356
356
Nov 23, 2014
11/14
by
KNTV
tv
eye 356
favorite 0
quote 0
harvard was 5.9%. but the big difference is -- but the big difference is harvard says when you ask our director of admissions they say it's not that 6% that qualified for harvard. we only had room for 6%. the big difference is we accept everybody that qualifies. the 2.8% is actually really who made the cut. >> right. >> these people, we don't care what country they're from or how rich they are. our kids are overwhelmingly not american because we don't discriminate. more female than male and more middle class than rich because we don't discriminate. >> you have three kids, two graduated, one is at northwestern. >> she could transfer. >> she can. >> i'll go online with her and talk about it. then we have a 14-year-old. so we start to think about him now. how long is the program and how much does it cost. >> it's a four-year program. room and board is just like any other university. room board is about $18,000. tuition is $10,000 a year. >> that's half of what we're paying for. >> $10,000 a year. how are
harvard was 5.9%. but the big difference is -- but the big difference is harvard says when you ask our director of admissions they say it's not that 6% that qualified for harvard. we only had room for 6%. the big difference is we accept everybody that qualifies. the 2.8% is actually really who made the cut. >> right. >> these people, we don't care what country they're from or how rich they are. our kids are overwhelmingly not american because we don't discriminate. more female than...
243
243
Nov 25, 2014
11/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 243
favorite 0
quote 0
you're a harvard -- you don't know who gruber is? no. >> she seems like such a nice woman. >> scared her away. >> what's putin doing that's making everybody so nervous these days? >> invading ukraine. >> excellent job. >> i wrote my thesis on russia, so nice try. >> russia has now, i guess, infiltrated eastern ukraine. >> vladimir is causing a lot of problems lately. >> when putin takes his shirt off, does that make you nervous? >> no, i like it a lot. i wish he'd do it more. i want to take my shirt off. >> this is an awkward moment for me. >> gravity has not been nice to that man. >> we are here to pump, you up. >> what is obama trying to do with this immigration push? >>in -- >> immigration. >> through presidential executive order instead of going through congress. >> how do you feel about that? >> i like. >> do you lock your doors? >> it auto locks. >> do you love the illegal aliens? >> i -- this is getting very personal. >> i'm sorry. i know we just met and all. >> it's just as close to harvard as you'll ever get. i hope you unde
you're a harvard -- you don't know who gruber is? no. >> she seems like such a nice woman. >> scared her away. >> what's putin doing that's making everybody so nervous these days? >> invading ukraine. >> excellent job. >> i wrote my thesis on russia, so nice try. >> russia has now, i guess, infiltrated eastern ukraine. >> vladimir is causing a lot of problems lately. >> when putin takes his shirt off, does that make you nervous? >> no,...
264
264
Nov 21, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 264
favorite 0
quote 1
, i was just like, my baby is at harvard. >> the first american college, harvard college, was a childty of cambridge in england. the puritans had come over to new england in the early 1630s and after they settled the basi basics, they started a college. in that sense the college was an offshoot of the church. the lecture so central to college education, is really a kind of modern version of the sermon. it was a commitment to the idea that students could be transformed to lead lives of meaning and purpose. >> harvard is the source of dna for almost all of high er education in america. it laid out the model that a university needs to emulate in order to get better resources, better professions, better students. as harvard passed that dna down to everyone else, it created a race. >> when the colonial colleges started to become universities, and when brand-new institutions were founded as universities, you begin to see a tension developing between the mission to educate young people and the competition for prestige the. to outbuild your rivals. american colleges are driven by the pursuit
, i was just like, my baby is at harvard. >> the first american college, harvard college, was a childty of cambridge in england. the puritans had come over to new england in the early 1630s and after they settled the basi basics, they started a college. in that sense the college was an offshoot of the church. the lecture so central to college education, is really a kind of modern version of the sermon. it was a commitment to the idea that students could be transformed to lead lives of...
110
110
Nov 20, 2014
11/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 110
favorite 0
quote 0
however, you're not a typical harvard student.ing in cleveland, your family was actually homeless before you got to harvard, how did you do it? how did you get to harvard from being homeless? >> to be honest, it was a situation where i was living day to day. i didn't feel like i was in a very tough situation because where i'm from, this is not entirely uncommon. a lot of students end up in a tough position as far as not having a home, being put out of their home, whatever the case may be. they have to make decisions. i was fortunate enough to have the support of my family and people at school that told me it was worth working hard for to try and get out of cleveland. an idea that was foreign to a lot of my classmates but was very common and understood for me. >> you know, the film is very interesting. i want wait to see the film, the entire thing of you there. what has been the biggest challenge for you as it comes through? because when you're going to harvard, many times you're going to school with people who are very financially
however, you're not a typical harvard student.ing in cleveland, your family was actually homeless before you got to harvard, how did you do it? how did you get to harvard from being homeless? >> to be honest, it was a situation where i was living day to day. i didn't feel like i was in a very tough situation because where i'm from, this is not entirely uncommon. a lot of students end up in a tough position as far as not having a home, being put out of their home, whatever the case may be....
