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Jul 9, 2021
07/21
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he is at dartmouth college.i look at where we are, and the first name i came up with -- and you are the first name i came up with. what i want to talk about is the primal scream nature of the 72 point executive order. who is screaming about consolidation in america? danny: i guess the way you would think of it now is that workers have been hurting. nonworkers have been hurting. they've been hit by a serious pandemic, and it's had a big impact on the world. but this sits on the end of many decades of poor wage growth, and the balance of power between workers and firms has shifted quite considerably compared to where it was. so this is, i've read it very quickly in the last 20 minutes, the kind of primal scream to try to redress the balance of power between workers and firms. i think the market response is very little. the question is, does it have any teeth? is it merely wishful thinking? so this is trying to think about some of the stories about big firms, about google, facebook, and so on. but this is a scream,
he is at dartmouth college.i look at where we are, and the first name i came up with -- and you are the first name i came up with. what i want to talk about is the primal scream nature of the 72 point executive order. who is screaming about consolidation in america? danny: i guess the way you would think of it now is that workers have been hurting. nonworkers have been hurting. they've been hit by a serious pandemic, and it's had a big impact on the world. but this sits on the end of many...
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Jul 29, 2021
07/21
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BLOOMBERG
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i went on a college tour and dartmouth was one of the places we visited.tly, i fell in love with the place when we got there. it was beautiful, it was in the middle of nowhere, it felt very much to me what college was meant to be. everyone was really friendly and had something great to say about it. very different from a lot of the other colleges i went to. it was surprisingly diverse at the time. i think they had, what might not see mike a big number now, but 18% of the students were students of color, or something like that. and it felt very welcoming. and i thought, this is the place for me. david: when you graduated you said ok, now i am going to go into something important like private equity or investment banking? or not? shonda: i was really lost for a little while when i got out of college, because i really wanted to be a writer. but i didn't know how to do that. and also, my parents had sacrificed a lot financially for me to go to the school, and i did not want to be a disappointment. so, i got a job in advertising for a little bit. and then i rea
i went on a college tour and dartmouth was one of the places we visited.tly, i fell in love with the place when we got there. it was beautiful, it was in the middle of nowhere, it felt very much to me what college was meant to be. everyone was really friendly and had something great to say about it. very different from a lot of the other colleges i went to. it was surprisingly diverse at the time. i think they had, what might not see mike a big number now, but 18% of the students were students...
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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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david: how did you happen to pick dartmouth?t is fairly isolated and different from chicago. >> i went on a college tour and it was one of the places we visited. honestly, i fell in love when i got there. it was beautiful, it was in the middle of nowhere, and felt like what college was supposed to be good everybody was friendly and had great things to say about it. it is different from the other colleges i went to. it was surprisingly diverse at the time. it had what might not seem like a big number now but 18% were students of color. it felt very welcoming. i felt like this was the place for me. i loved my time there. david: when you graduated, you said you would get into private equity or what? >> i was lost for a while after college. i wanted to be a writer. i wanted to be toni morrison when i grew up. i did not know how to do that. my parents at sacrificed a lot financially for me to go to the school. i didn't want to be a disappointment. i got a job in advertising for a little bit. i read an article that said it was harder
david: how did you happen to pick dartmouth?t is fairly isolated and different from chicago. >> i went on a college tour and it was one of the places we visited. honestly, i fell in love when i got there. it was beautiful, it was in the middle of nowhere, and felt like what college was supposed to be good everybody was friendly and had great things to say about it. it is different from the other colleges i went to. it was surprisingly diverse at the time. it had what might not seem like a...
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a new study from dartmouth and brown university warns that the u.s.out covid-19 than even scientific journals on things like school reopenings and declining, declining covid cases. that is up next on "the evening edit." stay right there. >> we shouldn't allow tony fauci and facebook to determine what we can and cannot say about this virus. from the beginning he has been giving politicized advice. he admitted he changed his advice based on what would be herd immunity levels, not based on what he thinks he sighs in ss in the data but based on what he thinks the american people are ready to hear. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪♪ comfort in the extreme. ♪♪ the lincoln family of luxury suvs. ♪♪ among my patients i often see them have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. the lincoln family of luxury suvs. does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. we made usaa insurance for members like martin.
a new study from dartmouth and brown university warns that the u.s.out covid-19 than even scientific journals on things like school reopenings and declining, declining covid cases. that is up next on "the evening edit." stay right there. >> we shouldn't allow tony fauci and facebook to determine what we can and cannot say about this virus. from the beginning he has been giving politicized advice. he admitted he changed his advice based on what would be herd immunity levels, not...
