80
80
Dec 16, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
for an undergraduate, your interest rate is lower in the direct loan program, and you have a more generous way to repay your loan than under the perkins loan. we want the perkins loan borrowers to know that. we want them to know they may consolidate their perkins loan into a federal direct loan to receive the benefits of the direct loan program. that is the lower rate and the more generous repayment terms. we want them to know that federal direct loans and perkins loans have different interest rates. we want them to know that if they're receiving a perkins loan as an undergraduate today and they've received one in the past that their institution is already awarded all subsidized federal direct loans for which they may be eligible for that year. in other words, the perkins loan may be their third loan. many students borrow more than they should and then have trouble paying it back. and we want them to know if they're receiving a perkins loan for the first time, their institution has already been awarded all subsidized and unsubsidized federal direct loans for which they were eligible that y
for an undergraduate, your interest rate is lower in the direct loan program, and you have a more generous way to repay your loan than under the perkins loan. we want the perkins loan borrowers to know that. we want them to know they may consolidate their perkins loan into a federal direct loan to receive the benefits of the direct loan program. that is the lower rate and the more generous repayment terms. we want them to know that federal direct loans and perkins loans have different interest...
49
49
Dec 21, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
so women are now more likely to go through and get an undergraduate degree in physics or math. but that now we are losing them, they are not going on to the ph.d, or they start a ph.d and draw. often for the same reasons that i walk away from. you know, i got my undergraduate degree but didn't want to grad school because no one encouraged me. talented you're really good at this. no one seemed to care. and so there are a few more women in those fields and we are losing them at a slightly later stage in the process, but we are still losing them. and, of course, for minority's it's much more dire. >> host: today you write only one-fifth of all physics ph.d's in this country are awarded to women. only about half of those degrees to nativeborn americans, and only about 14% of all physics professors in the u.s. are female? >> guest: that drew. >> host: what did you do after four years of science at yale traffic first i had a breakdown because i had been working so hard, almost literally every waking minute of my life to do the problems and my research. so once i walked away from it i
so women are now more likely to go through and get an undergraduate degree in physics or math. but that now we are losing them, they are not going on to the ph.d, or they start a ph.d and draw. often for the same reasons that i walk away from. you know, i got my undergraduate degree but didn't want to grad school because no one encouraged me. talented you're really good at this. no one seemed to care. and so there are a few more women in those fields and we are losing them at a slightly later...
65
65
Dec 5, 2015
12/15
by
CNBC
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> as an undergraduate, with a degree. >> absolutely because people aren't any good. fur a top cyber suit absolute coming out of school, not only demand, it's isn't just about money. students want to go to work to someplace where they are going to see these types of attacks and use their skills. one of the other types of challenges is not every type of company is attractive to these types of students. a fascinating example, at one of the most recent cyber security conferences, the top kind of evening event wasn't some venture funded cyber security company. it was a shoe company. >> because they care about it also. >> absolutely. they have got to recruit the talent. >> every aspect of our economy. thank you, gentlemen. >> up next on the money, a look at the news for the week ahead. and 'tis the season to say cheese. but how can you make sure all those photos stay safely preserved? a tech experts tells us the best ways to store them. >>> for more on our show and our guests go the our website, otm.cnbc.com. >> here are the stories that may impact your money this week. on
. >> as an undergraduate, with a degree. >> absolutely because people aren't any good. fur a top cyber suit absolute coming out of school, not only demand, it's isn't just about money. students want to go to work to someplace where they are going to see these types of attacks and use their skills. one of the other types of challenges is not every type of company is attractive to these types of students. a fascinating example, at one of the most recent cyber security conferences, the...
77
77
Dec 27, 2015
12/15
by
KWWL
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> seth: that's an interesting question and it happened as an undergraduate. fiction films require lots and lots of paem to make and it -- people to make and it takes a lot of resources. was something i just got into because it was something i could do, not on my own completely, but it was something you could have an idea and realize witho involving a lot of other people and needing financing to the same extent you need for a fiction film. that's really how i got into it. it's a way to be able to tell stories and then it became -- that was the first impulse and then i began to love just being able to tell people's stories. >> ron: and documentaries also carry with them that point of view, and that kind of disguised a little bit, but thee director and producer's point of view always comes out at some point and that's fun to have that bit of control, isn't it? >> seth: absolutely, and i think if you go -- it dedends how you want to make your films, but yes, you want it to feel as if the story is unfolding vaturally, but in reali, obviously,y,ou're guiding t t st
. >> seth: that's an interesting question and it happened as an undergraduate. fiction films require lots and lots of paem to make and it -- people to make and it takes a lot of resources. was something i just got into because it was something i could do, not on my own completely, but it was something you could have an idea and realize witho involving a lot of other people and needing financing to the same extent you need for a fiction film. that's really how i got into it. it's a way to...