158
158
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 158
favorite 0
quote 0
he put off harvard and enrolled in another school. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court. so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little apif mee of sorts. i learned a lot. i began to feel i was spinning at the university. i called the registrar at harvard medical schod i would like to come in. i remember her saying one guy dropped out. we have a spot. if you are here monday, it's yours. i grabbed a toothbrush and i didn't pack. i got on a plane and left. that's how i decided to become a doctor. >> why did you choose there? >> i was looking for something half way between the reality of medicine and the elegance, if you like, of philosophy. psychiatry was the obvious thing. that was my intention from the first day. i was lucky because it was probably the easiest branch of medicine for me to do once i was hurt. >> hurt. that doesn't begin to describe it. when did you realize the accident was life altering? >> the
he put off harvard and enrolled in another school. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court. so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little apif mee of sorts. i learned a lot. i began to feel i was spinning at the university. i called the registrar at harvard medical schod i would like to come in. i remember her saying one guy dropped out. we have a spot. if you are...
133
133
Nov 27, 2014
11/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 133
favorite 0
quote 0
he put off harvard and enrolled in another school. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court. so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little apif mee of sorts. i learned a lot. i began to feel i was spinning at the university. i called the registrar at harvard medical school and said i would like to come in. i remember her saying one guy dropped out. we have a spot. if you are here monday, it's yours. i grabbed a toothbrush and i didn't pack. i got on a plane and left. that's how i decided to become a doctor. >> why did you choose there? >> i was looking for something half way between the reality of medicine and the elegance, if you like, of philosophy. psychiatry was the obvious thing. that was my intention from the first day. i was lucky because it was probably the easiest branch of medicine for me to do once i was hurt. >> hurt. that doesn't begin to describe it. when did you realize the accident was life alterin
he put off harvard and enrolled in another school. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court. so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little apif mee of sorts. i learned a lot. i began to feel i was spinning at the university. i called the registrar at harvard medical school and said i would like to come in. i remember her saying one guy dropped out. we have a spot. if...
188
188
tv
eye 188
favorite 0
quote 0
the guy who created wonder woman is this harvard ph.d.sychologist. >> stephen: that's my next question is how can she be a feminist icon when she was created by this man. >> he said wonder woman is psychological propaganda for the type of woman i believe should rule the world. [crowd cheering] >> stephen: what does feminism mean at this time. >> the interesting thing about creating wonder woman in 1941 is she's really a throw back. he had gone to college in 1910 and was really inspired by the suffrage movement. the women gained the right to vote in 1920. he was a freshman in harvard when the great suffragists came to campus. he married his childhood sweetheart. he went to mouth holyoke in 1910. he becomes a professor and teaches at tufts university in 1925. my alma mater, tufts university. [applause] and falls in love with one of his students who happens to be the niece of margaret sanger who founded the birth control movement. she moves into the family and they are poly amorous. >> this guy who is a feminist has got two women one of whom
the guy who created wonder woman is this harvard ph.d.sychologist. >> stephen: that's my next question is how can she be a feminist icon when she was created by this man. >> he said wonder woman is psychological propaganda for the type of woman i believe should rule the world. [crowd cheering] >> stephen: what does feminism mean at this time. >> the interesting thing about creating wonder woman in 1941 is she's really a throw back. he had gone to college in 1910 and was...
31
31
Nov 29, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
she taught at harvard and got her ph.d. at harvard as well and began her career writing extraordinary books. like to start by asking you this. your written books about presidents that you obviously couldn't know abraham lincoln and teddy roosevelt franklin roosevelt john kennedy. if he had a chance to have dinner with any one of those and you only have to pick one who would he want to have dinner with? >> i think it would have to be abraham lincoln. i keep knowing that people say do you suppose you could have dinner with one of the guys what would you ask them? i know i should ask abraham lincoln what would you have done differently about the construction had the lives but i know i wouldn't ask him that. i would just say mr. lincoln would you tell me the story and then if he started giving me a story his whole face would change. his smile would come on. the story might be a funny story. it might have an anecdote. there might be a dirty story and i would see them come alive. the idea of abraham lincoln who i thought about ev
she taught at harvard and got her ph.d. at harvard as well and began her career writing extraordinary books. like to start by asking you this. your written books about presidents that you obviously couldn't know abraham lincoln and teddy roosevelt franklin roosevelt john kennedy. if he had a chance to have dinner with any one of those and you only have to pick one who would he want to have dinner with? >> i think it would have to be abraham lincoln. i keep knowing that people say do you...
398
398
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 398
favorite 0
quote 0
panel probably know his position on most, there is a lot you don't know about the all-star panelist, harvard trained psychiatrist, and even occasional baseball analyst we think you should, even if your steadidoctor has a different opinion. >> rote cent about this what is your thought. >> i don't like it. >> full disclosure i've been trying to convince charles krauthammer to sit for an interview for sometime. >> carry on the hill. >> not one where he simply shares his thoughts, on the news of the day. >> i suspect, there is going to be another twist here. >> one where he pulled back the curtain reveals beyond the extraordina thicker the life of an intensely pruitt man. >> when i say i don't like it i am not averse not going to pretend doesn't i go it but life it is not something that is very interesting to me. >> more disclosure, choorls krauthammer a cleland friend agreed to cooperate on a fox news reporting profile of reluctantly as part of the publicity campaign for yes, a new book. things that matter. is not a confessional memoir or kiss-and-tell, it is a collection of newspaper and magaz
panel probably know his position on most, there is a lot you don't know about the all-star panelist, harvard trained psychiatrist, and even occasional baseball analyst we think you should, even if your steadidoctor has a different opinion. >> rote cent about this what is your thought. >> i don't like it. >> full disclosure i've been trying to convince charles krauthammer to sit for an interview for sometime. >> carry on the hill. >> not one where he simply shares...