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Jul 24, 2021
07/21
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FOXNEWSW
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i went to dartmouth, we used to be the dartmouth indians, that was the big green and the woods or something but anyway they announced this change was a rather cheesy little video narrated by none other than tom hanks. >> we move forward with change, there has always been cleveland, that's the best part of our name and now it is time to unite as one family, one community to build the next era for this team and together we are the cleveland guardians. >> was he talking like this? celtic a bad movie trailer. >> tom hanks is an incredible actor. they kept the d i a n s and replace the iron on the name and added gu ar, i misspelling be expanded want to screw that because we go viral if i did. is the truth. it never ends. i wish you and me and other reasonable people can sit across the table and say let's decide the mascot controversy forever but now that the indians of change the name you know where this is heading, chicago blackhawks, atlanta braves, kansas city chiefs, this is not crazy but that is where we are at it, the notre dame fighting irish, the mascot, they're going to try to take it a
i went to dartmouth, we used to be the dartmouth indians, that was the big green and the woods or something but anyway they announced this change was a rather cheesy little video narrated by none other than tom hanks. >> we move forward with change, there has always been cleveland, that's the best part of our name and now it is time to unite as one family, one community to build the next era for this team and together we are the cleveland guardians. >> was he talking like this?...
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Jul 24, 2021
07/21
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FOXNEWSW
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to be the dartmouth indians and then it was the big green and we call it the woods or something. green was maybe too -- anyway, they announced this change with a rather cheesy little video narrated by none other than tom hanks. watch. >> we move forward with change. you see, there's always been to cleveland. that's the best part of our name. and now it's time to unite as one family, one community, to build the next era for this team and together, we are all cleveland guardians. >> laura: why is he talking like this? it sounds like a really bad movie trailer. the guardians, what is happening? >> tom hanks is an incredible actor but this is so funny. this is so funny. they just -- come on, they replace the "in" on the jersey and they added "guard." here's the truth, it never ends. i wish that you and me and other regional people would sit down and say let's decide this mascot controversy forever but now that the indians change their name coming over this is happen, chicago blackhawks, atlanta braves, kansas city chiefs. >> laura: blah, blah, blah. speak of this is where we are head
to be the dartmouth indians and then it was the big green and we call it the woods or something. green was maybe too -- anyway, they announced this change with a rather cheesy little video narrated by none other than tom hanks. watch. >> we move forward with change. you see, there's always been to cleveland. that's the best part of our name. and now it's time to unite as one family, one community, to build the next era for this team and together, we are all cleveland guardians. >>...
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we caught up with the expert for african art at the you art center in dartmouth, where she is planning and exhibition of contemporary art from ghana. i'm from one part of that well, which are cultural expressions and ways of seeing what a certain expense impressed. and i think my mission in a way is to bring these back to the forefront and show that value again. so that we have the fullness of being moved between culture. she was born in germany, but today's grand daughter is a guinea and king lives across her story as migration provide at the background for her debut novel that the god child child. very much still the colonial hang up. you know, parents said to us, especially when you grew up in europe and abroad, you know, you always have to be better than them in order to be taken half seriously. you have to speak better, you have to be more intelligent. you have to work hard. it's very much, you know, we have to still fight and prove ourselves to be equal. in the novel, she is my own, the only black girl in 1974 player has being perceived as different is a defining experience. her
we caught up with the expert for african art at the you art center in dartmouth, where she is planning and exhibition of contemporary art from ghana. i'm from one part of that well, which are cultural expressions and ways of seeing what a certain expense impressed. and i think my mission in a way is to bring these back to the forefront and show that value again. so that we have the fullness of being moved between culture. she was born in germany, but today's grand daughter is a guinea and king...
