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May 9, 2013
05/13
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princeton is not just a setting. it is a character. >> in gothic novel -- gothic novels there is a large house. is a wholet community. was very affluent. then it was a very white d extremelyntenn selective, a prestigious, with old families who came over on , and peopler involved in the revolutionary war whose names are famous. with georgeined , people like five. that.n -- people like that community is a kind of exemplary community of who areed people conscientious christians but in a very narrow way. they really only granted full humanity to people like themselves. --y did not a working man immigrants were fully human beings, and they did not think women should have the vote. even many women did not think they should have the vote. gotavis: i know you are not a psychologist, but you are an expert at know what you do. i wonder if you might offer your the whathts about prevents these people from being connect with their conscience and now. what is the blockage? >> cowardice, but two is a little more subtle. speakk when
princeton is not just a setting. it is a character. >> in gothic novel -- gothic novels there is a large house. is a wholet community. was very affluent. then it was a very white d extremelyntenn selective, a prestigious, with old families who came over on , and peopler involved in the revolutionary war whose names are famous. with georgeined , people like five. that.n -- people like that community is a kind of exemplary community of who areed people conscientious christians but in a very...
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May 13, 2013
05/13
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day school but it is still outstanding. >> host: your father arrived at princeton princeton, instantly a sensation, in fact, i think that'' is the department at princeton was divided into three categories theoretical mathematicians, a physicist ben john von neumann. [laughter] were you aware of that? did you have an understanding? >> i knew he was a hot shot mathematician. i don't think i was aware of how much he bridged over into physics and tell i became aware of the existence of the mathematician foundation of quantum mechanics but at some point* i became aware that he did bridge the two fields and after the war was over i learned something about the manhattan project -- project and what he had done but not until i went off to college that i began to be more aware what a remarkable person he was. his name did not become that much of a household world -- word. starting with a famous obituary article in "life" magazine right after he died. of lot of this side became more aware of as a young adult. >> host: do you remember when it started to become clear? in college? many children do i
day school but it is still outstanding. >> host: your father arrived at princeton princeton, instantly a sensation, in fact, i think that'' is the department at princeton was divided into three categories theoretical mathematicians, a physicist ben john von neumann. [laughter] were you aware of that? did you have an understanding? >> i knew he was a hot shot mathematician. i don't think i was aware of how much he bridged over into physics and tell i became aware of the existence of...
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May 19, 2013
05/13
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but, you know, i acquiesced, and i went off to live in princeton. and as i say, that had its complications, but it did give me a chance to interact much more with my father than i could have otherwise. partly because those vacations i spent with him certainly during world war ii were mostly spent without him because he was always either in los alamos or on a secret trip to england in the middle of the war and so forth. it also gave me a chance to go to a really terrific school which was something that doesn't exist be much now, a sort of all girls' private school. and we had teachers who today would be doctors or lawyers or professors in university, but in those days those options weren't open to them. so we had these absolutely brilliant women teaching us. and i have to say that when i got to harvard, um, it seemed easy in comparison to what was demanded of me at, of all things, miss fine's school which has now merged with the boys' school and is called the princeton day school. but it's still an outstanding school. >> so your father arrives at pri
but, you know, i acquiesced, and i went off to live in princeton. and as i say, that had its complications, but it did give me a chance to interact much more with my father than i could have otherwise. partly because those vacations i spent with him certainly during world war ii were mostly spent without him because he was always either in los alamos or on a secret trip to england in the middle of the war and so forth. it also gave me a chance to go to a really terrific school which was...