283
283
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 283
favorite 0
quote 0
harvard medicine, class of '75. his life seems be going according to plan. then no life ever really does. the snapshot was taken in may 1972. it shows a strapping 6'1" charles krauthammer standing on the beach. it is the confident smile of a young man on his way to making it. smart, athletic, handsome, driven. the future all his. >> spring break, i went with a bunch of friends to bermuda. that is the last picture of me taken standing. i didn't know it at a time and i was coming out of the water carrying my sandals i saw one of my friends with a camera and when i got to the top i stood there for a picture and thought nothing of it until i discovered it years later lying around in a box and remembering it was a faithful picture. bret: fateful because of what would happen at harvard that summer. >> 22 years old, tell me about that day. >> i went out, we had those and of my first year at medical school we are doing urology, the study of the spinal cord of all things. my classmate and i decided to skip the morning session. beautiful july day, we would play tennis
harvard medicine, class of '75. his life seems be going according to plan. then no life ever really does. the snapshot was taken in may 1972. it shows a strapping 6'1" charles krauthammer standing on the beach. it is the confident smile of a young man on his way to making it. smart, athletic, handsome, driven. the future all his. >> spring break, i went with a bunch of friends to bermuda. that is the last picture of me taken standing. i didn't know it at a time and i was coming out...
56
56
Nov 23, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
he is a law professor at harvard. after that, david brock, david rothbard, his most recent book called national insecurity, american leadership in an age of fear. we will do a call-in program with them so you will have a chance. this panel is just starting. >> good morning, everyone. good morning and welcome to miami book fair international. this is our 31st year, as you know, and it is truly a pleasure to see all of you here on a wonderful, sunny and bright south florida morning. thank you so much for being here. a special welcome to our friends of miami book fair international for your support it to really goes a very long wait in enabling us your future year. those of you visiting us how about the men we hope to see you many, many more years. this book fair could not take place without the generous bob airship of many, many organizations such as the night down bashan, o. h. l., american airlines and so many more that every single year come together to provide support. the book fair is also supported by hundreds of
he is a law professor at harvard. after that, david brock, david rothbard, his most recent book called national insecurity, american leadership in an age of fear. we will do a call-in program with them so you will have a chance. this panel is just starting. >> good morning, everyone. good morning and welcome to miami book fair international. this is our 31st year, as you know, and it is truly a pleasure to see all of you here on a wonderful, sunny and bright south florida morning. thank...
39
39
Nov 29, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 39
favorite 0
quote 0
he said the harvard audis think i talk into folksy language, but i know i reached them. speak softly and carry a big stick. it summed up his entire administration. he then gave maxwell house a slogan, good until the very next stop. he was able with his relationship, but he was so interesting. he had a mid-a shave. when the barbarous shaving hand, he is answering their questions and they say the barber has to keep up with him as he's moving around. he understood the press was an important channel for him to reach the public and so he would read their articles ahead of time. investigative reporters would be able to criticize him. they would criticize them. .. he didn't have the relationship of the press that he had so the president was drifting and the progressives were moving further forward than teddy was at the time. it was a desire to be back in office and his feeling that he had to keep that pressure on the conservative ideology in the country that taft wasn't up to the job but he decided to run against him. >> so you rant against against him and he barely loses the r
he said the harvard audis think i talk into folksy language, but i know i reached them. speak softly and carry a big stick. it summed up his entire administration. he then gave maxwell house a slogan, good until the very next stop. he was able with his relationship, but he was so interesting. he had a mid-a shave. when the barbarous shaving hand, he is answering their questions and they say the barber has to keep up with him as he's moving around. he understood the press was an important...
78
78
Nov 14, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
he also got a tour of the new facilities harvard is building. taylor swift's management team is taking issue with spotify's comments that she would have made $6 million this year. he said the label received less than $500,000 in the last year from spotify. he said swift made more from streaming site vemo then spotify. the amazon web services conference is going on in las vegas right now, but there is even bigger news today. amazon and hachette have ended their standoff. exact terms were not disclosed, but they said it will allow the publisher to set prices with financial incentives for the french publisher to keep them low. amazon also promised to restore titles that they had been delaying. welcome gladwell's book is still temporarily out of stock. joining us from amazon web services conference in las vegas is cory johnson and by skype, the founder of the ideological company that has been involved with publishing were nearly 50 years. we don't know the details of the deal how but both sides say they are pleased. what is your take? >> my take is
he also got a tour of the new facilities harvard is building. taylor swift's management team is taking issue with spotify's comments that she would have made $6 million this year. he said the label received less than $500,000 in the last year from spotify. he said swift made more from streaming site vemo then spotify. the amazon web services conference is going on in las vegas right now, but there is even bigger news today. amazon and hachette have ended their standoff. exact terms were not...
21
21
Nov 9, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
>> it has been called the harvard of silicon valley. y combinator is perhaps the most prestigious incubator in the world. it has funded 700 companies including dropbox, airbnb, and stripe. behind is a couple with their own start up story. how did they build y combinator into what it is today? joining me on the addition of "studio 1.0," husband-and-wife paul graham and jessica livingston. thank you for joining us. paul, it has been six months since you stepped down from the helm. how is it going? >> it is so great. i wish i had done in two years before. it was hard running y combinator. i'm not really an administrator. y.c. had gotten big. i was never suited to it. >> you would get your brain back. did you get your brain back? >> yeah. i had, this afternoon, the best conversation i've ever had. i had lunch with patrick collison. 100% was about ambitious plans. that is like the best possible office hours. >> how involved are you, jessica? >> i'm doing all of the same things i used to do. i miss working with paul but i also love working wi
>> it has been called the harvard of silicon valley. y combinator is perhaps the most prestigious incubator in the world. it has funded 700 companies including dropbox, airbnb, and stripe. behind is a couple with their own start up story. how did they build y combinator into what it is today? joining me on the addition of "studio 1.0," husband-and-wife paul graham and jessica livingston. thank you for joining us. paul, it has been six months since you stepped down from the helm....