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and if rosa wants to build on dartmouth german cup victory last season, he'll have to do it without one of his new clubs. best players dormant confirm jaden santo has been sold to premier league giant's manchester, united. the 21 year old blossomed into one of the buddhist leaders, most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64 assists. in 137 appearances the england international will join manchester, united for a reported 85000000 euros or dorman would have preferred not to sell him. central has long been looking to return to the premier league after coming up to the manchester city. youth ranks that are not the fantastic father, not one another. jayden was always very professional and he was really excellent for us late last season. so for the basket, we're not happy about the money. the instead we're sad, he's leaving because at the very least market rosa will have plenty to invest in his new squad as he prepares for the bundle we get campaign. even with santa leaving pressure is high. you're watching the w news of next are internationa
and if rosa wants to build on dartmouth german cup victory last season, he'll have to do it without one of his new clubs. best players dormant confirm jaden santo has been sold to premier league giant's manchester, united. the 21 year old blossomed into one of the buddhist leaders, most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64 assists. in 137 appearances the england international will join manchester, united for a reported 85000000 euros or dorman...
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Jul 6, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN2
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he turned down offers from places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin, he could've gotten tenure and worked and any economics department in the country. he was a quite talented scholar in his discipline before he ever began writing about racial controversy. just a number of academic publications surpassed most people in the field. but where he went into trouble was the faculty lounge. the college administrators with his teaching style anything part of the problem was this was the 19 fifties and higher education was changing. you had a women's rights movement and antiwar movement and gay rights and all these things are w coming together and college campuses were platforms and time was of a differenthi generation. i think he intended to teach the way he was taught and that was hard in the fifties that became very difficult to do but the professors and administrators were encouraged to be much o more indulgent than anything he had experienced and he would not bend so i think it reached ahead at cornell in the late fifties he was there for the protest on faculty at the time and i thi
he turned down offers from places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin, he could've gotten tenure and worked and any economics department in the country. he was a quite talented scholar in his discipline before he ever began writing about racial controversy. just a number of academic publications surpassed most people in the field. but where he went into trouble was the faculty lounge. the college administrators with his teaching style anything part of the problem was this was the 19 fifties...
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Jul 2, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN2
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he turned down offers at places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin. he could have gotten tenure and worked at any economics department in the country. he was quite talented in his discipline before he ever began writing about racial controversy and the number of academic publications. he had trouble with the faculty lounge. i think part of the problem was this was the 1960s and higher education was changing. you had the women's rights movement,h antiwar movement, all these things coming together. college campuses were being used as platforms for this sort of thing and tom was of a different generation. i think that he intended to teach the way that he was taught and that was hard starting in the 1960s. it became very very difficult to do. the professors and the administrators were much moret than anything tom had experienced. so, i think it reached ahead for him. he was there for the student protests and he was on the faculty at the time and i think that might have been the breaking point for him. eventually by the end of the 70s but his first love ha
he turned down offers at places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin. he could have gotten tenure and worked at any economics department in the country. he was quite talented in his discipline before he ever began writing about racial controversy and the number of academic publications. he had trouble with the faculty lounge. i think part of the problem was this was the 1960s and higher education was changing. you had the women's rights movement,h antiwar movement, all these things coming...
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the cup last season as lead to shot and dimple cause of shaft up and a frozen wants to build on dartmouth his german cup victory. last season, he'll have to do it without one of his new clubs. best players. norman confirmed jayden santo has been sold to premier league giant manchester, united with 21 year old blossomed into one of the bonus leaders, most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64. in 137 appearances. the england international will join manchester, united for a reported 85000000 euros, or dorman would have preferred not to sell him. central has long been looking to return to the premier league after coming up to the manchester city. youth ranks that nothing. fantastic thought it not on her, never kayden was always very professional, and he was really excellent for us late last season. so for basket, we're not happy about the money. the instead we're sad, he's leaving that because at the very least market rosa will have plenty to invest in his new squad as he prepares for the bonus league campaign. even with santa leaving pressu
the cup last season as lead to shot and dimple cause of shaft up and a frozen wants to build on dartmouth his german cup victory. last season, he'll have to do it without one of his new clubs. best players. norman confirmed jayden santo has been sold to premier league giant manchester, united with 21 year old blossomed into one of the bonus leaders, most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64. in 137 appearances. the england international will...