162
162
Dec 26, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 162
favorite 0
quote 0
we have lots of folks who have an undergraduate degree. other subjects. they're excellent interpreters. we have a research library. it's primarily a training library for our staff. and it exists because we enter this place at a variety of levels. and our duty to our employees is to help develop their talents. >> she also asked about the experience. >> we have colleagues in our ref lugs their era and we have the other side both on jamestown island historics and at the jamestown settlement museum. it's a reconstruction of early jamestown. nay're complimentary. you can come and see where european virginia began in 1607. you can span that site and contemplate the complexity of that moment and understand the native peoples perspective as they view the europeans and understand what drove these first englishmen here. and then you can march through time during your visit. you can come to williamsburg, which became the capitol in 1699, after jamestown. and you can steel how the colony and american society evolved. from its very english beginnings into a complex, a
we have lots of folks who have an undergraduate degree. other subjects. they're excellent interpreters. we have a research library. it's primarily a training library for our staff. and it exists because we enter this place at a variety of levels. and our duty to our employees is to help develop their talents. >> she also asked about the experience. >> we have colleagues in our ref lugs their era and we have the other side both on jamestown island historics and at the jamestown...
89
89
Dec 26, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 89
favorite 0
quote 0
we have lots of folks who has an undergraduate degree in history and other subjects, but they are excellent interpreters. library, john d rockefeller junior library here, primarily a training library for our staff and it exists because we enter this place and a variety of levels. employees is to help develop the talent. host: she also asked about the experience of visiting williamsburg versus jamestown. guest: sure. we are so fortunate to be here in historic time go, as -- triangle, as it is called, we have colleagues in yorktown who bring to life the revolutionary , and we have colleagues on the other side of the colonial parkway at on historico jamestown and at the jamestown settlement museum, a state a state run-- museum for a construction of early jamestown. their complementary. and see where european virginia began in 1607, and you can stand at that site and contemplate the complexity of that moment and understand perspectiveeople's as they viewed europeans, and understand what trophies first englishman here. you can march or time during your visit. you can come to williamsburg, which
we have lots of folks who has an undergraduate degree in history and other subjects, but they are excellent interpreters. library, john d rockefeller junior library here, primarily a training library for our staff and it exists because we enter this place and a variety of levels. employees is to help develop the talent. host: she also asked about the experience of visiting williamsburg versus jamestown. guest: sure. we are so fortunate to be here in historic time go, as -- triangle, as it is...
100
100
Dec 12, 2015
12/15
by
CNNW
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
at lehigh university as an undergraduate. mismatch would apply to me insofar i got in by virtue of my brother and father. if i struggled when i got there, but wasn't the case. is that the theory? >> if the preference amounts to 50 s.a.t. points that won't keep you from succeeding. 200 s.a.t. that's a barrier. it makes you likely you'll learn less in school. if you want to go to the sciences you'll drop off the science track. it has a variety of nevagative effects. what's disturbb about the reaction to scalia's comment. it tiplifies the absolute denial of universities that this is an issue. they want to pretend it's not there. >> was the criticism of justice scalia fair and appropriate as far as you're concerned? isn't this what he's supposed to be, questioning, probing raising controversial theories during the course of oral argument? >> absolutely he's supposed to be asking questions and he was quoting from the text that you just showed some points that were made in a brief. i think the problem came in when the university of
at lehigh university as an undergraduate. mismatch would apply to me insofar i got in by virtue of my brother and father. if i struggled when i got there, but wasn't the case. is that the theory? >> if the preference amounts to 50 s.a.t. points that won't keep you from succeeding. 200 s.a.t. that's a barrier. it makes you likely you'll learn less in school. if you want to go to the sciences you'll drop off the science track. it has a variety of nevagative effects. what's disturbb about...
79
79
Dec 6, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 79
favorite 0
quote 0
i first got to know him through his books when i was an undergraduate at yale writing my senior essay. reading his books on william mckinley, the spanish-american war, etc. since then, he has written books on, may be best book on the united states senate, may be the best book on the presidency, the republican party. he has written about various presidents, taft, roosevelt, mckinley. he's written the history of wyoming, the written history of first ladies. he is an extraordinary historian. i will quote a few of the quotes from important american historians from the back of itdern american presidency." might be the one book you should have on the presidency. the freshest and most original study of the modern presidency. compelling analysis and critique. rare achievement, informative synthesis, a pleasure strong and , provocative. richard ellis. highly readable, refreshing, required reading. and last but not least, as i introduce a friend of the library and a friend of mine, formerly a professor at the university of texas, a wonderful writer. i want to read what richard norton smith says
i first got to know him through his books when i was an undergraduate at yale writing my senior essay. reading his books on william mckinley, the spanish-american war, etc. since then, he has written books on, may be best book on the united states senate, may be the best book on the presidency, the republican party. he has written about various presidents, taft, roosevelt, mckinley. he's written the history of wyoming, the written history of first ladies. he is an extraordinary historian. i...