74
74
Nov 3, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 0
at harvard that ada was a manic depressive with the most amazing illusions about her talent she was as mad as a hatter and contributed more than trouble. that is a footnote by the way. but i paid two's thank you don't have to overstate her accomplishments to marvel at how wonderful it was that she saw the magic and humanities to be connected to the machine. the interesting thing about the digital age is it is very collaborative with people working together than who deserves the most credit? and then helping the engineer for the first atari know i did more or i did more and reduce the that all the time. so i tried judiciously to say here is the disputes but by the way this revolution is so amazing there is enough credit to go around we should not fight over it. >> host: we have four stories on the stage tonight we started with babich and lovelace then we go to the enigma. we will talk about that but then the apple one thing we will also talk after that. so let's talk about codebreaking. you do something very interesting to explore the year of 1937 when everything is converging all at on
at harvard that ada was a manic depressive with the most amazing illusions about her talent she was as mad as a hatter and contributed more than trouble. that is a footnote by the way. but i paid two's thank you don't have to overstate her accomplishments to marvel at how wonderful it was that she saw the magic and humanities to be connected to the machine. the interesting thing about the digital age is it is very collaborative with people working together than who deserves the most credit? and...
137
137
Nov 19, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 137
favorite 0
quote 0
no, harvard. be happy to go there. [ laughter ] >> what i would like is -- lou: two choices who's right, who's wrong. harvard is not in the right. >> oops. don't give me hate letters for this. >> sandra day o'connor said affirmative action -- >> 25 years. >> had a place in history, but that the point affirmative action should be eliminated. we have already righted the wrong, at least the supreme court stepped in. >> what i like is maybe race neutral but look at economic, kids coming from poor families, whatever race they are, look at that. then they have to build themselves up from the bootstraps to get into college. >> then it's not race related. economic diversity. lou: if it's not race related then how do you accommodate the interest of having a diverse student body? >> you do it financially. lou: talk about financing the system that would lead to that result, i don't see any guarantee doing it economically, those economically disadvantaged would result at a level of diversity. >> the ages of p
no, harvard. be happy to go there. [ laughter ] >> what i would like is -- lou: two choices who's right, who's wrong. harvard is not in the right. >> oops. don't give me hate letters for this. >> sandra day o'connor said affirmative action -- >> 25 years. >> had a place in history, but that the point affirmative action should be eliminated. we have already righted the wrong, at least the supreme court stepped in. >> what i like is maybe race neutral but look...
94
94
Nov 17, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
, and harvard approved it. and the founder and director of this organization was a man named rick doblin. same guy. and that's me in 2007, and and that's rick. [laughter] and so i said, okay, this time i'm doing the story myself. and i called him up, and not only did he remember me, he had on his desk in front of him both those stories i just showed you. and the reason he did that was because he had just had a meeting with his board of directors, and he was trying to impress upon them how far his image had come from this wild man hippie to this guy who was able to do business some of the most prestigious academic institutions in the world. and in the study at harvard, it was going to be, to use mdma to help people who were suffering from extreme end of life anxiety. some people with terminal cancer, you know? and i think they chose that because, partly because in the old days during the days of psychedelic therapy, they did use it for that. but also because, you know, be somebody was terminal, it was hard to ar
, and harvard approved it. and the founder and director of this organization was a man named rick doblin. same guy. and that's me in 2007, and and that's rick. [laughter] and so i said, okay, this time i'm doing the story myself. and i called him up, and not only did he remember me, he had on his desk in front of him both those stories i just showed you. and the reason he did that was because he had just had a meeting with his board of directors, and he was trying to impress upon them how far...
71
71
Nov 24, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
of harvard.i'm also an alum of harvard. thanks so much. for cindy crawford's meaningful beauty advanced. (female narrator) with special appearances by debra messing, valerie bertinelli, sara rue, and garcelle beauvais. (male narrator) hosted by cat deeley. brought to you by guthy-renker. hello there, i'm cat deeley here in beverly hills inviting you to come along as i take you to meet one of the most famous supermodels in the entire world, cindy crawford. it's nearly impossible to believe that cindy crawford is now 48 years old. how has she managed to keep her skin looking so young and so gorgeous for so long? wouldn't you like to know her secret? because whatever she's doing, it's clearly working. well, today cindy is not only revealing her secrets,
of harvard.i'm also an alum of harvard. thanks so much. for cindy crawford's meaningful beauty advanced. (female narrator) with special appearances by debra messing, valerie bertinelli, sara rue, and garcelle beauvais. (male narrator) hosted by cat deeley. brought to you by guthy-renker. hello there, i'm cat deeley here in beverly hills inviting you to come along as i take you to meet one of the most famous supermodels in the entire world, cindy crawford. it's nearly impossible to believe that...
