0
0.0
Jul 25, 2024
07/24
by
ESPRESO
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
sofia asher, a teacher of ukrainian, polish and russian languages at the university of indiana andf the international association of teachers of the ukrainian language, says that the war did not affect the number of students taking russian courses, because its study is funded by the american government and is often required civil servants. however, she is convinced, the approach to teaching is changing. russian is one of the so-called critical languages, yes, these are critical languages, critical for security, yes, for the security of the country. students can study arabic, chinese, or any other language that is also on this list. ukrainian does not belong to these languages. i think that this process of decolonization, de-russification is much more active. in classes, such as mine, yes, because she is a ukrainian who teaches russian, and of course, no, it is impossible, simply it is impossible to read texts about some beauties of moscow, in the ukrainian course at the university of indiana, the number of students remained traditional, less than 10 people, however, says sofia ashe
sofia asher, a teacher of ukrainian, polish and russian languages at the university of indiana andf the international association of teachers of the ukrainian language, says that the war did not affect the number of students taking russian courses, because its study is funded by the american government and is often required civil servants. however, she is convinced, the approach to teaching is changing. russian is one of the so-called critical languages, yes, these are critical languages,...
0
0.0
Jul 3, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
but the organization headquartered in bloomington, indiana, is at the university of indiana. there has been serving and continuing to refine its mission to really understand what it means to be in service to the field. how we help educators, how we help policymakers understand the past's relevance to our contemporary lives, and to the future. how is it different than the american historical association? mm. h i, i jokingly call them kind of grandma and grandpa, you know, slightly different, you know, older institution. there's age is a little older ages scope includes all historians in the united states working on the whole range of global issues, including u.s. history and the age. really focuses on historians all over the world, but who specialize in u.s. history. so it's kind of a different kind of lens through which to see the profession. can you be a member of both nations? yeah, i am. yeah. and what is your background? what is your study? field of study? i came up through ucla's history department as an undergraduate and then went to university of california, riverside,
but the organization headquartered in bloomington, indiana, is at the university of indiana. there has been serving and continuing to refine its mission to really understand what it means to be in service to the field. how we help educators, how we help policymakers understand the past's relevance to our contemporary lives, and to the future. how is it different than the american historical association? mm. h i, i jokingly call them kind of grandma and grandpa, you know, slightly different, you...
21
21
Jul 20, 2024
07/24
by
KGO
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
center of the w's rapid rise. >> the indiana fever select -- caitlin clark, university of iowa. >> reporteraft into the league breaking the all-time viewing record, averaging 2.4 million views. the second-most-watched nba draft averaged just over 600,000 views. >> it felt there were a lot more recognizable stars in the women's college game than in the men's college game. and so much of that, of course, is fueled by caitlin clark. she plays the game differently than any woman we have ever seen. i think that's just energized a fan base that maybe hadn't paid as close attention to the women's game in the past. >> reporter: so much has been made out of the rivalry between angel reese and caitlin clark. is it good for the sport? >> i think the rivalry is incredible for the sport. you know, some have likened it to magic johnson and larry bird. people are interested in watching these two young women play. they're in particular interested in these two women play against one another. >> reporter: the fever/sky game in june was the w's most-viewed in 23 years, 2.3 million tuning in. even though the v
center of the w's rapid rise. >> the indiana fever select -- caitlin clark, university of iowa. >> reporteraft into the league breaking the all-time viewing record, averaging 2.4 million views. the second-most-watched nba draft averaged just over 600,000 views. >> it felt there were a lot more recognizable stars in the women's college game than in the men's college game. and so much of that, of course, is fueled by caitlin clark. she plays the game differently than any woman...
0
0.0
Jul 30, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
gerard is the -- of the indiana university. the robert h mckinney school of law, the author of many books which we had the pleasure of discussing it ncc. we talk about the life of justice, maven marcus is the professor of law and director for institutional studies at the george washington university . many years. as editor of the documentary history of the supreme court of the united states, 1789 to 1800, professor marcus published a volumes with many articles around legal history. she was appointed by the librarian of congress is the general editor of the history of the supreme court of the united states in 2015. and walter starr is a historian and your times best-selling author of two time winner of the sewer award for excellence and civil war biography as the author of several books, including john jade, founding father and most recently salmon p chase, lincoln's vital rival. you so much for joining us. if i met, gerard, let's begin with you. why did you choose to write about justice washington and why should our ncc friends
gerard is the -- of the indiana university. the robert h mckinney school of law, the author of many books which we had the pleasure of discussing it ncc. we talk about the life of justice, maven marcus is the professor of law and director for institutional studies at the george washington university . many years. as editor of the documentary history of the supreme court of the united states, 1789 to 1800, professor marcus published a volumes with many articles around legal history. she was...