84
84
Dec 21, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
she is a proud daughter of kansas city, missouri, and she studied as an undergraduate at harvard. shoo-in for a phd at princeton, completing her dissertation on the direction of james mcpherson. her dissertation will be published in 1982 as the book "the plantation mistress." it was her first work to be characterized justly as "pioneering." drawing on the diaries, man ofletters and memoirs hundreds of plantar wives, the book challenges and interprets a host of issues related to the old south. the book forces us to rethink some of our basic assumptions about two peculiar institutions. the slave plantation, and the 19th-century family. as a result, it alters our understanding of the old south and women's place in it. catherine, we go -- would go on to author or edit by my count some 17 additional books, all of which are in the library. several became history book club selections. these included biography of harry tubman, the mosys-like conductor of the underground railroad which the chicago tribune put on their list for the best works of nonfiction in 2004. more recently, she publis
she is a proud daughter of kansas city, missouri, and she studied as an undergraduate at harvard. shoo-in for a phd at princeton, completing her dissertation on the direction of james mcpherson. her dissertation will be published in 1982 as the book "the plantation mistress." it was her first work to be characterized justly as "pioneering." drawing on the diaries, man ofletters and memoirs hundreds of plantar wives, the book challenges and interprets a host of issues related...
158
158
Dec 12, 2015
12/15
by
CNNW
tv
eye 158
favorite 0
quote 1
of any assistance, i don't mind telling the two of you i was a legacy at lehigh university as an undergraduate, mismatch would apply to me in as far as i got in by virtue of my brother and father having attended that school, if, in fact, i struggled when i got there, which thank god wasn't the case. is that the theory? >> if the preference amounts to 50 s.a.t. points, that's not going to keep you from succeeding, but if it's 200 s.a.t. points, that creates a barrier and makes it more likely you're going to learn less in school, if you want to go in the sciences you're going to drop off the science track. it has a variety of negative affects. what mismatch is trying to do is study those. what's disturbing about the reaction to scalia's comment is it typifies this absolute denial by universities and a lot of mismatch critics that this is even an issue. they want to pretend it's not there. >> reeva, was the criticism of justice scalia fair and appropriate as far as your concern? isn't this what he's supposed to be, questioning, probing, raising controversial theories during the course of oral arg
of any assistance, i don't mind telling the two of you i was a legacy at lehigh university as an undergraduate, mismatch would apply to me in as far as i got in by virtue of my brother and father having attended that school, if, in fact, i struggled when i got there, which thank god wasn't the case. is that the theory? >> if the preference amounts to 50 s.a.t. points, that's not going to keep you from succeeding, but if it's 200 s.a.t. points, that creates a barrier and makes it more...
71
71
Dec 6, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
i first got to know him through his books when i was an undergraduate at yale writing my senior essayreading his books on william mckinley, the spanish-american war, etc. since then, he has written books on, may be best book on the united states senate, may be the best book on the presidency, the republican party. he has written about various presidents, taft, roosevelt, mckinley. he's written the history of
i first got to know him through his books when i was an undergraduate at yale writing my senior essayreading his books on william mckinley, the spanish-american war, etc. since then, he has written books on, may be best book on the united states senate, may be the best book on the presidency, the republican party. he has written about various presidents, taft, roosevelt, mckinley. he's written the history of
47
47
Dec 13, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> so there's an undergraduate student at the university of san francisco where i teach that's interested in becoming the next david brock, what would you tell that student in terms of a track, what would you tell them in general that they need to do to prepare themselves? >> well, don't get recruited into the conservative movement at a young age. [laughter] and then i would say, you know, a good background and a combination of history and journalism is what i had, even though i applied it maybe in the wrong direction for a while. and, you know, sign up -- our groups have free web sites, media matters, american bridge, correct the record. and, you know, start to consume all this material. you know, when we started out in '04, there was no real progressive media. now there's like, there's a very vigorous progressive media, so the conversation is actually much more balanced than it was 10 or 12 years ago. so get informed, get active. >> we have seven minutes left. i'm wondering if you could sort of speculate. jim webb has gotten a lot of press today in the leadoff on tomorrow's debate. what
. >> so there's an undergraduate student at the university of san francisco where i teach that's interested in becoming the next david brock, what would you tell that student in terms of a track, what would you tell them in general that they need to do to prepare themselves? >> well, don't get recruited into the conservative movement at a young age. [laughter] and then i would say, you know, a good background and a combination of history and journalism is what i had, even though i...
104
104
Dec 26, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 104
favorite 0
quote 1
she's a proud daughter of kansas city, missouri, and she studied as an undergraduate, harvard, studied american history, and went for her phd at princeton, completing her dissertation on james mcpherson. her dissertation would be published in 1982 as the book "the plantation mistress, women's world in the old south"" her first work to be characterized justly as pioneering. the book forces us to rethink ite of our basic assumptions permanently alters our understanding of the old south and women's place in by my count, some 17 additional books, and several of which -- of history books course, she has published, "mrs. lincoln," which is available for signing after the lecture. this volume is an engaging, wonderfully written narrative that provides fresh insight into this complex woman. it is a triumph. according to pulitzer prize-winning historian joseph ellis, the biography is "distinctive for its abiding sanity. it's daft and in-depth handling of the white house years and for the consistent quality of prose." along the way, she has also written several history books for children and she
she's a proud daughter of kansas city, missouri, and she studied as an undergraduate, harvard, studied american history, and went for her phd at princeton, completing her dissertation on james mcpherson. her dissertation would be published in 1982 as the book "the plantation mistress, women's world in the old south"" her first work to be characterized justly as pioneering. the book forces us to rethink ite of our basic assumptions permanently alters our understanding of the old...