128
128
Nov 11, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
number one, harvard out of the top five.t makers" when we come back. ♪ >> live from bloomberg headquarters in new york, this is "market makers." with erik schatzker and stephanie ruhle. welcome back to "market makers." i'm erik schatzker. 11:30 on new york city. newt riding on ford's pickup truck. 'se f150 makes up much of ford profits. matt miller is life for the with the chairman of the ford motor company. >> i'm here with bill ford. to alle giving a talk the workers. something i did not realize is a decade ago they were thinking about closing this plant. you came in and said no, we are going to revitalize it. it wase were talks that ran down and maybe excess capacity. i stepped in and said absolutely not, this is the heart and all motor company. let's not just say this, let's make it a showpiece for the next generation. i went to bill mcdonough. bill and i sat around and reimagined this place, it is the most environmentally friendly place in the world. >> people were talking about the .phone conundrum when the new truck i
number one, harvard out of the top five.t makers" when we come back. ♪ >> live from bloomberg headquarters in new york, this is "market makers." with erik schatzker and stephanie ruhle. welcome back to "market makers." i'm erik schatzker. 11:30 on new york city. newt riding on ford's pickup truck. 'se f150 makes up much of ford profits. matt miller is life for the with the chairman of the ford motor company. >> i'm here with bill ford. to alle giving a...
93
93
Nov 12, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
robert kaplan, harvard business school, what happened?methodology of the survey. >> what is the methodology that would make for these jumps? did they change these methodologies? -- the methodology? we have seen a decline in where they go after they graduate in their careers. we are not seeing any of that. >> what i've seen is the rigor -- entry classss in chicago, stanford, and i'm not going to say harvard's number one. but there is a set of five or six schools that are getting the best and brightest. they also talk about how stanford university is doing in terms of recruiting the students that want to go into the startup entrepreneurial line. >> i'm just talking about academic chops. i'm just talking about critical thinking skills. >> robert kaplan has a woody allen problem. he would not collect his academy awards when he earned them. he would have to trust the academy's judgment when he did not win. >> fair enough. that is a long way of saying i don't know. i'm very curious about the methodology for stub i just haven't had time to look
robert kaplan, harvard business school, what happened?methodology of the survey. >> what is the methodology that would make for these jumps? did they change these methodologies? -- the methodology? we have seen a decline in where they go after they graduate in their careers. we are not seeing any of that. >> what i've seen is the rigor -- entry classss in chicago, stanford, and i'm not going to say harvard's number one. but there is a set of five or six schools that are getting the...
76
76
Nov 30, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
where the harvard undergrads have taken the varga girls home. but the varga girls, a high-heeled red boots that wonder woman gets instead of the stenographer's delicate shoes come from the fetish kitschy soft form of esquire. so she gets these than you can see the goods here. in the beginning she wears a skirt. there's this fantastic, the first episode of melinda carter the one woman tv show where paradise island makes her dress and outfit for her and she has the skirt which she says i don't think i will be needing this to reveal her star-spangled underwear. so we can look at these for a minute because another thing to say about wonder woman, from marston's life we know so much about how suffered and separatist and birth-control activist influenced him and were indeed members of his family but somehow we keep going forward here. we have jumped the shark here. but you can see in the visual representation of wonder woman that same implants, the influence of suffrage is some and birth-control movement and feminism. here is the panel of wonder woman
where the harvard undergrads have taken the varga girls home. but the varga girls, a high-heeled red boots that wonder woman gets instead of the stenographer's delicate shoes come from the fetish kitschy soft form of esquire. so she gets these than you can see the goods here. in the beginning she wears a skirt. there's this fantastic, the first episode of melinda carter the one woman tv show where paradise island makes her dress and outfit for her and she has the skirt which she says i don't...
30
30
Nov 27, 2014
11/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
m.i.t., harvard.nd hopefully, if you make it, which i hope, udacity. >> why leave a great job at google to focus on one of the hardest problems in the world? that is, education. >> to me, the mission of being able to educate is the biggest thing i can imagine. if i ask myself, how did we change, fundamentally change the planet, empowering people is is a basic human right. there should be a constitutional amendment saying that everybody has a right to a full education. >> how do you think you can change the world if you change education? >> i think if education is democratized, there will be fewer wars. less conflict. >> if you succeed, are you saying that we would not be in iraq or there would not be conflict in ukraine? >> at the core, i believe that most people want the same thing. they want stability. they want safety. and they want the ability to unfold their potential. to contribute. that is cut off if you cannot participate. you cannot play. >> something else that you think is broken is transpor
m.i.t., harvard.nd hopefully, if you make it, which i hope, udacity. >> why leave a great job at google to focus on one of the hardest problems in the world? that is, education. >> to me, the mission of being able to educate is the biggest thing i can imagine. if i ask myself, how did we change, fundamentally change the planet, empowering people is is a basic human right. there should be a constitutional amendment saying that everybody has a right to a full education. >> how...
94
94
Nov 23, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
no, harvard. what i like is -- >> who's right, who's wrong? >> harvard is not in the right.to say that. don't send me hate letters. >> sandra day o'connor says affirmative action had a place in history but at this point, affirmative action should be eliminated. >> we have already righted the wrong. at least the supreme court has stepped in and said -- >> i like what i think is maybe race neutral but look at economics. look at kids who are coming from poor families. look at that. then they have to build themselves up from the boot straps to get into college. >> then it's not race related. >> but if it's not race related, then how do you accommodate the interest of having a diverse student body? >> you do it economically, though. that's how you do it. >> if you are talking about financially, the system that would lead to that result, i don't see any guarantee that doing it economically, would result in a level of diversity -- >> people of economic disparity have not even wanted to apply to those schools because of the ticket it carries. >> harvard for years has said anyone who
no, harvard. what i like is -- >> who's right, who's wrong? >> harvard is not in the right.to say that. don't send me hate letters. >> sandra day o'connor says affirmative action had a place in history but at this point, affirmative action should be eliminated. >> we have already righted the wrong. at least the supreme court has stepped in and said -- >> i like what i think is maybe race neutral but look at economics. look at kids who are coming from poor families....
