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it would have had an important impact on princeton's life. it is complicating because i look around me and i know that there are many women here that are loyal to the education institution that educated them and feel brisley about the issues that i raised because in some way it may challenge their experience. the institution as faced full coeducation as harvard now has full coeducation. has a special experience. they are all different. you would -- i would love to engage you in a conversation about what happened at princeton, you know it better than anyone, you were there in the beginning and worked through it. but it has been a great strength for harvard to have had such strong alumni for so many years. and it -- i hope is a source of pride. what has happened in the period that has followed, and i hope it's a source of pride also that with the tenure track system, harvard is now really addressing the question of the promotion of junior members of the faculty up and that will lead to more women on the faculty and a better balance. i don't kno
it would have had an important impact on princeton's life. it is complicating because i look around me and i know that there are many women here that are loyal to the education institution that educated them and feel brisley about the issues that i raised because in some way it may challenge their experience. the institution as faced full coeducation as harvard now has full coeducation. has a special experience. they are all different. you would -- i would love to engage you in a conversation...
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Jul 7, 2012
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>> nancy malchio, princeton university. does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women undergraduates, faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would you say? >> nancy spent much of her professional life after graduate school as a harvard as a major force in princeton's administration, so i'm honored you are here today, nancy. princeton, you know, had a woman's institution. evelyn college, and it lasted only ten years. i think had it been able to gather the resources it needed in the way that radcliffe was able, it would have had an important impact on princeton's life. it is complicating because i look around me and i know that there are many women here in this audience that are very loyal to the institution that educated them and probably feel a little bit bristly about some of the issues that i raised because in -- because in some way it might challenge their experience. each institution as it has faced ful
>> nancy malchio, princeton university. does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women undergraduates, faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would you say? >> nancy spent much of her professional life after graduate school as a harvard as a major force in princeton's administration, so i'm honored you are here today, nancy. princeton, you know, had a woman's...
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Jul 1, 2012
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which is new for princeton. a couple of colleagues and i over the years have been offering a course. for a while just every other year. now recently every year on that war and society in the modern world. not just american history. much of it is european history. i think what's happened is a broadening of the meaning of military history from just the focus on strategy tactics, generals, battles, to the larger question of the impact of war on whole societies and on larger historical developments. if you stop and think about it, what has done more than warfare to shape the entire world in the 20th century? or what has done more to shape this country than wars, especially lit revolution and the civil war. and when you start asking questions like that and including that within the per view of military history it broadens it and gives it a greater legitimacy in the eyes of people who say i don't care about strategy and tactics. but they are interested in the larger impacted of wars. >> i'm very much look forward to r
which is new for princeton. a couple of colleagues and i over the years have been offering a course. for a while just every other year. now recently every year on that war and society in the modern world. not just american history. much of it is european history. i think what's happened is a broadening of the meaning of military history from just the focus on strategy tactics, generals, battles, to the larger question of the impact of war on whole societies and on larger historical...
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Jul 6, 2012
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>> nancy, princeton university, does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women under graduates faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would you say? >> nancy spent much of her professional life after graduate school at harvard, as a marriage force in princeton's administration, so i'm no
>> nancy, princeton university, does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women under graduates faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would you say? >> nancy spent much of her professional life after graduate school at harvard, as a marriage force in princeton's administration, so i'm no
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Jul 17, 2012
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politics and international affairs professor at princeton.licy planning for hillary clinton for two years, dean of princeton's woodrow wilson school. you wrote this cover article for the atlantic, why women still can't have it all. okay. first of all i can point out, you see this, you see that. now when i carry naked baby in my briefcase, i get in trouble. but its's okay for a woman to do it, okay. that is something you have that men don't have.
politics and international affairs professor at princeton.licy planning for hillary clinton for two years, dean of princeton's woodrow wilson school. you wrote this cover article for the atlantic, why women still can't have it all. okay. first of all i can point out, you see this, you see that. now when i carry naked baby in my briefcase, i get in trouble. but its's okay for a woman to do it, okay. that is something you have that men don't have.