0
0.0
Jul 30, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
gerard is the professor of law at the indiana university robert h. mckinney school of law. he's the author of many books we have had the pleasure of discussing at the ncc and the most recent is washington's air, the life of justice. research professor of law and director of the institute for constitutional studies at the george washington university law school. as editor of the documentary history of the supreme court of the united states 1789 to 1800, professor marcus published eight volumes with many articles on legal history. she was appointed by the librarian of congress as the general editor of the oliver wendell holmes device history of the supreme court of united states in 2015. walter starr is a historian in the new york times best-selling author, a two-time winner of the stewart award for excellence in civil war biography, the author of several books including john j founding father and most recently lincoln's final rifle. thank you for joining us. if i may, gerard, let us begin with you. why did you choose to write about justice washington and why should our ncc f
gerard is the professor of law at the indiana university robert h. mckinney school of law. he's the author of many books we have had the pleasure of discussing at the ncc and the most recent is washington's air, the life of justice. research professor of law and director of the institute for constitutional studies at the george washington university law school. as editor of the documentary history of the supreme court of the united states 1789 to 1800, professor marcus published eight volumes...
0
0.0
Jul 1, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
he is a distinguished professor at, the indiana university school of law. he's a graduate of stanford and yale law school. following graduation from law school, professor magali oka as a law clerk to the famed judge guido calabrese easy on the u.s. court of appeals for the second circuit. judge calabrese, as he was my torts professor in law school, and i know that both professor magli oka and i learned a great of law and history and wisdom from judge calabrese, professor mack leocha teaches and writes in the field constitutional law and the author of the book washing tins air the life of justice bushrod washington. professor magliozzi has authored four other books and, more than 30 articles on constitutional law and intellectual property. his sixth book will be released in 2025. it will be about the youngstown case and justice robert jackson. or, as we now like to refer to him, the first justice jackson. i look forward to that book as well. i could say more, but that would take away from our time to hear about justice. bushrod washington. please join me in
he is a distinguished professor at, the indiana university school of law. he's a graduate of stanford and yale law school. following graduation from law school, professor magali oka as a law clerk to the famed judge guido calabrese easy on the u.s. court of appeals for the second circuit. judge calabrese, as he was my torts professor in law school, and i know that both professor magli oka and i learned a great of law and history and wisdom from judge calabrese, professor mack leocha teaches and...
0
0.0
Jul 21, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
i know that at least at indiana university, they offer them to us for free. i maybe the folks this table can i believe we have suicide prevention gatekeeper trainings and the state of indiana. yeah we do look at that so these are things any of you guys in the audience can can access. i have personally taken through the state of indiana and i had a great experience. and so i think that's really important first of all, we have to get better at talking about suicide with kids so that we catch ourselves. we don't make those initial sort of that can be so painful and kind of create that rift and that alienation and between adults and kids, there are some wonderful resources is that there's this blog by that's called ten things not to say to someone who's suicidal ten things to say. and i provide links to them in the book i'm i don't have the kind of brain that can just rattle that but i'd be happy to show folks after the fact and they're written by a wonderful colleague of mine who whose name i'm going to blank because again my brain's not going to do that tonight
i know that at least at indiana university, they offer them to us for free. i maybe the folks this table can i believe we have suicide prevention gatekeeper trainings and the state of indiana. yeah we do look at that so these are things any of you guys in the audience can can access. i have personally taken through the state of indiana and i had a great experience. and so i think that's really important first of all, we have to get better at talking about suicide with kids so that we catch...
0
0.0
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
at the phillips university of my book in germany, a blind student asked her about adaptive learning resources for students with visual impairments. but she couldn't find anything. missing much indiana, my student wanted to study math. so of course, i'm not going to send him away. we decided to come up with something with all graphic elements can't be depicted in braille, so she decided to get a tactile image printer. it uses an infrared lamp to heat up geometric shapes on heat sensitive paper, creating a tac toe image that can be read with the fingertips. the image can also be placed on attack to know an interactive reader for people who are blind or visually impaired. and relate to a database which is supplied with information from the university lecture that allows blind students to understand what the graphics are representing. these doesn't mean when you put your finger on a specific point, it reads the information linked to it because a lot of people who are blind and people who are cited collaborate on the project. it's taken off and meanwhile, get support from industry foundations. we
at the phillips university of my book in germany, a blind student asked her about adaptive learning resources for students with visual impairments. but she couldn't find anything. missing much indiana, my student wanted to study math. so of course, i'm not going to send him away. we decided to come up with something with all graphic elements can't be depicted in braille, so she decided to get a tactile image printer. it uses an infrared lamp to heat up geometric shapes on heat sensitive paper,...