64
64
Dec 9, 2015
12/15
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
as an undergraduate--i'm the child of immigrants. my parents are european, so i was born in the united states, but english is my third language. i spoke french and german because my parents--my father was french, my mother was german. so as an immigrant, i came here as refugees. i had no money or anything else. so i go to school, i go to harvard as an undergraduate. then i go to stanford because there was a professor there i wanted to study with, and i got a master's degree, and then unfortunately this professor had a heart attack and died, and so i completed my education at yale. so here i am, harvard, stanford, and yale, by most american standards sort of a poster kid for elite education. that's what it is. it's elite education. it is designed for people not like me. i was one of those allowed to come in, and they've regretted it ever since. [laughter] allowed to come in on scholarsh--i had to have financial aid. my folks didn't have the money, et cetera, et cetera. i had to work all the time, that kind of thing, but it's an educat
as an undergraduate--i'm the child of immigrants. my parents are european, so i was born in the united states, but english is my third language. i spoke french and german because my parents--my father was french, my mother was german. so as an immigrant, i came here as refugees. i had no money or anything else. so i go to school, i go to harvard as an undergraduate. then i go to stanford because there was a professor there i wanted to study with, and i got a master's degree, and then...
95
95
Dec 12, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
i had discussions as an undergraduate when i was trying to investigate black power. i was the one voice in the room who said it's not all about burn baby burn. one of your former colleagues, niki taylor, put your dissertation in my hands. remarkably important book. thank you so much for your work and for reframing our conversation about black power and self-determination. brother cobb, you started off by theng stokely carmichael hisnizer, to address question on trans-nationalism and stokely carmichael, i would about stokely .armichael the socialist i was at the national civil rights museum. we were watching a compilation of his speeches. when of the own brothers asked us to say what stokely carmichael means to us. immigrant, anti-imperialist was not part of that discussion. part of the way we frame stokely carmichael is losing sight of quality to read -- -- more peopleat need to read it. the first two chapters is a meditation on the s4 and family. diaspora and family. we focus on the 14 years he spent in the united states. we know very little about the activities he
i had discussions as an undergraduate when i was trying to investigate black power. i was the one voice in the room who said it's not all about burn baby burn. one of your former colleagues, niki taylor, put your dissertation in my hands. remarkably important book. thank you so much for your work and for reframing our conversation about black power and self-determination. brother cobb, you started off by theng stokely carmichael hisnizer, to address question on trans-nationalism and stokely...
35
35
Dec 24, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
i'm used to getting his formal warning that goes along a path to a formal recognition, like an undergraduate degree, graduate degree, continuing medical education where it's much easier to plot the path. because you know the eventual hurdle that has become dover. this is a wholly different thing. this is something where it's completely populist, wide open. come one come all, spend 30 seconds at a part of the exhibition or spend all day. it's up to you to do it. and so the breadth of, i do want to use the word audience, the breadth of fellow human beings who we hope are increasingly coming to the smithsonian, either in person or over the wire, or whatever, over the wire. is not even a lawyer anymore. >> wireless. >> over the wireless, that's great. [laughter] digging deeper. anyway, is a much, much bigger task, a much harder task than teach in universities what people are going, forced for a specific purpose. even if the purpose as in my case decades ago was to discover what it wanted to do but i didn't know. it's much harder. i think within that not answer i just gave you, within a not answe
i'm used to getting his formal warning that goes along a path to a formal recognition, like an undergraduate degree, graduate degree, continuing medical education where it's much easier to plot the path. because you know the eventual hurdle that has become dover. this is a wholly different thing. this is something where it's completely populist, wide open. come one come all, spend 30 seconds at a part of the exhibition or spend all day. it's up to you to do it. and so the breadth of, i do want...
264
264
Dec 2, 2015
12/15
by
KCRG
tv
eye 264
favorite 0
quote 3
as noted they approved a plan that will cost in-state university of iowa undergraduate student's an tra 100 dollars per semester. 2016. gotten use to tuition freezes, as there have been many of them over the coursef the last couple of years. they haven't raraed tuition school year. one student who has benefited from those freezes says he doesn't see future increases as that big of deal. "i think three percent or 100 dollars added ttuition here is rerely negligible compared to the price, so i don't think it will affect people too much, so i don't see it being a big problem. " as noted it wawaa busy day for the regents. they also approved a plan to rename the u-i children's hospital after a top donor. beginning in november 2016, the hospital will b b known as the stead family university of iowa children's hospital after businessman jerre stead and his wife mary joy. jerer stead was a member r the search commmmtee that recruited the university's new president, bruce harreld to iowa city. in iowa city, mark carlson, kcrg tv nine news. medicaid recipients have questions about the state's swi
as noted they approved a plan that will cost in-state university of iowa undergraduate student's an tra 100 dollars per semester. 2016. gotten use to tuition freezes, as there have been many of them over the coursef the last couple of years. they haven't raraed tuition school year. one student who has benefited from those freezes says he doesn't see future increases as that big of deal. "i think three percent or 100 dollars added ttuition here is rerely negligible compared to the price, so...