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Jul 22, 2012
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a state department official, professor now at a princeton university. where she was once the dean of the woodrow wilson school. she has written an aert kel for "the atlantic" about whether women can have it all. it kick off a national debate this summer and is still getting people talking and is here to continue the conversation this morning. great to have you. >> it's a pleasure. >> here we are? the news this week, perhaps the best rebuttal to your piece about women can quote-unquote have it all. we can define what that means. but you have it googled, marissa mayer, who has left google to become the ceo of yahoo, and here she is getting on a track that in your mind is very difficult to achieve success. >> it's very difficult and applaud her, any more women who make it to the top, i want more women at the top. i think she confirms what i was saying. i say women who are superhuman, rich, and in charge of their own time, can do it. it's just that that's kind of a very high bar. and i don't think it makes sense to most women make ceo by 37 and then have ki
a state department official, professor now at a princeton university. where she was once the dean of the woodrow wilson school. she has written an aert kel for "the atlantic" about whether women can have it all. it kick off a national debate this summer and is still getting people talking and is here to continue the conversation this morning. great to have you. >> it's a pleasure. >> here we are? the news this week, perhaps the best rebuttal to your piece about women can...
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Jul 17, 2012
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politics and international affairs professor at princeton.r policy planning for hillary clinton for two years, dean of princeton's woodrow wilson school. you wrote this cover article for the atlantic, why women still can't have it all. okay. first of all i can point out, you see this, you see that. now when i carry naked baby in my briefcase, i get in trouble. but its's okay for a woman to do it, okay. that is something you have that men don't have. so what is it that women can't have all of. so they hear that phrase a lot and i don't know what it means. >> so it is having the same career choices to be able too have a career and a family, as a man does. so having it all. >> stephen: why can't you have it. >> you-- if you-- . >> stephen: it's a choice, you have free will. >> you have free will. >> stephen: have 2. >> but you need-- . >> stephen: have all of it. >> you need to be able-- a man can have a career and can have a family and the family is not an obstacle to the man's career. >> stephen: how is it an on stack tell to a woman. what is
politics and international affairs professor at princeton.r policy planning for hillary clinton for two years, dean of princeton's woodrow wilson school. you wrote this cover article for the atlantic, why women still can't have it all. okay. first of all i can point out, you see this, you see that. now when i carry naked baby in my briefcase, i get in trouble. but its's okay for a woman to do it, okay. that is something you have that men don't have. so what is it that women can't have all of....
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Jul 6, 2012
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>> nancy, princeton university, does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women under graduates faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would
>> nancy, princeton university, does the history of radcliffe mean that the situation of women under graduates faculty and administrators at harvard today is less complicated than at princeton or yale that had no such history? more complicated or what would
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Jul 29, 2012
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>> i taught at princeton briefly, i taught at u.c. berkeley, university of pittsburgh, for a year i was at the hebrew university at jerusalem and currently at boston unive >> you have? >> yes, indeed. >> i got my degree in '79. >> you're the professor of the appreciation of scripture, you've been doing that for what? >> since '90. >> for nine years. three books to your credit? >> that's true. >> i notice that you retreated from some of your statements from your first book, "jesus of nazareth, king of the jews." what changed in the 11 years between the publication of these two books. >> my first book was "from jesus to christ." and that was published in 1988. and "jesus of nazareth" was published a few months ago. what changed is time elapsed, i continued to work in the field and learned more. >> isn't it the all-important question of why jesus was killed, you now believe he represented a limited threat to public order during the festival of passover rather than a major threat to roman rule? >> i don't think anybody thinks he, includin
>> i taught at princeton briefly, i taught at u.c. berkeley, university of pittsburgh, for a year i was at the hebrew university at jerusalem and currently at boston unive >> you have? >> yes, indeed. >> i got my degree in '79. >> you're the professor of the appreciation of scripture, you've been doing that for what? >> since '90. >> for nine years. three books to your credit? >> that's true. >> i notice that you retreated from some of your...
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Jul 26, 2012
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alan blinder of princeton university and former vice chair of the federal reserve. >> tom: while we wait for the data on the u.s. economy in the second quarter, britain today reported it continued to be in recession during the second quarter. the u.k.'s economy took a bigger hit than expected this spring, falling 0.7%, between april and june. it marks the third quarter in a row of contraction in the u.k., which has been hit by weakness in the euro-zone region. >> susie: meanwhile china announced some currency moves today to deal with slowness from its exposure to europe, the people's bank of china guided the yuan downward against the dollar for a third day, to its lowest level since november. it's a stark contrast to the central bank's previous behavior, over the past two years, it has been focused on boosting the yuan's value. >> tom: the global economy may be slowing but its business in north america that is powering some big american manufacturers. caterpillar, boeing and ford were able to shake off weakness in europe, even as the difficulties are expected to continue. >> reporter: ca
alan blinder of princeton university and former vice chair of the federal reserve. >> tom: while we wait for the data on the u.s. economy in the second quarter, britain today reported it continued to be in recession during the second quarter. the u.k.'s economy took a bigger hit than expected this spring, falling 0.7%, between april and june. it marks the third quarter in a row of contraction in the u.k., which has been hit by weakness in the euro-zone region. >> susie: meanwhile...