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May 27, 2013
05/13
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she serves on the boards of harvard and princeton and of the institute for advanced study at princeton, and she holds honorary degrees from more than 20 colleges and universities. quite a woman, ladies and gentlemen. it's my pleasure to welcome her now. please, marina von neumann whitman. [applause] so good to have you here. >> well done can. so good to be here. >> thank you very much. >> i should say, by the way, that i have served on the boards of harvard and princeton, but not smugglesly. >> ah, okay. [laughter] >> that would sort of be like serving on the boards of gimbles and macy's at the same time. >> that's true. [laughter] good point. well, welcome. >> it's wonderful to be here. and i must say this is a fabulous museum. i had a sort of mini tour. i think, actually, the full tour would take days and days, but it's pretty exciting. >> thank you. thank you very much. it was so much fun to take you around this morning and, of course, to look at what we call the johnnyac, but i know that was not your father's favorite phrase for that computer. >> well, he liked it, but the institut
she serves on the boards of harvard and princeton and of the institute for advanced study at princeton, and she holds honorary degrees from more than 20 colleges and universities. quite a woman, ladies and gentlemen. it's my pleasure to welcome her now. please, marina von neumann whitman. [applause] so good to have you here. >> well done can. so good to be here. >> thank you very much. >> i should say, by the way, that i have served on the boards of harvard and princeton, but...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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it was to a professor at princeton. had moved to wales from princeton. is a professor of archaeology. there will a couple years apart from each other. his name was thomas hobson. point of saying that she and the president had very little in common. he found boring when she found interesting. it is different with the second husband. they had a lot of insurance -- they had allotted share interest. interest in traveling. they had a lot of the same interest. interest in traveling. they had much better relationship. public was mrs. cleveland's life after grover cleveland's death? she had to manage the press. it waned over time. she was active during world war i. she was active with an organization which made him made garments that they gave to nonprofits for giving out in emergency situations. you could still read these items about her. the session was nowhere near. >> she continued to be against women's suffrage. ofshe was the vice president the league of anti-suffrage from 1913 on tell women got the right to vote. public'sas the reaction to a first lady who
it was to a professor at princeton. had moved to wales from princeton. is a professor of archaeology. there will a couple years apart from each other. his name was thomas hobson. point of saying that she and the president had very little in common. he found boring when she found interesting. it is different with the second husband. they had a lot of insurance -- they had allotted share interest. interest in traveling. they had a lot of the same interest. interest in traveling. they had much...
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May 26, 2013
05/13
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the world's top universities including harvard columbia, uc berkeley and princeton offering virtual learning to some 15 countries through nonprofit websites. like udacita and udemi. the founder is also a stanford professor and he believe hes the old model of education is being challenge. >> when you go to school for four years and the next 40 years is on what you learned the model doesn't make sense in the rapidly changing world. we are bringing adults back into the education system so that they can keep on, you know, getting booster shots of knowledge. >> already, millions are tapping in with an average of 15% of them finishing the entire course. the american council on education says some are worthy of college credit. >> interesting thing is because of the technology and because we can track what students.org and what they are learning, how they are performing on different exercises and examinations, we have the ability to be able to really determine the learning outcomes. >> still, educators threat that inter-- stress that interaction is critical and crucial to learning and there may be r
the world's top universities including harvard columbia, uc berkeley and princeton offering virtual learning to some 15 countries through nonprofit websites. like udacita and udemi. the founder is also a stanford professor and he believe hes the old model of education is being challenge. >> when you go to school for four years and the next 40 years is on what you learned the model doesn't make sense in the rapidly changing world. we are bringing adults back into the education system so...
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May 26, 2013
05/13
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also from princeton university dr.correspondent for msnbc, and author of a new book "who's afraid of blackness, what does it mean to come black now." >> let's start with you. you talk about what it means to be black now. >> sure, i hate to be talking for black people which immediately puts everyone on their heels and makes everyone nervous. it means anything you want it to be. 40 million black people, there's 40 million ways to be black. you can do anything. you can be anyone. there's a million different ways -- 40 million ways to be black. >> amani, what does it mean to be 40 million ways to be black. are there certain things that bind black folks as a community? is blackness up in the air? >> well, it's up in the air to the fact there's 40 million distinctness or identities in the united states. but on the other hand there are a number of constraints that tend to frame the experiences of black americans still. there's persistent racial inequality in every sector. on the other hand, we have cultures and traditions tha
also from princeton university dr.correspondent for msnbc, and author of a new book "who's afraid of blackness, what does it mean to come black now." >> let's start with you. you talk about what it means to be black now. >> sure, i hate to be talking for black people which immediately puts everyone on their heels and makes everyone nervous. it means anything you want it to be. 40 million black people, there's 40 million ways to be black. you can do anything. you can be...