51
51
Dec 22, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
skorton: from being an higher ed for so long and working with undergraduates, my wife, who is the sourcef my great ideas, w had the idea that we should live with a freshman. mr. isaacson: that is something that i would not consider a great idea. mr. skorton: the latest thing she is talking about is having sleepovers at the museum. mr. isaacson: that sounds like a good idea. [laughter] mr. skorton: you think it is a good idea, but those floors are marble. [laughter] mr. skorton: when you think about the higher and experience, i always thought that our ideas about some aspects of academia could not depend on an audience s response. aspects like the way we do have consumer input, or whatever the right word is. i want to emphasize more public input into how we do our planning. specifically, we will set up a youth advisory council here in washington. i have a wonderful experience, talking to mayor bowser about it. she was very kind to spend time with me. she endorsed the idea. we will work on it together. we hope to bring high school freshman,perhaps sophomore's, from all over the d.c. area,
skorton: from being an higher ed for so long and working with undergraduates, my wife, who is the sourcef my great ideas, w had the idea that we should live with a freshman. mr. isaacson: that is something that i would not consider a great idea. mr. skorton: the latest thing she is talking about is having sleepovers at the museum. mr. isaacson: that sounds like a good idea. [laughter] mr. skorton: you think it is a good idea, but those floors are marble. [laughter] mr. skorton: when you think...
143
143
Dec 6, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 143
favorite 0
quote 0
we have lots of folks who has an undergraduate degree in history and other subjects, but they are excellent interpreters. library, john d rockefeller junior library here, primarily a training library for our staff and it exists because we enter this place and a variety of levels. employees is to help develop the talent. host: she also asked about the experience of visiting williamsburg versus jamestown. guest: sure. we are so fortunate to be here in historic time go, as -- triangle, as it is called, we have colleagues in yorktown who bring to life the revolutionary , and we have colleagues on the other side of the colonial parkway at on historico jamestown and at the jamestown settlement museum, a state a state run-- museum for a construction of early jamestown. their complementary. and see where european virginia began in 1607, and you can stand at that site and contemplate the complexity of that moment and understand perspectiveeople's as they viewed europeans, and understand what trophies first englishman here. you can march or time during your visit. you can come to williamsburg, which
we have lots of folks who has an undergraduate degree in history and other subjects, but they are excellent interpreters. library, john d rockefeller junior library here, primarily a training library for our staff and it exists because we enter this place and a variety of levels. employees is to help develop the talent. host: she also asked about the experience of visiting williamsburg versus jamestown. guest: sure. we are so fortunate to be here in historic time go, as -- triangle, as it is...
61
61
Dec 28, 2015
12/15
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 61
favorite 0
quote 0
an eye on newspapers and websites. they're full of story of undergraduates who identified a dream school, got in and broated breathtakingof money to get in. six figure debt loads really cover a minority of cases but when you consider how many schools breezed past the $60,000 a year barrier and are now headed towards 70, should more students and their families simply use their market power to say no, we're not going to do it? degrees, costs and benefits this time on the program. will you end up concluding college was worth it if you don't overpay? if you drop the dream school and pick a school you can really afford? leslie fenwick of howard university, matt mcdonald of hamilton place strategies and george hamilton of washington university, we have management at the table. is cost really playing enough of a role when inspirational families aspirationalfamilies are playinr a role in making a choice? >> absolutely they are. we have to know our economy is less than 30% of the country having bachelor's degrees. there is some sense in the american psyche that in order for me to get a job i may not need that college degree if o
an eye on newspapers and websites. they're full of story of undergraduates who identified a dream school, got in and broated breathtakingof money to get in. six figure debt loads really cover a minority of cases but when you consider how many schools breezed past the $60,000 a year barrier and are now headed towards 70, should more students and their families simply use their market power to say no, we're not going to do it? degrees, costs and benefits this time on the program. will you end up...
46
46
Dec 31, 2015
12/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 46
favorite 0
quote 0
an mba from stanford. love to learn. i rolled right from my undergraduateegree into a .asters i eventually had to go get a job. the hoodies and the dropping out wasn't as popular back then. he worked for steve jobs and apple. they tried to recruit you at pixar. steve: it was a short. of time it was pretty intense. he has this incredible laserlike focus on whoever he is speaking with. would go that we were on. i want to study the way he did business. not that i could be like him but just to try to understand him. i just asked him. he came to my house to speak when i was at stanford business school. he stayed for like three hours. what i remember was that he was just obsessed with apple when he was at next. he was just distraught. he felt this visceral pain when apple was getting beat around in the public eye and in the press. he would always come to the same that appleconclusion should bring him in with the next technology. i would look at him like he was nuts. i said what ceo would ever bring you back and keep his job? and of course that is exactly what hap
an mba from stanford. love to learn. i rolled right from my undergraduateegree into a .asters i eventually had to go get a job. the hoodies and the dropping out wasn't as popular back then. he worked for steve jobs and apple. they tried to recruit you at pixar. steve: it was a short. of time it was pretty intense. he has this incredible laserlike focus on whoever he is speaking with. would go that we were on. i want to study the way he did business. not that i could be like him but just to try...