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i must say when i was teaching at princeton how frustrated i got because so many of the kids would say, i'm not going to do that. i'm not going to do those jobs because that's terrible. politics has gotten awful rather than saying, i'm going to go in and change it. and i'm trying to think of what made that difference. then once i was in a wedding here in denver. and i began to think, maybe some of us are to be held accountable for their attitudes. at this wedding, what would happen is when anybodymy age would hear anybody the bride and groom's age say they were thinking about going into geology, teaching, the law, doctoring, whatever it was, whoever my age was one of those, would move in on that kid and say, you don't really want to be a teacher. you wouldn't believe what's happened. or you don't want to go into the law, or you don't want to be -- and i began to think, what do we want them to be? baseball players? i mean, what have we got left we would say, that's great. the mentoring and bringing along and making them really feel may not be perfect, but if you get in, maybe you can he
i must say when i was teaching at princeton how frustrated i got because so many of the kids would say, i'm not going to do that. i'm not going to do those jobs because that's terrible. politics has gotten awful rather than saying, i'm going to go in and change it. and i'm trying to think of what made that difference. then once i was in a wedding here in denver. and i began to think, maybe some of us are to be held accountable for their attitudes. at this wedding, what would happen is when...
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the author is politics and international affairs professor at princeton university who spent two years as the director of political planning at the state department, the first woman to every hold that position, and she is the mother of two teenaged sons. she writes, i still strongly believe that women can have it all, and that men can too i'm glad to hear it. i believe that we can have it all at the same time but not today. not with the way america's economy and society are currently structured. anne-marie slaughter why not. you're an icon to woman proving that you can have it all what have you concluded. >> i have proven that i could have it all because i had the flexibility to run my own time. as long as i had that, i could have kids, have a career, work as hard as i wanted. as soon as i got into a job when i didn't have that kind of flexibility, i realized that it was not work for teenage kids. i did it for two years but most women do not have what i havish to do what i have done, flexibility. >> eliot: the job that required this epiphany was the two years as director of policy plan
the author is politics and international affairs professor at princeton university who spent two years as the director of political planning at the state department, the first woman to every hold that position, and she is the mother of two teenaged sons. she writes, i still strongly believe that women can have it all, and that men can too i'm glad to hear it. i believe that we can have it all at the same time but not today. not with the way america's economy and society are currently...
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. >> los campus enfrentan crisis presupuestaria, que toman un programa cómo stanford y princeton . >>s, pagar por los medicamentos vencidos. >> la dda dice que es mejor tirarlas a la basura en un recimpiente cerrado. >> en san mateo, eligen el aumento de impuestos para las arcas del condado . >> pasamos a venezuela, hoy es el natalicio de bolivar, hugo chávez hará una versión tridimencional . >> bolivar, no murió asesinado sino por toz cronica . >> si usted tiene carriola vieja, es posible que sea riesgo para su bebé . >> la copa liga mx es mejor vamos y arrancamos en un flash. >> . >> (♪ ♪) . >> (♪ ♪) . >> y bueno parece que hay futbol, baseball, ahora vamos con el deporte. . >> ya estamos con la acción deportiva . >> que tal amigos, arrancon la liga mx, con 13 goles, el toluca recibía jaguares, gol, adrián lima anota, los lobos ganan 3 a 1. >> jaguares y necaxa, luis fernando garcía, los hidrorayos continuan atancando, las jaguares encuentra la victoria 1 a 0. >> morelia y estudiantes empataron a 1. >> los cholos empataron con meriland. >> y los gallos vencieron 2 as 1 . >> edison b
. >> los campus enfrentan crisis presupuestaria, que toman un programa cómo stanford y princeton . >>s, pagar por los medicamentos vencidos. >> la dda dice que es mejor tirarlas a la basura en un recimpiente cerrado. >> en san mateo, eligen el aumento de impuestos para las arcas del condado . >> pasamos a venezuela, hoy es el natalicio de bolivar, hugo chávez hará una versión tridimencional . >> bolivar, no murió asesinado sino por toz cronica . >>...