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May 27, 2013
05/13
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my world in environments that i describe at college in princeton, law school at the faraway place.it's also a line that i used in my book when i talked about being comfortable in both worlds, and yet never feeling completely a part of either. you can't come from a world like the one i grew up in, south bronx, and enter the world that i got catapulted into as a college student, princeton. live the life since then now on the world stage without feeling the frenzy of exile, constantly. and meeting regularly to take stock and return to the essence of my world with love, to take strength from it. i wrote about the south bronx in terms that i think most people are unaccustomed to. the south bronx people don't know is the one portrayed in the famous movie when i was growing up, fort apache. dirty, crime and drug ridden. that's the world most people think about. i wrote about the people. i wrote about the values of that community, about the hopes and struggles of the people who live within those communities so that others could see a world that was different than their expectation, and tha
my world in environments that i describe at college in princeton, law school at the faraway place.it's also a line that i used in my book when i talked about being comfortable in both worlds, and yet never feeling completely a part of either. you can't come from a world like the one i grew up in, south bronx, and enter the world that i got catapulted into as a college student, princeton. live the life since then now on the world stage without feeling the frenzy of exile, constantly. and meeting...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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i asked him, are you had hadded back it princeton? he wouldn't comment.e he was getting ready to go back to the lecture hall with the jeans. ashley: was he carrying rest of his belongings? >> going collegiate. definitely informal here today at the white house. ashley: peter barnes, thank you so much. tracy: coming up stocks are rallying on better-than-expected economic data but this could mean an end to the fed ease money policy we'll hear from a economist who says rates could be actually heading higher this year. ashley: chinese hackers breach our weapons design. coming up we'll talk to former homeland security secretary tom ridge. first as we do at this time every day, let's take a look how oil is trading with the markets still in rally mode. oil too, moving higher. up more than a buck a barrel at 95.24. we'll be right back. [ malannouncer ] we gave the new e-class some of the most advanced driver systems ever made. stereoscopic vision... distronic plus braking... lane keeping and steering assist... eleven enhanced systems in all. ♪ twelve, counting you
i asked him, are you had hadded back it princeton? he wouldn't comment.e he was getting ready to go back to the lecture hall with the jeans. ashley: was he carrying rest of his belongings? >> going collegiate. definitely informal here today at the white house. ashley: peter barnes, thank you so much. tracy: coming up stocks are rallying on better-than-expected economic data but this could mean an end to the fed ease money policy we'll hear from a economist who says rates could be actually...
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and i've talked to princeton and elsewhere and it appears. that a new set of very well this is this is the subtle racism that is in our media is looking for those stereotypes when they want to portray people who are you know muslim or you know pick your pick your minority group thank you very much for the call george in los angeles hey george thanks for watching us what's up. terrorism is a tactic terrorism is is using using civilians using people who have nothing to do with a particular grievance injuring them or killing them in order to cause other people to be frightened and this is the great disservice the george w. bush did to us with this so-called war on terrorism it's like saying we're going to declare war on guns or we're going to declare war on you know. you know some military tactic you can't do that and there are you have to figure out the grievance you we have we you have to address it and these people who attacked us on nine eleven they were not there it was not a militia it was not a country where you can declare war on them th
and i've talked to princeton and elsewhere and it appears. that a new set of very well this is this is the subtle racism that is in our media is looking for those stereotypes when they want to portray people who are you know muslim or you know pick your pick your minority group thank you very much for the call george in los angeles hey george thanks for watching us what's up. terrorism is a tactic terrorism is is using using civilians using people who have nothing to do with a particular...