349
349
Dec 10, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 349
favorite 0
quote 0
following his service in the united states air force during the korean war, thomas earned an undergraduate and master's degree while simultaneously pursuing his career in law enforcement and raising a family. thomas joined the new york city police department in 1957 and went on to serve the city for 37 years, rising all the way to the rank of assistant chief. thomas was the sign of irish immigrants. from a very early age he learned the importance of hard work and selfless dedication to his family and the community. though he endured many tragedies in his life, including the loss of all three of his wives to various diseases, never lost his zeal for life. he was buoyed by the great pride he held for his children who rose to become great successes in law, business, and the secret service. thomas personifies the great american spirit. not only did he persevere through trying times, he prospered. his was a life well lived. and i feel truly blessed to have known him and his great family. mr. katko: may god hold thom mass in the palm of his hand. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back. the speaker
following his service in the united states air force during the korean war, thomas earned an undergraduate and master's degree while simultaneously pursuing his career in law enforcement and raising a family. thomas joined the new york city police department in 1957 and went on to serve the city for 37 years, rising all the way to the rank of assistant chief. thomas was the sign of irish immigrants. from a very early age he learned the importance of hard work and selfless dedication to his...
71
71
Dec 20, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
so international macroeconomics to both undergraduates in the economics department, and i teach sort of an international macro course to masters-level students in the school of public affairs. and the one thing that i want them to know is keep alert, to read about what's going on in the world and incorporate what you've learned in class to analyzing why is it that, you know, things are the way her, why is it that certain individuals in certain positions of management in financial firms say what they say versus what people in policy positions would say versus what journalists would say. in particular, to use their minds to analyze and dissect what's being stated and argued rather than taking for granted, you know, somebody says something and because they look authoritative, believe it. i want them to question, question everything and to use their minds to analyze what's going around, going on around them. >> host: all right. macroeconomics. why can a small country like greece affect our giant economy here in the u.s.? >> guest: so that's an interesting question. it is -- let me give you an
so international macroeconomics to both undergraduates in the economics department, and i teach sort of an international macro course to masters-level students in the school of public affairs. and the one thing that i want them to know is keep alert, to read about what's going on in the world and incorporate what you've learned in class to analyzing why is it that, you know, things are the way her, why is it that certain individuals in certain positions of management in financial firms say what...
125
125
Dec 14, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 125
favorite 0
quote 0
by the young undergraduates, a young woman from tennessee who stood up and and the american dream was dead because she was african-american in the united states. to that struck me. we had anting conversation with undergraduates at that point. when i went back to our study i worked on the study questions, we asked if it was alive or dead. and 48% said it was dead, or deny percent said it was alive. event was alive. event is one of the more sobering account of not just this survey but any survey of the left several years. student loan issues, economic situation, can you put some color to the actual numbers on why they responded the way they did? guest: sure. we do focus groups and interviews, and there were several reasons behind this. one of which is there was a lot of stress in the heads of young people, especially those in college. they are incredibly concerned, not just about finishing college and being able to pay for it, but that first job. x, a member of generation and i know we had struggles when we were that age weapons we were never as concerned about finding a job. the unemployment rate is about 20% among this group. that is one key factor, connected to the stres
by the young undergraduates, a young woman from tennessee who stood up and and the american dream was dead because she was african-american in the united states. to that struck me. we had anting conversation with undergraduates at that point. when i went back to our study i worked on the study questions, we asked if it was alive or dead. and 48% said it was dead, or deny percent said it was alive. event was alive. event is one of the more sobering account of not just this survey but any survey...
179
179
Dec 15, 2015
12/15
by
KQED
tv
eye 179
favorite 0
quote 0
tonight, julie lythcott-haims, a former stanford university undergraduate dean and author of the book "how to raise anlt," shares ideas on her belief that the job of parents is to put themselves out of work. here's her perspective on why it is important to get out of the over-parenting trap. >> we parents seem to have forgotten a simple, unassailable fact: we're mammals. sure, we may be mammals with clothing and cell phones, but like our counterparts in the wild, our job as parents is to put ourselves out of a job and raise our kids to be independent adults who can raise their own offspring one day. if you think about it, it's how we evolved to this point as humans. but these days, too many of us feel our child simply will not be successful in life unless we constantly protect and prevent at every turn, hover over every happening, micromanage every moment, take care of every little thing. yes, we can help our kids get a short-term win such as the better grades that come when we remind them to put their homework in their backpack, or bring it to school when they've forgotten it, or outright do some of
tonight, julie lythcott-haims, a former stanford university undergraduate dean and author of the book "how to raise anlt," shares ideas on her belief that the job of parents is to put themselves out of work. here's her perspective on why it is important to get out of the over-parenting trap. >> we parents seem to have forgotten a simple, unassailable fact: we're mammals. sure, we may be mammals with clothing and cell phones, but like our counterparts in the wild, our job as...