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Jul 6, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN2
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laughter] >> comput have worked at any university he wanted to, he turned down offers to places likehe dartmouthiversity of wisconsin, he could have worked at any department in the country, he was quite talented in his discipline before he even began writing on racial controversies and so forth. a number of academic publications and so forth. when he rannd into trouble with was faculty from the college administrators have different teaching style and i think part of the problem was this was the 1960s higher education was changing. you had a woman's right movement, gait movement, antiwar movement, all of these things are coming together. college campuses were using the platform for this sort of thing and tom was a different generation, he intended to teach the way he was taught and that was part, starting in the 1960s, that became very difficult to do. the professors and administrators born much more indulgent than anything he experienced and he just was not so i think it reached a head for him in the 60s, he was on the faculty at the time and i think that might have been the break for him and he
laughter] >> comput have worked at any university he wanted to, he turned down offers to places likehe dartmouthiversity of wisconsin, he could have worked at any department in the country, he was quite talented in his discipline before he even began writing on racial controversies and so forth. a number of academic publications and so forth. when he rannd into trouble with was faculty from the college administrators have different teaching style and i think part of the problem was this...
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Jul 28, 2021
07/21
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BLOOMBERG
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david: she grew up in chicago and went to dartmouth and decided to get into writing after she tried herdvertising. it turns out she is the greatest writer and producer in recent hollywood history and is the most powerful force at netflix because the show she just produced and wrote has broken all of the records for netflix. an incredible talent, very nice person. i've got to know her over the years because she was on the kennedy center board for six years and she still helped serve on the kennedy center honors selection committee. she is incredibly smart, good writer, very creative, and a very likable person. tom: is she her business person or does she have people around her that help her? david: she is not that focused on money so much as creativity. she does have people that manage her money, but she does not measure her self-worth by her neck work. she is not trying to be the richest person in hollywood. she tried to create good shows and now she has adopted three young girls and she is raising them as well as doing all of the other things. she is gritting a lot of shows -- she does
david: she grew up in chicago and went to dartmouth and decided to get into writing after she tried herdvertising. it turns out she is the greatest writer and producer in recent hollywood history and is the most powerful force at netflix because the show she just produced and wrote has broken all of the records for netflix. an incredible talent, very nice person. i've got to know her over the years because she was on the kennedy center board for six years and she still helped serve on the...
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best players, dartmouth, confirm. jayden. sanchez has been sold to premier league giant manchester united with 21 year old blossomed into one of the abundance leaders most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64 assist in 137 appearances. the england international joint manchester, united for a reported 85000000 euros or dorman would have preferred not to sell him. central has long been looking to return to the premier league after coming up to the manchester city. youth ranks that not the fantastic fathers not going to her, never jayden was always very professional and he was really excellent for us late last season. so for basket, we're not happy about the money. the, instead we're sad, he's leaving that because at the very least market rosa will have plenty to invest in his new squad as he prepares for the bonus league campaign. even with santo leaving pressure is high. british royal princes, william and harry have appeared in public together to unveil a statue of their late
best players, dartmouth, confirm. jayden. sanchez has been sold to premier league giant manchester united with 21 year old blossomed into one of the abundance leaders most exhilarating attackers in his 40 years at dormant, dodging an incredible 50 goals and 64 assist in 137 appearances. the england international joint manchester, united for a reported 85000000 euros or dorman would have preferred not to sell him. central has long been looking to return to the premier league after coming up to...