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to biologist from princeton go to darwin's i land every year. since 1973 and they camp on a desert island that darwin never sought and they documented of militiamen inaction by natural selection. they see it and a measure it to with exquisite detail. doing what dar whenever it imagined and thought it would take geological ages. no mortal could but we can. we're watching. i have gone back twice to visit the of galapagos and to visit peter and rosemary. it is wonderful they still do the research. officially they retired but they are there every year. >>host: and talking to jonathan wiener with his most recent book long for this world. thank you very much. >> it is a pleasure.
to biologist from princeton go to darwin's i land every year. since 1973 and they camp on a desert island that darwin never sought and they documented of militiamen inaction by natural selection. they see it and a measure it to with exquisite detail. doing what dar whenever it imagined and thought it would take geological ages. no mortal could but we can. we're watching. i have gone back twice to visit the of galapagos and to visit peter and rosemary. it is wonderful they still do the research....
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Jul 20, 2012
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i spent a month at princeton last year in the microbiology department. [laughter] i am curious about stuff. that is what fills your head. where it comes out, who knows. tavis: but if you put the right stuff in. >> there is a relationship between all of the visual fields and architecture. what i took away from my heart life -- art world life is the right to be intuitive. i see my friends coming out of school. they were trying to justify, you have to do this because of that. there are so many reasons to rationalize and justify. it is irrelevant. you can make lots of forms work for lots of things. i call it the moment of truth. the artist faces the white canvas. what am i going to do? architecture gets to that point eventually. you digest all of the stuff, the building department, all of the things you have to do. the moment to make a shape, a move, a mark, it becomes the beginning of the architecture. it is intuitive. if i know what i am going to do in defense, i would discard it. i walked away from it. tavis: it has to flow. what is your process? you have
i spent a month at princeton last year in the microbiology department. [laughter] i am curious about stuff. that is what fills your head. where it comes out, who knows. tavis: but if you put the right stuff in. >> there is a relationship between all of the visual fields and architecture. what i took away from my heart life -- art world life is the right to be intuitive. i see my friends coming out of school. they were trying to justify, you have to do this because of that. there are so...
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i don't think there's the slightest interest at princeton in wt ie toay bse thdes y the word, the truth and the life and they don't want me confusing the issue. so there's no point in my making an unnecessary trip across the country to chitchat with people atnc. someone who spends as long as you have at the university deals with a thing called tenure. you don't teach. do you have tenure? >> no, we don't have tenure. i use that veryften. nuo ami fomueedo >> so you're associated with hoover, not with stanford? >> but my paycheck is from stanford university, because it's in some puliar legal relation. bu i'thi te speak their mind. timid people are attracted to jobs that have iron cladenure. in the civil service, that's not why you get yr bold new ias, op ylavonitt have. >> given what you've said, let's say that all of a sudden you wanted to go to work at another university as afessor. tau oouactaccte have a hard time getting a job based on your views? >> i don't know. i do get feelers have various places a various times. fe -el97 i back in 12, i offered a professorship at harvard and i gue
i don't think there's the slightest interest at princeton in wt ie toay bse thdes y the word, the truth and the life and they don't want me confusing the issue. so there's no point in my making an unnecessary trip across the country to chitchat with people atnc. someone who spends as long as you have at the university deals with a thing called tenure. you don't teach. do you have tenure? >> no, we don't have tenure. i use that veryften. nuo ami fomueedo >> so you're associated with...
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richard haass, now the president of the council on foreign relations, and ann marie slaughter back at princeton university. joining me from washington, "the new york times" foreign affairs columnist, tom friedman. welcome. tom, let me start with you. you talk to a lot of people in the region. what is your sense about whether assad can hold on? so far he has defied many expectations and has held on. >> well, fareed, you know, i think it's the nature of these kind of regimes that they're strong, they're strong, they're strong until they around and then they go quickly. we just don't know when that moment will be. but the reason he has held on up till now is because he clearly has support. support of the minority that he represents. first of all, his own sect, an offshoot of shias, about 12% of the syrian population, and then christians who basically fear a sunni/muslim majority taking power in syria. and then some sunni muslims who have been allied with the regime for business and other purposes. so this isn't a one-man show. there is support there. it's basically tribe and sect based. they're de
richard haass, now the president of the council on foreign relations, and ann marie slaughter back at princeton university. joining me from washington, "the new york times" foreign affairs columnist, tom friedman. welcome. tom, let me start with you. you talk to a lot of people in the region. what is your sense about whether assad can hold on? so far he has defied many expectations and has held on. >> well, fareed, you know, i think it's the nature of these kind of regimes that...
