000 graduate of a law school and its public interest law, former poll worker, is at the league of women voters and redistricting commission for los angeles county. i wanted to ask about rogue poll workers and rogue election workers. what sort of simple remedies or administrative remedies or criminal penalties do you think...
0
0.0
Feb 3, 2024
02/24
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
there was a guy who owned the property, i kind of knew his name because his brother was teaching at princetonr something. but he'd never really lived at the farm. he had a name for the farm called cotswold or something that i didn't want. i said who had the farm before? they said it was bruce sunland. i contacted bruce sunland and asked what was the name of the farm before? he said it was salamander. i asked where that name came from? he was a fighter pilot that was shot down over nazi occupied belgium, his entire unit was captured, he was able to get out across europe, and he ended up in allied territory in france. he fought briefly for the french resistance. the u.s. came to him and said we've got to go in and rescue the rest of your unit out of the pow camp. this is a true story, the story of hogan's heroes is the story of bruce sunland, that's where the tv show came from. salamander, mythically is the only animal that can walk through fire and still come out alive, which i loved. realistically, if you cut off its limbs, they regenerate. at that time, i said i need that brand, i'm going to
there was a guy who owned the property, i kind of knew his name because his brother was teaching at princetonr something. but he'd never really lived at the farm. he had a name for the farm called cotswold or something that i didn't want. i said who had the farm before? they said it was bruce sunland. i contacted bruce sunland and asked what was the name of the farm before? he said it was salamander. i asked where that name came from? he was a fighter pilot that was shot down over nazi occupied...
0
0.0
Feb 27, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
we played princeton at our place. we were the two seed but we put themem in our place before we hd one really big wood but we played a really close game with princeton.long ago it was at princeton. so, they came in a played a really nice name and we lost. and gosh, i wasgo just fit to be tied i'm probably all of them are pretty sad. you note this is hard to believe but for the most part we are on the floor with one junior, whole bunch of sophomores, hold your freshman and that's what we've got. last year a lot of them were sophomores now are freshman then.ex i'm on my way to charleston the next day i cannot get out of my mind how it went last night. it went terrible we were out of the whole deal then it was just gone, it was over. for a lot of these kids they felt like what in the world just happened? i walked in the office remember said a minute ago god always shows up. so i walked in my office and rebecca, who gives me a letter after letter after letter and lots of times there's no weight to keep up with reading a l
we played princeton at our place. we were the two seed but we put themem in our place before we hd one really big wood but we played a really close game with princeton.long ago it was at princeton. so, they came in a played a really nice name and we lost. and gosh, i wasgo just fit to be tied i'm probably all of them are pretty sad. you note this is hard to believe but for the most part we are on the floor with one junior, whole bunch of sophomores, hold your freshman and that's what we've got....
0
0.0
Feb 24, 2024
02/24
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
eddie glaude junior is a professor in the chair of the african american studies have princeton university he's the author of the important book, began again, james baldwin's america and it's urgent lessons for our own. that does it for me. thank you for watching, catch me back
eddie glaude junior is a professor in the chair of the african american studies have princeton university he's the author of the important book, began again, james baldwin's america and it's urgent lessons for our own. that does it for me. thank you for watching, catch me back
0
0.0
Feb 3, 2024
02/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
chairman powell was born february 1953 in washington and received a bachelors in politics from princeton university in 1975 and earned a law degree from georgetown university in 1979. president gayle began serving july 1, 2022 after serving as president and ceo of the chicago community trust from october 2017-june 2022. under her leadership the trust adopted a new strategic focus on closing the racial wealth gap in the chicago region. for almost a decade she served as both president and ceo of care a leading humanitarian organization. as a pediatrician and public health division with expertise in economic development, humanitarian efforts, and health issues she spent 20 years with the cdc working primarily on hiv and aids. a previous member of the federal reserve of chicago's board, she serves on public and nonprofit boards including the coca-cola company, organized how tomato networks, the bill and melinda gates foundation, the brigantine -- bridging's institutions, new america and the one campaign. she is an inaugural member of president biden's advisory council on african diaspora eng
chairman powell was born february 1953 in washington and received a bachelors in politics from princeton university in 1975 and earned a law degree from georgetown university in 1979. president gayle began serving july 1, 2022 after serving as president and ceo of the chicago community trust from october 2017-june 2022. under her leadership the trust adopted a new strategic focus on closing the racial wealth gap in the chicago region. for almost a decade she served as both president and ceo of...