221
221
Nov 30, 2014
11/14
by
WHYY
tv
eye 221
favorite 0
quote 0
that's what researchers studying harvard business school graduates found as they attempted to understandchasm in career outcomes for high achieving men and women. >>> women who have all the advantages still struggle, still see gender gaps, still have difficulty realizing their careers and family aspirations. think about what that means to women who aren't as privileged. >>> 65% of female alumnae surveyed returned to work within a year of childbirth eager to find a way to keep rising career-wise and raise a family. women expected to rise in the ranks as quickly as their spouses even though they'd had more childcare responsibilities. >> they're every bit as ambitious as their male counterparts. i think it's an understandable disconnect. women wanted to have more egalitarian relationships in terms of whose career took precedence. what happened was different. they were more likely to see their careers take a back seat. >> the few female alumnae who did not return to work soon after childbirth said they simply found their jobs unfulfilling with little room for advancement. while men enjoyed a
that's what researchers studying harvard business school graduates found as they attempted to understandchasm in career outcomes for high achieving men and women. >>> women who have all the advantages still struggle, still see gender gaps, still have difficulty realizing their careers and family aspirations. think about what that means to women who aren't as privileged. >>> 65% of female alumnae surveyed returned to work within a year of childbirth eager to find a way to keep...
296
296
Nov 23, 2014
11/14
by
KYW
tv
eye 296
favorite 0
quote 0
they give up the lead to harvard and harvard goes on for the victory. >> adam: perfect season. 17th undefeatedte played 150 today. >> brian: going for the eighth straight 100-yard game. i think he's going to get it. maybe on this play. rutgers. no chance whatsoever. michigan state, sparty. big time. >> adam: all over rutgers 45-3 as langford gets 126 on the ground. they'll go to penn state next week. the game we brought you. ole miss shut out by arkansas thirst-0. the defense doing it. allie laforce catching up with one of their stars, trey flowers. >> allie: you decided to come back for your senior season. you were honored for senior day. can you imagine it going anywhere this? >> no, i couldn't imagine. i thank god my teammates for putting it out on the line for me and for all seniors, it was a big day. >> allie: two shutouts in a row against s.e.c. opponents. is this defense finally playing the way you you knew it could? >> we knew all along what kind of defense we are and we knew the type of things we could do in this league. for us to put up two big shutouts, that's big time. that's letti
they give up the lead to harvard and harvard goes on for the victory. >> adam: perfect season. 17th undefeatedte played 150 today. >> brian: going for the eighth straight 100-yard game. i think he's going to get it. maybe on this play. rutgers. no chance whatsoever. michigan state, sparty. big time. >> adam: all over rutgers 45-3 as langford gets 126 on the ground. they'll go to penn state next week. the game we brought you. ole miss shut out by arkansas thirst-0. the defense...
106
106
Nov 8, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 106
favorite 0
quote 0
harvard square because his friend bill gates is at harvard and is convince paul to drop out into even to come to cambridge. so he's there and he sees this thing and he says it's happening without us. he grabbed a copy of the magazine and its snowing and he trudges through the slush to the carrier house which is bill gates house at the harbor. he said this is happening without us. bill as you know starts rocking as he's reading and these rocking. he blows off all the exams and they sit there using the computer right next to the mar mark i but a pdp one and a later version of the pdp at the harbor computation lab and they write basic for the altaire. bill gates basically doesn't shave at this point by paul allen can agree -- at least grow sideburns. they want to figure out what to do when they realize that paul allen is going to have to be the one to bring it to albuquerque when they make this altaire but bill is sort of in charge. so they decide that bill should call ed robertson say we have a version of basic but as you said he is paul allen. he makes his voice deeper says he is paul
harvard square because his friend bill gates is at harvard and is convince paul to drop out into even to come to cambridge. so he's there and he sees this thing and he says it's happening without us. he grabbed a copy of the magazine and its snowing and he trudges through the slush to the carrier house which is bill gates house at the harbor. he said this is happening without us. bill as you know starts rocking as he's reading and these rocking. he blows off all the exams and they sit there...
43
43
Nov 9, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
barack was on his way to harvard university, harvard law, and i remember, i was actually -- that balmy summer i was in my room reading a book, the devil drives, a great history of, a biography of richard burton, the great colonial adventure. and i heard a crunching sound of gravel outside. i knew the car had arrived. i heard sounds of voices and the door opened. my mother was in the door, and she was trembling. my mother is a big lady. she strong. she's a mountain climber. not literally, but she's a person who has gone through many challenges in life and survived. but she was trembling. it was like there was this emotion. and what happened was she said to me, mark, your brother from america is here. i said, what brother? i didn't know, there have been memories and rumors and stories sort of nebulous things that have talked about a brother i had in america, but i had never met him. this was a totally unannounced visit. so it was a big surprise. anyway, i said my brother from america, what do you? your brother barack from america, he is here to see. and i all of a sudden, you know, to th
barack was on his way to harvard university, harvard law, and i remember, i was actually -- that balmy summer i was in my room reading a book, the devil drives, a great history of, a biography of richard burton, the great colonial adventure. and i heard a crunching sound of gravel outside. i knew the car had arrived. i heard sounds of voices and the door opened. my mother was in the door, and she was trembling. my mother is a big lady. she strong. she's a mountain climber. not literally, but...