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Jul 9, 2021
07/21
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BLOOMBERG
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blanchflower of dartmouth said it is there, it is policy. does it have any power?oes it have any strength? it is a margin call for corporations to respond every single one of those items they are going to have to respond to it. jonathan: the emphasis is clear, and worth pointing out. this is about competition. i think it is something we all want to see. romaine: and when it gets to tom's point -- when it comes to tom's point, does this may be give you second thoughts about this, or do you move forward with it and try to test this new policy and this administration on what it thinks about anti-committed to practices. jonathan: we will talk to terry jane's -- to terry haines of pangaea policy about this very issue. alongside tom, i'm jonathan ferro, together this morning with romaine bostick. i believe lisa is back on monday. tom: hard to believe. jonathan: getting some sleep maybe next week, romaine? do you go to the gym? romaine: i used to, before i started doing this show. [laughter] jonathan: this is bloomberg. ♪ ♪ ♪ look, if your wireless carrier was a guy you'd
blanchflower of dartmouth said it is there, it is policy. does it have any power?oes it have any strength? it is a margin call for corporations to respond every single one of those items they are going to have to respond to it. jonathan: the emphasis is clear, and worth pointing out. this is about competition. i think it is something we all want to see. romaine: and when it gets to tom's point -- when it comes to tom's point, does this may be give you second thoughts about this, or do you move...
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Jul 2, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN2
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this is man, he turned down offers from places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin.e could've gotten tenure and worked at any economics department in the country. it's quite clear he was a quite talented scholar in his discipline. writinge ever began about racial controversies and so forth, there's been a number of academic publications of so forth that surpassed most people in the field. what tom ran into trouble was with the faculty lounge. the college administrators and so forth. part of the problem was this was the 1960s, , dennis, and higher education was changing. you had women's rights movement, a gay-rights movement, andth antiwar movement, all these things are coming together, college campuses were being used as platforms for the sort of thing and tom was of a different generation. i think he intended to teach the way he was taught and that was hard starting in the 1960s, that became very, very difficult to do. the professors in the administrators were encouraged to be much more indulgent anything tom had w experienced d he just would not bend. i think it re
this is man, he turned down offers from places like dartmouth, university of wisconsin.e could've gotten tenure and worked at any economics department in the country. it's quite clear he was a quite talented scholar in his discipline. writinge ever began about racial controversies and so forth, there's been a number of academic publications of so forth that surpassed most people in the field. what tom ran into trouble was with the faculty lounge. the college administrators and so forth. part of...
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Jul 21, 2021
07/21
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CNNW
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just this morning a professor of biology at dartmouth said what he's seen in his own work whether vaccinatedeople can transmit the virus to e.rothers >> undoubtedly it can happen but i think there need to be specific circumstances, like you are symptomatic, our sharing a small space. we've seen vaccinated people test positive, but we've yet to see a vaccinated person test positive and infect another person to date. >> what should vaccinated people take away from that, and do you agree in general with the sentiment he expressed there? >> i do agree in general. let's be scientifically specific about how people transmit the virus from an infected person to someone who's not. you have to have enough viral load in your body to spread it. then that virus has to take hold in the uninfected person and start to replicate. that's what the transmission consists of. that's why masks work. it lessens the amount of virus that gets spread from one person to another. that's why the delta variant is scarier, because delta seems to create higher viral loads more quickly in infected people. up until now the va
just this morning a professor of biology at dartmouth said what he's seen in his own work whether vaccinatedeople can transmit the virus to e.rothers >> undoubtedly it can happen but i think there need to be specific circumstances, like you are symptomatic, our sharing a small space. we've seen vaccinated people test positive, but we've yet to see a vaccinated person test positive and infect another person to date. >> what should vaccinated people take away from that, and do you...
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Jul 3, 2021
07/21
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MSNBCW
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he was attending dartmouth. he said the process of establishing residency in the state took a full month. he needed a letter from his school to prove to the town clerk he actually lived where he lived. he had to drive 45 minutes each way to the dmv to set up his new license. he paid $300 to register his car in order to establish residency in new hampshire. the student likened the tax to a poll tax, the price to access the ballot box. he sued. that student along with a few of his classmates filed a lawsuit to overturn that republican voter legislation in new hampshire which they said encroached on their right to vote. today, the supreme court in new hampshire agreed. in a unanimous ruling, the highest court in new hampshire overturned that republican voter law of 2017. the court ruled that the law made it more confusing to vote and could deter people from trying to register. they wrote in the ruling that the bill, quote, imposes unreasonable burdens on the right to vote. so they ordered that the law, quote, must
he was attending dartmouth. he said the process of establishing residency in the state took a full month. he needed a letter from his school to prove to the town clerk he actually lived where he lived. he had to drive 45 minutes each way to the dmv to set up his new license. he paid $300 to register his car in order to establish residency in new hampshire. the student likened the tax to a poll tax, the price to access the ballot box. he sued. that student along with a few of his classmates...