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May 9, 2013
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as the first woman to serve as novet princeton, she -- as president of princeton, she is a role model for many young women. she set in order a number of flishtives, presenceton increased its financial aid offering significantly, making princeton's program one of the most generous in the country. dr. tillman has also worked diligently to bolster the university's academic offerings, overseeing the creation of the lewis center for the arts this center for african-american study the center for energy and the environment and the princeton knew row science institute. -- neurorow science institute. as a proud -- neuroscience institute. i proud princeton alum, extend my thanks. princeton's service has now expanded to include the service of all nation. i congratulate dr. shirley tillman and yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: for what purpose does the gentlewoman from california seek recognition? >> to address the house for onemen. the speaker pro tempore: without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized for one minute. >> thank you, mr. speaker. i rise in recognition o
as the first woman to serve as novet princeton, she -- as president of princeton, she is a role model for many young women. she set in order a number of flishtives, presenceton increased its financial aid offering significantly, making princeton's program one of the most generous in the country. dr. tillman has also worked diligently to bolster the university's academic offerings, overseeing the creation of the lewis center for the arts this center for african-american study the center for...
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May 28, 2013
05/13
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it was to a professor at princeton. he had moved to wales from princeton.ofessor of archaeology. there will a couple years apart from each other. his name was thomas hobson. she made a point of saying that she and the president had very little in common. he found boring when she found interesting. it is different with the second husband. they had a lot of insurance -- they had allotted share interest. interest in traveling. -- they had a lot of the same interest. interest in traveling. they had much better relationship. >> how public was mrs. cleveland's life after grover cleveland's death? >> she had to manage the press. it waned over time. she was active during world war i. she was active with an organization which made him made garments that they gave to nonprofits for giving out in emergency situations. you could still read these items about her. the session was nowhere near. >> she continued to be against women's suffrage. >> she was the vice president of the league of anti-suffrage from 1913 on tell women got the right to vote. >> what was the public'
it was to a professor at princeton. he had moved to wales from princeton.ofessor of archaeology. there will a couple years apart from each other. his name was thomas hobson. she made a point of saying that she and the president had very little in common. he found boring when she found interesting. it is different with the second husband. they had a lot of insurance -- they had allotted share interest. interest in traveling. -- they had a lot of the same interest. interest in traveling. they had...
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May 26, 2013
05/13
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she did at princeton once you read about the failure to embrace a chicano culture and her father complained to the department of health education and welfare. heard tough questions were the reason voting rights and gay marriage case's lead attorneys time tied and lead in the news and does so in writing, of whic is more candid and feeling and personal than that of any other supreme court justice. she has confounded expectations in the tradition of the man who came to the salt content yuri 2 to 1860. a crowd expected contemporary, something weird and uncultivated . as abraham lincoln delivered th speech with the line that ended it, his call to action to end slavery, let us have faith that light makes my. it began to applaud. a lincoln biographer roche, onl at the great hall, cooper union can audiences so equally hale lincoln's presence, their to imagine not that diane, with th living man, not the bearded iconic myth, but the case shaven , fresh voice political original of concord all fear on the way to the white house and to the immortality. a fresh voice of political a result, a proud new yo
she did at princeton once you read about the failure to embrace a chicano culture and her father complained to the department of health education and welfare. heard tough questions were the reason voting rights and gay marriage case's lead attorneys time tied and lead in the news and does so in writing, of whic is more candid and feeling and personal than that of any other supreme court justice. she has confounded expectations in the tradition of the man who came to the salt content yuri 2 to...
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ok i mean princeton the fed i these are not primary sources to me i think the one that was done before was at u.c. berkeley not usually going to be a primary source without i'm not saying it's completely wrong but i think there's some always potential for some bias there why are people going after long term unemployment because that line between that safety net and that complacency hamrick that net versus they idea that you're you know it catches you on the way down and then when you just start swinging and i think they're playing with the weeks the bottom line here is we absolutely have to reform entitlements there's no way to talk about the physical nature of them it's a tightness is it's a safety it's a social safety net it's a type of entitlement in so far as it has a guarantee for a certain number of weeks i'll have people pay a little bit about a compromise how about instead of instead of giving people long term unemployment we do a franklin roosevelt did and say you have a right to a job if you don't have a job the best welfare program in the world is a job and we will create a
ok i mean princeton the fed i these are not primary sources to me i think the one that was done before was at u.c. berkeley not usually going to be a primary source without i'm not saying it's completely wrong but i think there's some always potential for some bias there why are people going after long term unemployment because that line between that safety net and that complacency hamrick that net versus they idea that you're you know it catches you on the way down and then when you just start...