60
60
Nov 30, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
i think that affirmative action will likely help me secure a job at harvard law school.as a very fine student. i've been very hard-working. i think that i think that my record speaks for itself and that i've been able to be a real contributor to legal academia. but have i been helped like so many other african-americans over the past 30 years in elite institutions? have i've been helped by affirmative action? yes. >> host: wended affirmative action begin? >> guest: , it all depends on how you define a affirmative action. for instance, i mean there is a way of saying affirmative action has been part of american life since the civil war. the nation's first federal civil rights statute civil rights act of 1866 was vetoed by the president of the united states andrew johnson the successor to abraham lincoln. and andrew johnson vetoed the civil rights act of 1866 because he said it would give quote discriminating texture and textured african-americans. he thought he was giving an illicit, i'm just helping hand to african-americans because it allowed african-americans to be cit
i think that affirmative action will likely help me secure a job at harvard law school.as a very fine student. i've been very hard-working. i think that i think that my record speaks for itself and that i've been able to be a real contributor to legal academia. but have i been helped like so many other african-americans over the past 30 years in elite institutions? have i've been helped by affirmative action? yes. >> host: wended affirmative action begin? >> guest: , it all depends...
683
683
Nov 29, 2014
11/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 683
favorite 0
quote 0
he putit off harvard, enrolled t oxford. while studying e history's great political philosophers, he met a fellow student from australia,al robin. attractive and brilliant, too. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court.om but so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little epiphany of sorts. i i started legal theory, was getting more and more abstract. i learned a lot, but i began t feel that i was sort of spinning out into a universe that didn't have anything to too with the real world. i called the register at harvard medical school and said, i'd h like to come in the coming t class. and i remember her saying, well, one guy dropped u. we got a spot. if you're here o monday, it's yours. so i grabbed a a toothbrush andi didn't pack. i got on a plane and i left. that's how i decided to become doctor. now, when i woke up in boston the next day, i thought toda myself, oh, my god, what have i done? but there w
he putit off harvard, enrolled t oxford. while studying e history's great political philosophers, he met a fellow student from australia,al robin. attractive and brilliant, too. a clerk to the chief justice of her home state supreme court.om but so much would change in the three years between when they met and married. beginning with his sudden decision to leave england. >> i had this little epiphany of sorts. i i started legal theory, was getting more and more abstract. i learned a lot,...
67
67
Nov 28, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 67
favorite 0
quote 0
i don't remember, but i remember him saying that he was president of harvard more than a century ago at least it should be expected of a harvard graduate to learn to pronounce the name of god without embarrassment. >> host: we are going to take a short break and be back with what works commonsense solutions for a stronger america. >> host: at the end of your book you wrote what have come and i'm quoting, the equipment of testimony and church where we can start showcasing people who once lived in poverty and despair and counsel sufficient because they embrace the historically sound principles. >> guest: i made a speech in the buck to kansas chamber of commerce 18 months or so ago and sam brownback now the governor of the state has created some tremendous business friendly programs. many states now do not have a state income tax when years ago it was only two. north carolina and florida. many of them are realizing that this becomes an inhibitor to prosperity. now i do say inspiration for what by motivation followed by perspiration improves. the whole metaphor of testimony, time and chu
i don't remember, but i remember him saying that he was president of harvard more than a century ago at least it should be expected of a harvard graduate to learn to pronounce the name of god without embarrassment. >> host: we are going to take a short break and be back with what works commonsense solutions for a stronger america. >> host: at the end of your book you wrote what have come and i'm quoting, the equipment of testimony and church where we can start showcasing people who...
83
83
Nov 13, 2014
11/14
by
FBC
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
they go to yale, harvard and study fine arts. >> you're late for show and saying bad things about harvard? >> harvard would play off. >> fine arts? melissa: one way or the other -- great connections with place like harvard. when you get out of harvard one way or another you make money. real tragedy -- >> is yale. it is jail. -- yale. melissa: subpar private schools that cost a fortune where you get folks go very deep into debt with no hope of getting a job on the other side. those are people who think somebody else will pay it off. >> names. melissa: i'm not going to names. >> like one of those liberal schools on the hudson river? melissa: not going to do it. >> for-profit schools, graduation rate is horrible. debt load is huge. that is one category. >> students are clearly in denial. they're not accepting reality you have to pay the loans. >> they won't. >> other option is default. >> i bet they won't. melissa: even if you file for bankruptcy -- >> you have to have the student loans for life. even dunne your social security. >> sounds like they do something or bond it out or something. m
they go to yale, harvard and study fine arts. >> you're late for show and saying bad things about harvard? >> harvard would play off. >> fine arts? melissa: one way or the other -- great connections with place like harvard. when you get out of harvard one way or another you make money. real tragedy -- >> is yale. it is jail. -- yale. melissa: subpar private schools that cost a fortune where you get folks go very deep into debt with no hope of getting a job on the other...