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religion six spiritual expressions and traditions have so often been humbled by the faithful this princetons of indigenous people who have such reverence for the earth and if only we western culture had picked up on some of that a few centuries ago when might not be measuring the melting polar ice cap as we gather here. the un + twenty in arm and a gathering is giving up down in rio. people from all parts of the world that are participating in that frame a uniquely religious or spiritual perspective into the conversations about climate. >>> added to get interested in this? >>> good question there are two pieces to that when i was born and raised in the episcopal church and yet have always felt that as much as the cherished by christian identity that that was not the only path to the ultimate truth to god and that pena and non been known and unknown and that part of life has been the most compelling to me and learning from others not just from people who practice my own state has always been compelling for me. the other is a group with a brother who had down syndrome and he taught me in his l
religion six spiritual expressions and traditions have so often been humbled by the faithful this princetons of indigenous people who have such reverence for the earth and if only we western culture had picked up on some of that a few centuries ago when might not be measuring the melting polar ice cap as we gather here. the un + twenty in arm and a gathering is giving up down in rio. people from all parts of the world that are participating in that frame a uniquely religious or spiritual...
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Jul 22, 2012
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new way of being catholic but touching into traditions that have perhaps been lost or understated princeton's having the were shipped the language of the people it's an old tradition not just a new idea but there was new to the mid-20s century but it was or renewal rather than bringing in something brand new i think i was true for a lot of things the sacraments and understand how to teach the faith and let the faith of it was a renewing or rather than a brand new product. >>> and will get to the future and today the house that for people of your generation did you see that coming? how was that to adjust? >>> i don't think we sought coming at think remember something somebody said at that time to a number of us saying that the first half of the 20th century and a church in america was unusual for the 20th century history and the church. everyone was very certain of the understanding of what the faith meant uncertain about their obligations were and there are certain the enemies of their faith for outside themselves and to identify the mother was coming as a more with mit. and then i think the
new way of being catholic but touching into traditions that have perhaps been lost or understated princeton's having the were shipped the language of the people it's an old tradition not just a new idea but there was new to the mid-20s century but it was or renewal rather than bringing in something brand new i think i was true for a lot of things the sacraments and understand how to teach the faith and let the faith of it was a renewing or rather than a brand new product. >>> and will...
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Jul 19, 2012
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. >> then there is michelle obama's senior thesis from princeton university. >> where's the white house's records >> why can't they release the birther is i have the sdmat >> show it to us. >> show us the birth certificate. thank you very much, steve, i appreciate that. (audience reacts) >> you're a good man steve, you're hired. you keep it up maybe one day i'm come in and sit on that (bleep)ing couch instead of phoning in from bed. (laughter) where i am right now naked! (laughter) all right, all right, that's republicans hounding obama for documents but still the less the better because no matter how innocuous it might seem democrats will tear it to sheds desperate to make something out of nothing. what would that look like? >> this is not a birth certificate? >> see this? this has clearly been photocopyd from a book. >> this whole boarder is suspect. >> it's s a fraudulent document. >> yes. thank you sheriff joe, if anyone knows how to authenticate a 50-year-old hawaiian birth certificate it's the arizona county sheriff. (laughter) democrats didn't want to be dicks about romney's tax
. >> then there is michelle obama's senior thesis from princeton university. >> where's the white house's records >> why can't they release the birther is i have the sdmat >> show it to us. >> show us the birth certificate. thank you very much, steve, i appreciate that. (audience reacts) >> you're a good man steve, you're hired. you keep it up maybe one day i'm come in and sit on that (bleep)ing couch instead of phoning in from bed. (laughter) where i am...