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Jul 21, 2021
07/21
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CNNW
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a biology professor at the university of massachusetts dartmouth with us now. look, i'm sure that you're hearing from your friends, people around you, this is the hot topic, right, for vaccinated people. can we get it? should we be worried? what do you say? >> well, good morning, brianna. we know there are breakthrough cases and we knew they were going to happen right from the start when they released the phase 3 data that said that the vaccines were roughly 95% effective. so, basic math, at least five out of every 100 cases were going to be breakthrough cases. so, seeing them now is really not unsurprising in that the greatest scheme of the pandemic. it's just that people have been caught by surprise. i'm fully vaccinated. i've changed my behavior. i'm out going to restaurants and bars and clubs. oh, no, i got infected. and these -- we just knew it was going to happen. it's sort of caught the public by surprise. >> so let's talk about what this means operationally, if we can. the cdc lists a number of actives that it says is safe for vaccinated americans to do
a biology professor at the university of massachusetts dartmouth with us now. look, i'm sure that you're hearing from your friends, people around you, this is the hot topic, right, for vaccinated people. can we get it? should we be worried? what do you say? >> well, good morning, brianna. we know there are breakthrough cases and we knew they were going to happen right from the start when they released the phase 3 data that said that the vaccines were roughly 95% effective. so, basic math,...
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Jul 26, 2021
07/21
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CNNW
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joining me now to answer some of your questions is aaron brommage from the use of massachusetts dartmouths thinking let's break the questions into for vaccinated and for unvaccinated. because it is like two different things, two different groups, two different americas right now. when it comes to schools, i notice that one major difference for the start of this year versus last we're is there seems to be near universal agreement that kids need to be in the classrooms if at all possible. for the vaccinated and for those who still aren't or can't be yet, how is the start of school going to be different? >> well thank you for having me on, kate. the school year should be the same as what it was last august and september when we went back. we knew the ways to get schools back safely. it is taking care of the air, it is >>> making sure big cohorts of children don't mix together. it can be done safely. we've now lowered the risk more by having any teacher that wanted to get a vaccine has now had it. anyone over the age of 12 now has the opportunity to actually have the vaccine and have that lay
joining me now to answer some of your questions is aaron brommage from the use of massachusetts dartmouths thinking let's break the questions into for vaccinated and for unvaccinated. because it is like two different things, two different groups, two different americas right now. when it comes to schools, i notice that one major difference for the start of this year versus last we're is there seems to be near universal agreement that kids need to be in the classrooms if at all possible. for the...
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elizabeth: let's talk about this dartmouth college brown university national bureau of economic researchrelentlessly more negative about9 covid-19 then even science journals or thehe foreign press u.s. media going negative light cases dropping, schools reopening, vaccines working and now we have this the media and many of the left-wing media pushing on critical race theory parents are fighting back against the teachers union on that and the teachers union demanding more from mandatory and evacuation of all students and staffers before they reopen what do you say to this. >> parents are not only fighting back but they're getting arrested at school board meetings for speaking up against mandated vaccinates same or critical race theory, this is incredible what is happening in this country and i think many americans like myself included my family and friends and neighbors were turning off the news at night because it'st so inegative. elizabeth: at least six states have passed bills to ban critical race theory at least 20 more considering similar legislation we've got cnn accused of gas light
elizabeth: let's talk about this dartmouth college brown university national bureau of economic researchrelentlessly more negative about9 covid-19 then even science journals or thehe foreign press u.s. media going negative light cases dropping, schools reopening, vaccines working and now we have this the media and many of the left-wing media pushing on critical race theory parents are fighting back against the teachers union on that and the teachers union demanding more from mandatory and...