0
0.0
Jul 24, 2024
07/24
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> bill: here is some video of kamala harris making her way off marine two going toward a universitybloomington, indiana. she offered to give a speech at a sorority and skip the prime minister's address before the joint meeting of congress. you saw protests on the hill, more today. that's the decision she has made along with half a dozen other democratic senators and by my count 80 democratic house members. >> dana: you heard mark penn thinking it is a terrible first decision. if you want to be commander-in-chief one of the first tests to pass all right they'll meet but it will be behind closed doors. you think about how biden was bending over backwards to make sure the votes in michigan came his way. you have to wonder if kamala harris is already thinking about that as well. >> bill: okay. >> dana: chad pergram live on capitol hill with this. how is it going there, chad? >> good morning. the middle east is deeply divisive for democrats. gop hopes to exploit those fissures ahead of the election with harris not showing up. some liberals say netanyahu should not appear. >> people in ga
. >> bill: here is some video of kamala harris making her way off marine two going toward a universitybloomington, indiana. she offered to give a speech at a sorority and skip the prime minister's address before the joint meeting of congress. you saw protests on the hill, more today. that's the decision she has made along with half a dozen other democratic senators and by my count 80 democratic house members. >> dana: you heard mark penn thinking it is a terrible first decision. if...
0
0.0
Jul 24, 2024
07/24
by
KQED
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the persuadable voter universe could be large for. you can either think of her as obama 3.0. wins places like north carolina, indiana. why? because he got a lot of young voters, new voters. you can think of her as hillary 2.0. here is a person who is also well-known, loses michigan, loses wisconsin by small margins. and how you see her, is she closer to obama or hillary, would assess the challenges you are trying to address. i would say you need to think about the fact that a lot of the voters are still not sold on her and she has to think as if she's playing from behind and she has to have a pitch to these voters to get them enthusiastic beyond the core democratic base. geoff: how does the trump campaign pivot? they had a specific strategy calibrated for joe biden. how do they make that move now, especially if kamala harris if competitive in states where joe biden wasn't? kevin: first, they have to move more quickly. you would have expected with the developments over the last month that the trump campaign would have had the job of saying, if this is not going to be joe biden
the persuadable voter universe could be large for. you can either think of her as obama 3.0. wins places like north carolina, indiana. why? because he got a lot of young voters, new voters. you can think of her as hillary 2.0. here is a person who is also well-known, loses michigan, loses wisconsin by small margins. and how you see her, is she closer to obama or hillary, would assess the challenges you are trying to address. i would say you need to think about the fact that a lot of the voters...
0
0.0
Jul 2, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
that's 98% universal it's prettyty close pretty together. what do theycounts in horseshoes and grenades. yep. sothe unions used covid to empower parents? yeah. i mean, there's so much evidence of the unions. there's like a whole chapter on. ey did. they're lobbying the cdc to the schools closed as libey knew that if their were closed, it wasn't that they could keep j whereas private industries couldn't do so. it was also th could benefit financially benefit from keeping the schoolscl incentives are so perverse and the government school. it's the complete opposit listening to the customers, it's listening to the and they could leverage the closures to hold children's education hostage to get those ransom payments from taxpayers. one story that's really interesting out california so in sacramento county they had the have to close if you're a school. but if not going to get you. it's a really learning something and you're in the sameldget you. but if you're in the buildings and you're just sitting there while the virus itt somehow knows. and so
that's 98% universal it's prettyty close pretty together. what do theycounts in horseshoes and grenades. yep. sothe unions used covid to empower parents? yeah. i mean, there's so much evidence of the unions. there's like a whole chapter on. ey did. they're lobbying the cdc to the schools closed as libey knew that if their were closed, it wasn't that they could keep j whereas private industries couldn't do so. it was also th could benefit financially benefit from keeping the schoolscl incentives...
0
0.0
Jul 25, 2024
07/24
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
jim grew up in tera haut, he attended indian university. he -- indiana university.fell in love twice, once with the school and once with his beloved wife jackie. he then became a chief of staff to a young mayor of indianapolis named richard lugar. since then almost nothing great in our capital city happened without jim's involvement. he helped launch a university in downtown indianapolis, until recently known as iupui. he was involved in the building of the indianapolis zoo, the colts, the pacers, they all had jim's fingerprints on them. he understood the key to healthy organizations and communities was to connect and empower others and ensure the serious of purpose was met with civil discourse. in 2002, jim took that approach global when he was appointed to lead the united nations world food program. he served as executive director of the program for five years, caring for and delivering aid to men, women, and children around the world who experienced a level of poverty that is difficult for us to imagine. these monumental headline grabbing accomplishments were onl
jim grew up in tera haut, he attended indian university. he -- indiana university.fell in love twice, once with the school and once with his beloved wife jackie. he then became a chief of staff to a young mayor of indianapolis named richard lugar. since then almost nothing great in our capital city happened without jim's involvement. he helped launch a university in downtown indianapolis, until recently known as iupui. he was involved in the building of the indianapolis zoo, the colts, the...