63
63
Dec 30, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
guests told me told her thates after earning her undergraduate degree from the university of illinois, she was contemplating going to law school. being an engineering student she didn't know much about law school. some of us it was one of the best decisions i ever made as dean in terms of bringing people to the law school with the exception of hiring barack obama. graduating,, upon she served as a law clerk on the united states court of appeals for the seventh circuit. and spent the set past seven years working at the department of justice and she returned as an assistant professor and later served as the professor of law and director of the law school. ago, profes years sor meares headed to new haven where she remains to this day. career,er distinguished she worked extensively with things working with the federal government from 2004 to 2011, for example, she served on the .ommittee on law and justice she was named by attorney general eric holder to sit on the department of justice on the newly created science advisory board and president obama named her head of the task force on 21st century policing. focused on criminal procedure and
guests told me told her thates after earning her undergraduate degree from the university of illinois, she was contemplating going to law school. being an engineering student she didn't know much about law school. some of us it was one of the best decisions i ever made as dean in terms of bringing people to the law school with the exception of hiring barack obama. graduating,, upon she served as a law clerk on the united states court of appeals for the seventh circuit. and spent the set past...
207
207
Dec 10, 2015
12/15
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 207
favorite 0
quote 2
it is an issue getting national attention after a federal survey found 1-5 undergraduate women said theyere a victim of sexual assault of some form. colleges cracking down fearing the loss of federal funding. sometimes the victim is not always clear cut. that story is part of an upcoming fox news documentary on the untold story of the campus sexual assault crisis. cory mock is a student at the university of tennessee chattanooga who was expelled after being accused of raping a fellow student. he said it was consentual sex. a judge ruled in cory's favor in august saying the school presented no evidence and the reasoning was flawed. cory said the damage to his reputation was already done. >> it looks like cory was free and clear. but 17 days later the school asked to ajudicator to reconsider her decision and sure enough even though there was no new evidence the decision was reversed. the new finding: cory had violated the student code and would be expelled. >> i called my attorney right now way and was like can she do this? and he was like yes. >> this is cory's father cd who went through
it is an issue getting national attention after a federal survey found 1-5 undergraduate women said theyere a victim of sexual assault of some form. colleges cracking down fearing the loss of federal funding. sometimes the victim is not always clear cut. that story is part of an upcoming fox news documentary on the untold story of the campus sexual assault crisis. cory mock is a student at the university of tennessee chattanooga who was expelled after being accused of raping a fellow student....
92
92
Dec 3, 2015
12/15
by
KGAN
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 3
india.the undergraduate and graduate students met for the first time last night with aditional indian food to discuss the goals for their journey.they will leave december 27 to work with an eye clinic there.group leaders say the clinic helps provide surgery to those who can't afford it-- saving their sight and livelihood. "we've identified 4 different projects for us to meet with the clinicians, observe what's going on and come up with ideas on how to problem solve it. then we will make those presentations to the group." to the united states three weeks later. it's it's a special morning here at broadcast park! park!our annual toys s r tots toy drive is in full swing. we'll head back outside to see good morning, it's on this morning, we'll have a look at some of today's top stories, right after thisis welcome back - dad: i'm on it. culligan man: dude. don't do it yourself. dad: no? culligan man: no. anncr: leave it to the experts. with a culligan whole-house water softening system, you gegebetter water, and service you can actually count on. dad: hey, culligan man. culligan man: hey! dad: this is great! it's called a rigged economy, and this is how it wks. most new wealt
india.the undergraduate and graduate students met for the first time last night with aditional indian food to discuss the goals for their journey.they will leave december 27 to work with an eye clinic there.group leaders say the clinic helps provide surgery to those who can't afford it-- saving their sight and livelihood. "we've identified 4 different projects for us to meet with the clinicians, observe what's going on and come up with ideas on how to problem solve it. then we will make...
157
157
tv
eye 157
favorite 0
quote 0
undergraduate semester in the future. the program counts for in state tuition. you can also use the money for an of state school but there may be other costs. the current program is open from december 1st, that was yesterday, through the end of march next year. >>> a program for preschoolers is kicking off today in washington. word expeditions workshop will help pre-k kids learn vocabulary. the program received a million dollar grant from the kennel wood park side community in northeast washington. they'll host the workshops once a month and the smithsonian castle is hosting a kickoff today. in prince gorges county. an overnight fire heavily damages a home and leaves two people hurt. this dog, however, caused problems for firefighters who were trying to help the victim. news 4's kristen wright is live at the scene with what happened. >>> plus, if you're about to leave for work, take a look at this. this is a live picture in northwest washington. it's a weather alert day because of the heavy fog around here and all of that rain. coming up, when the fog will finally lift and when the heavy rain wi
undergraduate semester in the future. the program counts for in state tuition. you can also use the money for an of state school but there may be other costs. the current program is open from december 1st, that was yesterday, through the end of march next year. >>> a program for preschoolers is kicking off today in washington. word expeditions workshop will help pre-k kids learn vocabulary. the program received a million dollar grant from the kennel wood park side community in...