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dartmouth college, brown university, national bureau of economic research, published their study that than even science, journals or the foreign press. u.s. media even going negative on things like cases dropping, schools reopening, vaccines working. and now we have this, the media, many in the left-wing media is pushing on critical race theory. parents are fighting back against the teachers union on that and the teachers union demanding mandatory vaccination of all students and staff before they reopen. what do you say to this? >> well, parents not only are they fighting back but getting arrested at school board meetings for speaking up against mandated vaccinations or critical race theory. this is, it is incredible what is happening in this country. i think like many americans, like myself included, my family, my friends, my neighbors, we're often turning off the news at night because it is so negative. elizabeth: you know at least six states have passed bills that is moving to ban concepts associated with critical race theory. at least 20 more are considering similar legislation. w
dartmouth college, brown university, national bureau of economic research, published their study that than even science, journals or the foreign press. u.s. media even going negative on things like cases dropping, schools reopening, vaccines working. and now we have this, the media, many in the left-wing media is pushing on critical race theory. parents are fighting back against the teachers union on that and the teachers union demanding mandatory vaccination of all students and staff before...
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Jul 30, 2021
07/21
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a little autobiographical, i came to washington in 1985 the same year as a conservative guy from dartmouthrom chicago. we were part of the same community of conservatives and politicians. i saw a youtube today of him showing bits of really emotional testimony and he is laughing at them for being wimps and cowards and it was repulsive. to think i spent part of my career as a community and half of the community went off into the never-trump world, which i did, and the other half went completely bonkers, in my view, and, so, he is part of that community and tucker carlson and the people we grew up with. that's in my little world, but that's the republican world that people went off in radically different directions from the reagan years, and that's part of our national life. and i wonder where the elected officials, where they're going to end up because eventually you have to decide whether you're going to be with suza or reality. so this hearing was a little piece of where is the american right going to evolve. >> if i could say quickly, i think one of the depressing things particularly abou
a little autobiographical, i came to washington in 1985 the same year as a conservative guy from dartmouthrom chicago. we were part of the same community of conservatives and politicians. i saw a youtube today of him showing bits of really emotional testimony and he is laughing at them for being wimps and cowards and it was repulsive. to think i spent part of my career as a community and half of the community went off into the never-trump world, which i did, and the other half went completely...
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Jul 6, 2021
07/21
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linked the critique of slavery to colonial protests in a poem she rode out to be handed liberty to dartmouth this gesture hope set in motion her trip to london, and the publication of her book. which boston patriots had been afraid to touch precisely because they were worried it would encourage already common critiques of patriot apocryphal. while in london it was suggested publicly that should be freed. in her 1773 poem she downplayed somewhat her linkage of herself, of criticisms a slavery and race thinking to the colonial protests. in 1773, and four years afterwards, both patriots and tories roulette read her book could buy the anti slavery ethos that she embodied. and convey implicitly a explicitly to their political outlook. that was intentional and effective, in short phyllis weekly hedged her bets, was more effective in doing so. mark peterson in his important new book on boston, and in a paper that i and probably others of you have heard or read earlier, has argued that the revolution cut off wheelies atlantic tides. indeed, she did lose patrons in war times. despite publishing poems
linked the critique of slavery to colonial protests in a poem she rode out to be handed liberty to dartmouth this gesture hope set in motion her trip to london, and the publication of her book. which boston patriots had been afraid to touch precisely because they were worried it would encourage already common critiques of patriot apocryphal. while in london it was suggested publicly that should be freed. in her 1773 poem she downplayed somewhat her linkage of herself, of criticisms a slavery...
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Jul 6, 2021
07/21
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they didn't stay there i am the anomaly to leave texas to go to school in new hampshire at dartmouth. but to live outside of texas. most of my family is in texas. when they left to go somewhere he went to dallas or san antonio. they did not come to new york or l.a. most of my family is still there. host: bacteria book on page t101 i was taken to see it with my best friend. >> it was a big deal in those days there is a little town outside of houston now of course houston has reached out and encroached upon all of that area but it is an exciting thing and a tree to go see this movie about people we already knew about. jim, travis, davy crockett, these were names that were known to us. i knew who they were and as a semi- god black person. and in real life he would get into knife b fights and then to become famouse because of that so we go to see the film and it was a very heroic portrayal of the alamo is you would have expected and there was nothing in there that surprised me and a character who was a slave and portrayed not in a way with that trope of loyal slaves but for the most part
they didn't stay there i am the anomaly to leave texas to go to school in new hampshire at dartmouth. but to live outside of texas. most of my family is in texas. when they left to go somewhere he went to dallas or san antonio. they did not come to new york or l.a. most of my family is still there. host: bacteria book on page t101 i was taken to see it with my best friend. >> it was a big deal in those days there is a little town outside of houston now of course houston has reached out...
