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Jan 21, 2020
01/20
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in the early 1970s the colorado school of minds and dartmouth developed the hls method. the company never adopted the method stating in the early 170s memo that may be too sensitive and not in their best worldwide interest to employ. if the cosmetic powder manufacturers insist on using their talc in cosmetic products it's vital to the public safety that the most sensitive method must be required. there's no dispute that this is the hls preparation method with analysis by tem. even using the best method one can state it does not contain asbestos. the only true solution is to ban the use of talc in cosmetic products. thank you, representatives. >> thank you. next dr. malin. >> good afternoon, i'm honored to be here today. i'm a board certified physician specializing in occupational and environmental medicine which deals with the impact of exposure on the health of individuals including asbestos. it's caused thousands of death in the united states. the fibers are microscopic. once the fibers are breathed in, they can penetrate deeply in the lungs and move throughout the bod
in the early 1970s the colorado school of minds and dartmouth developed the hls method. the company never adopted the method stating in the early 170s memo that may be too sensitive and not in their best worldwide interest to employ. if the cosmetic powder manufacturers insist on using their talc in cosmetic products it's vital to the public safety that the most sensitive method must be required. there's no dispute that this is the hls preparation method with analysis by tem. even using the...
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Jan 23, 2020
01/20
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he has a degree from dartmouth and mba from stanford. i'm delight to have him here know it's smorgasbord of opportunity and ideas and wonderful people that come together, bound together forever because they actually care about energy, they care about the environment and the well-being of the world. step forward, please. [ applause ] >> thank you very much, sheila. good morning, everyone. wonderful to be here and part of the smorgasbord this morning. somewhat analogous of that, i was looking at the lineup of speakers you and barry put together, reminded me of a group of people in a very darkroom and an animal and the elephant, reaching out to feel the tux and tail and leg. i do think the end of the day today you will have an extraordinary summary where we are in u.s. energy and where another going. i hope it is a great day for you. we have a great lineup of speakers. i'd like to start with a few data points or guard rails where i see the wind industry and my good colleague, abbey hopper, with solar will follow because there is a lot of gr
he has a degree from dartmouth and mba from stanford. i'm delight to have him here know it's smorgasbord of opportunity and ideas and wonderful people that come together, bound together forever because they actually care about energy, they care about the environment and the well-being of the world. step forward, please. [ applause ] >> thank you very much, sheila. good morning, everyone. wonderful to be here and part of the smorgasbord this morning. somewhat analogous of that, i was...
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Jan 5, 2020
01/20
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dubois and william lewis and many of those graduates of amherst or dartmouth, they might be the only black person on their campus but they would come out and hang out with trotter and one of the things that trotter shared was that many members of that class once they graduated disavowed their earlier activism for the sake of their careers so one of the things i argue in the book is the way he was able to get into these communities that he didn't live in is you would call out members of his former cohorts who were met leaders in these communities so the leader of the ame church in pennsylvania in the 20th century, the leader of the church in rural new york who then became a trotter convert who had gone to the theological seminary and disavowed his activism and trotter called him out in the church and said you were the person who protested in 1893, why aren't you protesting now and he had a miracle and starts subscribing to the guardian so one of the things i argue is that shamelessness was part of his strength and his downfall. cause you can't be that intense all the time but he defin
dubois and william lewis and many of those graduates of amherst or dartmouth, they might be the only black person on their campus but they would come out and hang out with trotter and one of the things that trotter shared was that many members of that class once they graduated disavowed their earlier activism for the sake of their careers so one of the things i argue in the book is the way he was able to get into these communities that he didn't live in is you would call out members of his...
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Jan 26, 2020
01/20
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you get to the umass dartmouth or whatever, university of wisconsin green bay places. they are aware of the fact the have a problem. nobody of this place will say no, we don't have any kind of problem. they may say gee, it's our students. it seems to me the pushback that look, this institution just like you has a graduation rate of 15% higher. they must be doing something right. that's a part of the story. i also think if i were in a state position i would be encouraging aggregations of community college, university and high schools at industry and metropolitan areas to work together so you don't have these courses that are sort of all over the place. it's not enough, for example, that community colleges courses count for credits at the university. you've got to build a curriculum which brings together the university professor and the community college professor so there's a real on rent. if you said that at an elite institution there would be a lot of eyebrow raising. if you said that at the university of central florida, that's what they do. they have faculty from un
you get to the umass dartmouth or whatever, university of wisconsin green bay places. they are aware of the fact the have a problem. nobody of this place will say no, we don't have any kind of problem. they may say gee, it's our students. it seems to me the pushback that look, this institution just like you has a graduation rate of 15% higher. they must be doing something right. that's a part of the story. i also think if i were in a state position i would be encouraging aggregations of...