276
276
Dec 21, 2015
12/15
by
WPVI
tv
eye 276
favorite 0
quote 0
he received his undergraduate degree at chestnut hill college and his master's from philadelphia college of osteopathic medicine. >> well, it was anake last night on live tv during the miss universe pageant. host steve harvey announced the wrong winner. >> i have to apologize. the first runner up is colombia. [cheers and applause] >>> miss universe 2015 is philippines. >> and with there, the outgoing miss universe plucked the crown from the head of miss colombia and placed it on the head of miss philippines. harvey apologized for the mixup. as you might expect though the moment has gone viral. lots of folks are weighing in on social media some even saying the whole thing was a publicity stunt. i don't know. >> wow. >> it was stunt but i don't know if it was publicity. >> i don't know if that's how they wantd that to go. >> matt pelman in the "action news" traffic center with an update how -- uh-oh, 76. >> yeah. >> backed up. >> that's a pretty big oops and this is also an oops along the schuylkill expressway, 76 eastbound rick and sharrie, a crash approaching passyunk avenue taking out the right lane giving us extra heavy conditio
he received his undergraduate degree at chestnut hill college and his master's from philadelphia college of osteopathic medicine. >> well, it was anake last night on live tv during the miss universe pageant. host steve harvey announced the wrong winner. >> i have to apologize. the first runner up is colombia. [cheers and applause] >>> miss universe 2015 is philippines. >> and with there, the outgoing miss universe plucked the crown from the head of miss colombia and...
69
69
Dec 3, 2015
12/15
by
KGAN
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 1
india.the undergraduate and graduate students met for the first time last night with traditional indian food to discuss the goals for their journey.they will leave cember 27 to work with an e clinic there.group leaders say the clinic helps provide surgery to those who can't afford it-- saving their sight and livelihood. "we've identified 4 different projects for us to meet with the clinicians, observrvwhat's going on and come up with ideas on how to problem solve it. then we will make those presentations to the group." group."the group will return to the united states three weeks later. four university of iowa students are attending the conference of parties climate change talks in france.they'll be with 40-thousand delegates from nearly 200 countries trying to find a solution to reduce greenhouse gas emissionsnthe students say they want to bring back new perspectives on issues like water quality - and how that impacts iowans. it's next...the one habit that's life.in your cbs 2 you get better water, and service you can actually count on. dad: hey, culligan man. culligan man: he dad: this is gre! culligan man: i know. you get better water, and service you can actually thi
india.the undergraduate and graduate students met for the first time last night with traditional indian food to discuss the goals for their journey.they will leave cember 27 to work with an e clinic there.group leaders say the clinic helps provide surgery to those who can't afford it-- saving their sight and livelihood. "we've identified 4 different projects for us to meet with the clinicians, observrvwhat's going on and come up with ideas on how to problem solve it. then we will make...
30
30
Dec 20, 2015
12/15
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
an mba at stanford. steve: i love to learn, and that is what i love about being a venture capitalist, i am always learning. at school, i did not want to leave. i rolled from my undergraduateo my masters to a phd, which i didn't intend to take. it sort of happened. i eventually had to get a job, so i took off. i guess hoodies and dropping out was not as popular back then. emily: after you got all this schooling, you went on to work at apple. you worked with steve jobs at next, and he tried to recruit you at pixar. what was your relationship with steve like? steve: it was a short period of time, but it was pretty intense. he was someone who has this incredible, laserlike focus on who he is speaking with. the thing i remember most vividly is the walks that we would go on. i had hoisted into an agreement with him that i would study how he does business. emily: you are like his protege? steve: an acolyte. not that i thought i could be like him, but i can understand him. he was a fascinating individual. emily: how did you get that front row seat? steve: i just asked him. he came to my house to speak at stanford business school, sat across from the fireplace, and talked for, lik
an mba at stanford. steve: i love to learn, and that is what i love about being a venture capitalist, i am always learning. at school, i did not want to leave. i rolled from my undergraduateo my masters to a phd, which i didn't intend to take. it sort of happened. i eventually had to get a job, so i took off. i guess hoodies and dropping out was not as popular back then. emily: after you got all this schooling, you went on to work at apple. you worked with steve jobs at next, and he tried to...
153
153
Dec 16, 2015
12/15
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 153
favorite 0
quote 0
despite the challenges of being an immigrant, she graduated from valley high school in santa ana and received her undergraduate degree from cal state fullerson. last saturday, family and friends gathered at st. barbara's catholic church to mourn the death of this young woman who was known for her incredible spirit and a heart bigger than the sun. let us honor the memory of this extraordinary young woman. she gave so much but her life was tragically cut short by these shootings. thank you, mr. speaker. i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentleman from california seek recognition? >> i ask unanimous consent to address the house for one minute. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentleman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. 224 years ago today, the states ratified the first 10 amendments to our constitution. mr. lamalfa: these remain the bedrock of our society yet even today we see them under attack. free tom of speech is attacked by some, not wanting to hear dissenting opinions. the right to bear arms is under constant threat
despite the challenges of being an immigrant, she graduated from valley high school in santa ana and received her undergraduate degree from cal state fullerson. last saturday, family and friends gathered at st. barbara's catholic church to mourn the death of this young woman who was known for her incredible spirit and a heart bigger than the sun. let us honor the memory of this extraordinary young woman. she gave so much but her life was tragically cut short by these shootings. thank you, mr....