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Jul 5, 2021
07/21
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i'm sort of the anomaly of having left texas to go to school in the new hampshire at dartmouth or to live outside of texas. most of my family is in texas. when they left the little town to go somewhere, they went to houston or they went to dallas or san antonio. they didn't come to new york. they didn't go to l.a. so the roots go deep, and most of my family is still there. >> host: well, back to your book "on juneteenth," page 101, quote: in 1967 there was a re-release of the 1960 film "the alamo." i was taken to see it with my best friend. can you tell us that story? >> guest: yeah. it was an exciting thing. it was a big deal to go to the movies in those days. and going to houston to see a movie. i was in a little town outside of houston, and there was essentially a pine forest between the two places. now, of course, houston has reached out and encroached upon all of that area. but it was an exciting thing, a treat to go see this movie about people that we already knew about, jim bowie, travis, dave i have correct. these were name -- davy crockett. and my friend who was a boy, my be
i'm sort of the anomaly of having left texas to go to school in the new hampshire at dartmouth or to live outside of texas. most of my family is in texas. when they left the little town to go somewhere, they went to houston or they went to dallas or san antonio. they didn't come to new york. they didn't go to l.a. so the roots go deep, and most of my family is still there. >> host: well, back to your book "on juneteenth," page 101, quote: in 1967 there was a re-release of the...
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Jul 5, 2021
07/21
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for the colonies thee directly linked slavery in a colonial protest in poem she hand delivered to dartmouth. this gesture helped set in motion her trip to london and the publication of her book which boston patriots have been afraid to touch precisely because they were worried it would encourage already common critiques of patriot hint accuracy. while in london, it was suggested publicly that wheatley ought to be freed. and in her 1773 poems, she infact downplayed somewhat her linkage of herself, of criticisms of slavery and race thinking to the colonial protest movement. in 1773, and for years afterwards, both patriots and tories who read her back could alie the anti-slavery ethos she embodied and conveyed implicitly and explicitly to their political outlook. i think that was intentional and effective. in short, phyllis wheatley hedged her bets and was all the more effective for doing so. mark peterson n his important new book on boston, and in a paper that i and probably others of you have heard or read earlier, has argued trenchantly that the revolution cut off wheatley's atlantic ties.
for the colonies thee directly linked slavery in a colonial protest in poem she hand delivered to dartmouth. this gesture helped set in motion her trip to london and the publication of her book which boston patriots have been afraid to touch precisely because they were worried it would encourage already common critiques of patriot hint accuracy. while in london, it was suggested publicly that wheatley ought to be freed. and in her 1773 poems, she infact downplayed somewhat her linkage of...
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614
Jul 5, 2021
07/21
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the company was founded in 1971 by dartmouth college grads with very little exposure to dance. >> pilobolusce training. clothes. so there was a lot of -- a lot of nudity. >> i'm so glad you guys are all here today. >> reporter: deep in the woods of western connecticut, these rebels have found another cause. >> same sequence look starting with just the head -- >> reporter: they're training seniors in a skill critical to their choreography -- the art of balance. >> lift it up -- >> reporter: emily kent is the group's education director. >> pilobolus really is about movement is for everybody. this is a way that people who maybe never thought they would be dancing are dancing and moving their bodies in ways that they never would have. we're going to do the one where we pretend we're putting it down on the ground and then up on the shelf. >> reporter: they're exercising in a way to ensure they can move throughout their lives. >> one more time. i just want you to keep your eye on that letter. we're doing some things with euro eyes. we're working on mobility of different joints and cardiovascular
the company was founded in 1971 by dartmouth college grads with very little exposure to dance. >> pilobolusce training. clothes. so there was a lot of -- a lot of nudity. >> i'm so glad you guys are all here today. >> reporter: deep in the woods of western connecticut, these rebels have found another cause. >> same sequence look starting with just the head -- >> reporter: they're training seniors in a skill critical to their choreography -- the art of balance....