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Jul 21, 2012
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princeton's in concord a this number is 76 degrees in concord a? whatever time is 1020 and night its warmer added 21 as against it was five to 15 degrees warmer today's sunny and even more tomorrow than it's going to cool off until later this coming week. the pressure spinning above the pacific northwest and high-pressure part of the eastern pacific it's going to be hot in linz minimal status along the shoreline we look for a little bit small morning in terms of numbers a south they not so bad in the mid-80s 85 is unclear what once a morgan hill 86% as day above the east bay mid-90s and 87 and that the for the north bay and its a mill valley and falsely of in the '70s the happened to sonoma and it will be in the '80s and will be just about as warm on sunday: trend coming tuesday when the and then steps back into the '80s. >>> can coil after a break. mayor ed lee text on the giants during his trip to philadelphia. brandon crawford hit a grand slam and had a career high 5 runs batted in the giants beat the phillies 7 to 2 timman to come to accept his
princeton's in concord a this number is 76 degrees in concord a? whatever time is 1020 and night its warmer added 21 as against it was five to 15 degrees warmer today's sunny and even more tomorrow than it's going to cool off until later this coming week. the pressure spinning above the pacific northwest and high-pressure part of the eastern pacific it's going to be hot in linz minimal status along the shoreline we look for a little bit small morning in terms of numbers a south they not so bad...
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reporter and a princeton with the zimmerman side of the story. but i do wish there was anything we could have done that wouldn't have put in a position where i had to his conversation didn't last long before martin started driver punches. an interview fox news channel john handy is the women recounted how he approached him shortly before he called police about a suspicious person last february. yes to my problem was and i looked up and he punched me and broke my nose. zimmerman appeared with his attorney the neighbor had washed captain has been freed but not seen since posting $1 million bond july 6th place in the un arms teenager attacked him of his patrol in a gated community in several florida martin's family alleges the man shot their son because he was black. he said as the 2 7/8 he felt his life was in danger. and it went down my chest. >>> to ron's father telling the associated press what did george zimmerman to murder my teenage son and the kingston cbs news. cooler weather is helping firefighters make progress on the wild fire burning in
reporter and a princeton with the zimmerman side of the story. but i do wish there was anything we could have done that wouldn't have put in a position where i had to his conversation didn't last long before martin started driver punches. an interview fox news channel john handy is the women recounted how he approached him shortly before he called police about a suspicious person last february. yes to my problem was and i looked up and he punched me and broke my nose. zimmerman appeared with...
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she was teaching at princeton and takes a job at another city. the kids are at home. even now she says, okay, in order to be with my kids -- i admire her for her candor in writing this and admire the decision she made. but she's cut back to 50 hours a week, being a professor at princeton, giving speeches around the country. she's not typical. >> no, and that's kind of what women are doing increasingly. they're finding more flexible ways to succeed. they start their own business. you know, that i work in contract basis. they work when they can. they telecommute from home. it's a more creative way to succeed. that does not mean that you don't need women in the traditional power positions. that's why you find women doing it. >> right. i think in those traditional power positions, unless there is a way to get these powerful women to stick around in positions of leadership, we're going to continue to see the same problem perpetuated because men are not driving or going to be driving the decisions, women aren't even at the table. >> i would briefly say that to butch much, m
she was teaching at princeton and takes a job at another city. the kids are at home. even now she says, okay, in order to be with my kids -- i admire her for her candor in writing this and admire the decision she made. but she's cut back to 50 hours a week, being a professor at princeton, giving speeches around the country. she's not typical. >> no, and that's kind of what women are doing increasingly. they're finding more flexible ways to succeed. they start their own business. you know,...
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Jul 20, 2012
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i spent a month at princeton last year in the microbiology department.[laughter] i am curious about stuff. that is what fills your head. where it comes out, who knows. tavis: but if you put the right stuff in. >> there is a relationship between all of the visual fields and architecture. what i took away from my heart life -- art world life is the right to be intuitive. i see my friends coming out of school. they were trying to justify, you have to do this because of that. there are so many reasons to rationalize and justify. it is irrelevant. you can make lots of forms work for lots of things. i call it the moment of truth. for lots of things. i call it the moment of truth. the artist
i spent a month at princeton last year in the microbiology department.[laughter] i am curious about stuff. that is what fills your head. where it comes out, who knows. tavis: but if you put the right stuff in. >> there is a relationship between all of the visual fields and architecture. what i took away from my heart life -- art world life is the right to be intuitive. i see my friends coming out of school. they were trying to justify, you have to do this because of that. there are so...