705
705
Nov 5, 2014
11/14
by
KDTV
tv
eye 705
favorite 0
quote 1
. >> junto con birmania rÍos compartimos el orgullo de nuestros hispanos en harvard. >> y entrevistamos" de pequeÑos gigantes. >> andrea chediak realiza la transformaciÓn a una televidente. >> bienvenidos a "despierta amÉrica", el programa mÁs feliz de la televisiÓn hispana. >> ello gracias a ustedes el nÚmero uno! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> asÍ como quiÉn dice oiga, me agarraron infraganti, asÍ debe es dar toda la gente en "despierta amÉrica", comenzamos! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> muy buenos dÍas! mi cantinflas, vÉngase para acÁ, desde los angeles california! plaza mÉxico, completamente en vivo y acompaÑado de grandes celebridades, mi luisito sandoval... >> cantinflas! >> ¿cÓmo estÁ? >> me siento como terciopelo, como la cenicienta. >> y hoy nos acompaÑa nuevamente ninette rÍos con algo muy interesante. >> sÍ, en exclusiva acompaÑamos a el dasa a grabar el himno del teletÓn. >> y el mismÍsimo jomari goyso! >> estamos en ruta de impacto! >> jomari! >> menos mal porque no confÍo en ti todavÍa. >> hoy viene con nosotros nuestra abogada de inmigraciÓn, y hermenegilda se fue a hollywood a conocer las estrellas, no estÁ a
. >> junto con birmania rÍos compartimos el orgullo de nuestros hispanos en harvard. >> y entrevistamos" de pequeÑos gigantes. >> andrea chediak realiza la transformaciÓn a una televidente. >> bienvenidos a "despierta amÉrica", el programa mÁs feliz de la televisiÓn hispana. >> ello gracias a ustedes el nÚmero uno! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> asÍ como quiÉn dice oiga, me agarraron infraganti, asÍ debe es dar toda la gente en "despierta...
56
56
Nov 4, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
and harvard kennedy school's been very supportive of my work on that. i spent a lot of time talking to think tanks in washington, think tanks in beijing, think tanks in tokyo, and think tanks in delhi and singapore and moscow on these questions, as well as officials from those governments as well. of course, given the topic that we've set this morning, which is about questions of future regional architecture, china does not constitute the totality of that picture, nor does the china-u.s. relationship constitute the totality of that picture. so in my remarks here this morning, having been invited to do this only two days ago, let me seek to stand back and look at the trends at work as i see them across the asia pacific region. secondly, what's going well. thirdly, what's not going so well. fourthly, where does the china/u.s. relationship fit within that for the future. and some final remarks on questions of architecture. if you stand back and try and look at the events in the asia-pacific region, we tend to think that we are unique in terms of those fact
and harvard kennedy school's been very supportive of my work on that. i spent a lot of time talking to think tanks in washington, think tanks in beijing, think tanks in tokyo, and think tanks in delhi and singapore and moscow on these questions, as well as officials from those governments as well. of course, given the topic that we've set this morning, which is about questions of future regional architecture, china does not constitute the totality of that picture, nor does the china-u.s....
46
46
Nov 8, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
a wonderful new book out by a harvard historian call ed "the collapse." it's a wonderful new book, in part because she gives nbc credit for how we covered it. she has unbelievable detail about what was going on behind the scenes. it's quite riveting. the narrative take said you all the way through it. we'll be doing some things at harvard this fall with that. >> yes, sir. >> how do you account for the news media's failure to challenge the basis for the invasion of iraq? . a no go to something that's got obviously a lot of attention paid to it. there's the documentary. >> you know, that's that's been around for a while. my personal judgment, i was in there a lot beforehand. i didn't know about weapons of mass destruction, and no one really did. the u.n. couldn't quite figure out whether they had them or didn't have them. could they have been hidden? there were all these bunkers all over the country. what i did think was, and i said this on the air, was that we'll be successful militarily in the short-term, but then the country will begin to break up into i
a wonderful new book out by a harvard historian call ed "the collapse." it's a wonderful new book, in part because she gives nbc credit for how we covered it. she has unbelievable detail about what was going on behind the scenes. it's quite riveting. the narrative take said you all the way through it. we'll be doing some things at harvard this fall with that. >> yes, sir. >> how do you account for the news media's failure to challenge the basis for the invasion of iraq? ....
66
66
Nov 10, 2014
11/14
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
in 1906 eric munter is a professor at harvard. is teaching german there and is also expecting his second child. but his wife is having a difficult pregnancy. he leaves his harvard office everyday, he goes home to see her and he spoon feeds her every night this special broth that he's made to help her through this difficult pregnancy and÷+ he's a very solicitous husband. the neighbors talk about how much he cares about his wife. the nurses report him. oh, professor munter, he cares so much about her. and despite her illness, she is able to give birth and everything seems okay but then four days afterwards she dies. and munter is filled with grief and he decides that he will bring the baby -- the newborn baby and his other infant baby with him to his in-law's house in chicago. they'll bury his wife leona there. and he goes up to chicago with the nurses and the two babies. after the funeral, he tells his father-in-law, i just need to think about things. let me spend two days and then i'll be back. he never comes back. and while he's
in 1906 eric munter is a professor at harvard. is teaching german there and is also expecting his second child. but his wife is having a difficult pregnancy. he leaves his harvard office everyday, he goes home to see her and he spoon feeds her every night this special broth that he's made to help her through this difficult pregnancy and÷+ he's a very solicitous husband. the neighbors talk about how much he cares about his wife. the nurses report him. oh, professor munter, he cares so much...