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Jan 30, 2020
01/20
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LINKTV
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." >> she does a great job of taking it all the way back to dartmouth where you had a group males comingether to decide what intelligence might look like. here you are saying, something that looks like intelligence. the thing about artificial intelligence is what it is changes. as machines get better at specific kinds of tasks, you might say that is not truly intelligence. it is a moving line. amy: shalini kantayya, why don't you talk about how you came up with the idea for "coded bias." of this central figure film. take the history further. >> basically, i was sort of like a scieience fiction fanatic. i like reading about technology and imagining the future. i think so much of what we think about artificial intelligence comes from scieience fiction. it is s sort of f the stuff of " blade runner" and "the terminator." whenen i started readiding and listening to ted talks by joy and another mathematician named , ihy o'neill other women realize that artificial intelligence was something entirely different in the now. it was becoming a gatekeeper, making automated decisions about who gets h
." >> she does a great job of taking it all the way back to dartmouth where you had a group males comingether to decide what intelligence might look like. here you are saying, something that looks like intelligence. the thing about artificial intelligence is what it is changes. as machines get better at specific kinds of tasks, you might say that is not truly intelligence. it is a moving line. amy: shalini kantayya, why don't you talk about how you came up with the idea for...
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Jan 14, 2020
01/20
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KGO
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that's according to dartmouth college professor david blancheflower, who found middle age is the moste narrowed down the point of peak unhappiness. he says it's age 47.2 years. he came up with that age by studying data from 132 countries and measured the relationship between well-being and age. and the findings were released by the bureau of economic research. personally at age 47.2, i was quite happy. >> i 1 was fine at 47. when i got the point two. >> it all went downhill. >> what is that based on? are they random sample. ing and saying are you happy or not? >> does it come down to your finances? >> your career. >> i'm not going to be able to retire? >> my thought would be that period as you approach 50 for men and women is a transitionary period. maybe your kids are a little older and you're in that transition area between a young career and moving into what the rest of your life might be like. >> that makes sense. >> that's a guess. junior psychologist, but that's my guess. >> i'd take it. office hours are open. >> i'll be there later. >> a bit of a longing for 47 all of the sudde
that's according to dartmouth college professor david blancheflower, who found middle age is the moste narrowed down the point of peak unhappiness. he says it's age 47.2 years. he came up with that age by studying data from 132 countries and measured the relationship between well-being and age. and the findings were released by the bureau of economic research. personally at age 47.2, i was quite happy. >> i 1 was fine at 47. when i got the point two. >> it all went downhill....
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Jan 4, 2020
01/20
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CSPAN3
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pleasure for me tonight to introduce randall blamer who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time. his undergraduate work was done where my father and my brother attended that school at the same time, and randy has turned into one of our great modern american historians. one of the things that makes him great is that he minds the resources of the presidential libraries. he has come here to the carter library and has gone through and found a very interesting document that other people have not seen before and he has done that at other presidential libraries. combined with that he is also mind the resources of the archives on various evangelical organizations that have become involved in politics. and in addition to that on top of his research skills come he , he is an excellent writer. i've had the privilege of reading many of his books including the one that's just come out. and i can tell you that as much as i followed the subjects and have done my own research there were many points i came across new information and said wow ,
pleasure for me tonight to introduce randall blamer who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time. his undergraduate work was done where my father and my brother attended that school at the same time, and randy has turned into one of our great modern american historians. one of the things that makes him great is that he minds the resources of the presidential libraries. he has come here to the carter library and has gone...