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Jul 1, 2012
07/12
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bachelor's degree from northwest and master's and journalism where she was the pulitzer fellow with princeton university woodward school of public policy international affairs and of the republic and leadership teaching at princeton and harvard with the constitution and project at brookings and currently a vice president of the asman institut leadership program his book the parties versus the people. published this summer. and mickey will baptized all of them before you leave. [laughter] >> is the great pleasure to be here with four people i have quoted so many times. i have a little bit of news i found out the title of the next book coming out between thomas mann and norman ornstein. 1982 is renewing congress. 2000, the permanent campaign. pretty neutral. 2006, the broken branch. the new book is called a run for your life. [laughter] after that they will march up and down they take on many institutions and let me talk for a minute appropriate to criticize how we do our jobs and do them better fact checking truth telling on what the organization's tried to do this year. there has been a move
bachelor's degree from northwest and master's and journalism where she was the pulitzer fellow with princeton university woodward school of public policy international affairs and of the republic and leadership teaching at princeton and harvard with the constitution and project at brookings and currently a vice president of the asman institut leadership program his book the parties versus the people. published this summer. and mickey will baptized all of them before you leave. [laughter]...
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Jul 2, 2012
07/12
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i would tell my students at harvard and later at princeton look what they did to poor me. they didn't do it to me. i'll end with this. the most important part of the constitution says that every single senator and representative must be an inhabitant of the state from which they're elected. it was a deliberate repup dags of the parliamentary system. it was that your legislatures are supposed to know you, know your concerns, know what matters to you, you're supposed to know them. know their integrity. and that system in my case got destroyed because when they redrew my district, i the city guy, was now representing wheat farmers and cattle ranchers and small town merchants and i didn't know their issues. i didn't know their concerns. they were being represented by somebody who could not articulate as needed to be done their -- their most
i would tell my students at harvard and later at princeton look what they did to poor me. they didn't do it to me. i'll end with this. the most important part of the constitution says that every single senator and representative must be an inhabitant of the state from which they're elected. it was a deliberate repup dags of the parliamentary system. it was that your legislatures are supposed to know you, know your concerns, know what matters to you, you're supposed to know them. know their...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Jul 10, 2012
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he was on his deathbed in princeton in 1955 in the hospital in princeton, new jersey, and he asked for a pad of paper in which he had been scriping equations in the desperate hope that even in the final minutes he would complete this journey. that's the drama of science. and he didn't find the unified theory. >> rose: a near they tells how it fits together. >> how all nature's forces work. >> rose: steven hawking used to work on this, too, didn't he? >> i think he made a bet that the higgs wasn't there and it was a hundred bucks. >> rose: he acknowledged he lost the bet. >> that's right. >> rose: so what are the other big questions that are out there excite me about physics. >> so another great discovery that's probably in some way related to this-- which happened about a dozen years ago-- is that we've known for a long time the universe is expanding. it's getting bigger and bigger over time. but everybody thought the expansion would be slowing down. it's like if you throw up a baseball in the air it goes up slower and slower because gravity pulse it back. we thought the gravitational
he was on his deathbed in princeton in 1955 in the hospital in princeton, new jersey, and he asked for a pad of paper in which he had been scriping equations in the desperate hope that even in the final minutes he would complete this journey. that's the drama of science. and he didn't find the unified theory. >> rose: a near they tells how it fits together. >> how all nature's forces work. >> rose: steven hawking used to work on this, too, didn't he? >> i think he made a...
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Jul 29, 2012
07/12
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paul krugman is columnist for "the new york times," professor at princeton and has a book, "end thisn now." and ken rogoff is a professor at harvard university and a former chief economist at the international monetary fund. welcome. paul, let me begin with you by asking you, just how bad is it? because at some level, you know, compared with europe, we're doing okay. we're growing at about 2%. we still have no housing recovery, which presumably there will be at some point in a demographically vibrant country. so is the situation as dire as -- as, you know, you write about? >> you know, there's a -- the not as bad as is one of the issues that comes up. you say this is not as bad as the great depression. not as bad as europe. it's pretty terrible. it's -- thing i like to focus on is long-term unemployment. we've gone around four million people out of work for a year. that's devastating, that's an ongoing process of enormous devastation to families. it also means probably damage to our long run future because people who have been out of the work force that long find it hard ever to re-e
paul krugman is columnist for "the new york times," professor at princeton and has a book, "end thisn now." and ken rogoff is a professor at harvard university and a former chief economist at the international monetary fund. welcome. paul, let me begin with you by asking you, just how bad is it? because at some level, you know, compared with europe, we're doing okay. we're growing at about 2%. we still have no housing recovery, which presumably there will be at some point in...