1
1.0
Feb 3, 2024
02/24
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 1
favorite 0
quote 0
let me remind you that erkan graduated from princeton university, held senior positions at goldman saxnd first republic, the latter went bankrupt a year after her departure. she was appointed head of the central bank in june 2023, thus becoming the first woman in turkey in this position, since then the regulator has increased the key eight times. with current politics will be really interesting. there were a lot of rules that banks were subject to, she began to separate them, the banking sector relaxed a little, this was good for the banking system in turkey. she did everything that was necessary, but whoever was in her place would have done the same. but erkan left, this departure was not unexpected, rumors about this went on for about a week, and the turkish ministry of finance, in turn, followed the statement of the ex-head the central bank assured that the resignation. became a purely personal decision of rkan itself, and the department will continue to adhere to the current economic course, however, some experts still believe that Şimşek and arkan simply did not work well together
let me remind you that erkan graduated from princeton university, held senior positions at goldman saxnd first republic, the latter went bankrupt a year after her departure. she was appointed head of the central bank in june 2023, thus becoming the first woman in turkey in this position, since then the regulator has increased the key eight times. with current politics will be really interesting. there were a lot of rules that banks were subject to, she began to separate them, the banking sector...
0
0.0
Feb 10, 2024
02/24
by
KQED
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
we moved to princeton, new jersey, where he then went on to the woodrow wilson school.ad to work to make sure that he got through, and i wanted to make sure that there weren't any bills. i was the one doing all this work. i was the cheerleader. and the more that i put out and to protect him and to help him, the more i was disrespected. and even when we started our company, black entertainment television, i really believed in how that company was going to grow. and i worked very hard, and i wanted to put him in front, because so often inhis country, african american men are not given the respect that they should and i wanted to make sure that i was going to put him first and put him out there. - it was at the expense of cheerleading yourself and- - yes. i lost myself in the process. i had no idea who i was. and i realized that i was getting more and more depressed as i was going through this, but i kept powering through and working hard to make sure it was going to be successful. - well, that was a successful enterprise. - oh, yes. - and you co-founded black entertainmen
we moved to princeton, new jersey, where he then went on to the woodrow wilson school.ad to work to make sure that he got through, and i wanted to make sure that there weren't any bills. i was the one doing all this work. i was the cheerleader. and the more that i put out and to protect him and to help him, the more i was disrespected. and even when we started our company, black entertainment television, i really believed in how that company was going to grow. and i worked very hard, and i...
0
0.0
Feb 25, 2024
02/24
by
CNNW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
to potentially make nuclear fusion more stable, joining us now is princeton university associate professor egman coleman good morning. appreciate your time. let's get very basic here before our viewers and myself turned to google and type in nuclear fusion. what is it? explain what is nuclear fusion? first of all? >> well nuclear. fusion is the main source of energy in the universe in our solar system as well, the stars are run by fusion energy and so is their son. so if you look at all the energy in the world may be wind or solar power is generally starting from a fusion energy at the center of the sun. so what we tried to do is bring that sun on earth and put it in a small reactors. so make it small son in a reactor and use that energy to produce 24/7 energy. that's clean. oh, interesting. so then where does artists? art artificial intelligence. how does it play a role then >> well, we want this reactors to be running 24/7 without any stop. and as you might imagine, if you put a sun in a small magnetic cage, we use a magnetic fields, stabilize it it might have some instabilities. and wha
to potentially make nuclear fusion more stable, joining us now is princeton university associate professor egman coleman good morning. appreciate your time. let's get very basic here before our viewers and myself turned to google and type in nuclear fusion. what is it? explain what is nuclear fusion? first of all? >> well nuclear. fusion is the main source of energy in the universe in our solar system as well, the stars are run by fusion energy and so is their son. so if you look at all...