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Jan 23, 2020
01/20
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he has a degree from dartmouth and mba from stanford.elighted to have him here that we have a smorgasbord of opportunity and ideas and wonderful people that come together, down together forever because they actually care about energy, they care about the environment, and they care about the well being of the world. step forward, please, tom. [ applause ] >> thank you very much. good morning, everyone. it's wonderful to be here. wonderful to be part of the smorgasbord this morning. somewhat analogous to that i was looking over the lineup of speakers that you have put together. did remind me of that buddhist parable, group of people in a dark room with an animal. some say it's an elephant. at the end of the day today you'll have an extraordinary summary of where we are in u.s. energy and where we're going. so i hope it is a great day for you. we got a great lineup of speakers. with that what i would like to do this morning is start with just a few data points or guardrails as to where i see the wind energy industry and then i know my good
he has a degree from dartmouth and mba from stanford.elighted to have him here that we have a smorgasbord of opportunity and ideas and wonderful people that come together, down together forever because they actually care about energy, they care about the environment, and they care about the well being of the world. step forward, please, tom. [ applause ] >> thank you very much. good morning, everyone. it's wonderful to be here. wonderful to be part of the smorgasbord this morning....
89
89
Jan 4, 2020
01/20
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pleasure for me tonight to introduce randall blamer who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time.
pleasure for me tonight to introduce randall blamer who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time.
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249
Jan 15, 2020
01/20
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KPIX
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this is according to a dartmouth professor.d countries. but don't lose hope. the study finds happiness peaks again in the 70s when it goes back to the levels in the 20s. we had someone on recently daniel levin about aging successly. he said he reach your peak happiness at 82. >> i've got something to look forward to. >> you're on the way to happiness. the road signs i'm saying are danger ahead. >> down and dark for you. >> i disagree with 47.2 that you're miserable. >> it makes sense to me. you've got old parents. you've got young kids. you've got all kinds. >> the rock and roll hall of fame announced official 2020 class. it includes posthumous honors. take a look ♪ it was all a dream i used to read word up magazine ♪ ♪ heavy d in the limousine hang your pictures on my wall ♪ >> notorious b.i.g., biggie small, christopher wallace will be inducted. other inductees include depeche mode, the doobie brothers. it will be held mei 2nd in cleveland. >> that's great biggie made it. big difference between george wallace and christopher
this is according to a dartmouth professor.d countries. but don't lose hope. the study finds happiness peaks again in the 70s when it goes back to the levels in the 20s. we had someone on recently daniel levin about aging successly. he said he reach your peak happiness at 82. >> i've got something to look forward to. >> you're on the way to happiness. the road signs i'm saying are danger ahead. >> down and dark for you. >> i disagree with 47.2 that you're miserable....
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Jan 14, 2020
01/20
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FOXNEWSW
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is that true unhappiest age a dartmouth college professor studied people around the world happiness betweenn. happiness levels peak in a person's '70s. steve: i worried about money but never about globalization. meanwhile, 7:30 in new york city. we all heard this breakfast is the most important meal of the day. watch this clip again. >> you eat breakfast, yes? breakfast is most important meal of day. protein good for bones. brian: forgot that part. next guest says it's all a lie. it looks so real and wants to cancel breakfast in 2020. guess who is here? ainsley: the host of the dr. oz show dr. mehmet oz. >> good morning. brian: you are proponent of intermittent fasting. >> i don't think so you should eat breakfast until 3 or 4 hours after you are awaken. launched most successful program for new years' ever. 20 steps to reduce your chance of chronic illness and if you need to lose weight. study. if anyone wants this on dr. oz.com. here is the key the foundation of this program, which includes meditation and exercise and some snacks. it's all about intermittent fasting. a huge study just came
is that true unhappiest age a dartmouth college professor studied people around the world happiness betweenn. happiness levels peak in a person's '70s. steve: i worried about money but never about globalization. meanwhile, 7:30 in new york city. we all heard this breakfast is the most important meal of the day. watch this clip again. >> you eat breakfast, yes? breakfast is most important meal of day. protein good for bones. brian: forgot that part. next guest says it's all a lie. it looks...
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Jan 12, 2020
01/20
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eye 23
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tonight to introduce randall blamer who balmer, who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time. his undergraduate work was done where my father and my brother attended that school at the same time, and randy has turned into one of our great modern american historians. one of the things that makes him great is that he minds the resources of the presidential libraries.
tonight to introduce randall blamer who balmer, who is the family professor of arts and sciences at dartmouth college. i have followed his career for a long time. his undergraduate work was done where my father and my brother attended that school at the same time, and randy has turned into one of our great modern american historians. one of the things that makes him great is that he minds the resources of the presidential libraries.