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people to become lazy and not look for work and now a study has actually been done and farber a princeton and san francisco fed caught it was the the you know the fed. robbed a lot of these are not. political order in situations organizations they looked at this and what they found was that extending the benefits long term unemployment benefits of people into a bad economy is actually encourage those people to continue looking for work because they could at least afford to get up every day put a suit you know have bus fare or pay for the car to go knock on a door and try and get another job so if that being the case if law extending long term unemployment benefits actually encourages people to continue looking for work why are republicans working so hard to cut unemployment long term unemployment benefits. well i think there is something in human nature if you keep giving somebody something now i'm not going to sit here and say everybody who is who's getting unemployment benefits is a slacker sitting on a couch there are people who are actually they need that money and they they spend it
people to become lazy and not look for work and now a study has actually been done and farber a princeton and san francisco fed caught it was the the you know the fed. robbed a lot of these are not. political order in situations organizations they looked at this and what they found was that extending the benefits long term unemployment benefits of people into a bad economy is actually encourage those people to continue looking for work because they could at least afford to get up every day put...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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May 25, 2013
05/13
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i was born in princeton, my childhood in asian and we grew up in hawaii which was a huge melting pot and i went to school in new york and southeast to atlanta and then here in san francisco. it's here in san francisco that i really feel that i found myself as an asian american and that's where i own my asian heritage. we have such a dynamic vibrant community, a confident one and that along with the acceptions and the support of the bay area community. it's been a wonderful, this is where i have spent most of my life so it's really wonderful to be honored in city hall in san francisco. i have had a great career and met really outstanding interns like kate, she was a stand out. but i also found this incredible mixed chapter where i can do work to help the asian community. as to why the asian pacific fund exist because say tiny percent of charitable dollars goes towards asian needs in the bay area and the needs are vast and deep and on going. there is extreme poverty, there is barriers to finishing high school, there is a lack of access to health care, chronic health problems and pretty
i was born in princeton, my childhood in asian and we grew up in hawaii which was a huge melting pot and i went to school in new york and southeast to atlanta and then here in san francisco. it's here in san francisco that i really feel that i found myself as an asian american and that's where i own my asian heritage. we have such a dynamic vibrant community, a confident one and that along with the acceptions and the support of the bay area community. it's been a wonderful, this is where i have...
SFGTV2: San Francisco Government Television
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May 28, 2013
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she is summa cum laude from princeton. she is here with her first collection, "fighting for progress in the age of obama." i do not always agree with her personally when it comes to politics. we are here to find out from katrina how we're going to save the world with barack obama. let's start there. [laughter] >> i do not know how you learned by worked at national lampoon. saving the world. let me begin by saying how low they must be to go that low in new orleans. i would not put in the same sentence president obama and saving the world. it is very much about movements and the power in our history to bring about a fundamental change. you do need people inside, political leaders inside. it captures the imagination of the nation. through the turbulent history, it has been movement and the power of movements. franklin roosevelt was moved by later movements. lyndon johnson had the civil rights movement. i think we begin with that. this book comes out at a moment when the country sees the power and possibility of occupy, 99%, a
she is summa cum laude from princeton. she is here with her first collection, "fighting for progress in the age of obama." i do not always agree with her personally when it comes to politics. we are here to find out from katrina how we're going to save the world with barack obama. let's start there. [laughter] >> i do not know how you learned by worked at national lampoon. saving the world. let me begin by saying how low they must be to go that low in new orleans. i would not...
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princeton engineers created a functioning ear from a 3-d printer.n assistant professor is michael, and he's here with me in new york city on the set. welcome to the program. >> hi, thanks for having me. >> get pee straight on how this work -- me straight on how this works here, a 3-d print, how much did it cost? >> a thousand dollars. >> off the shelf? >> off the shelf, yes. >> what did you put into the 3-d printer to print an ear? >> well, most use 3-d printers to print plastics, jewelry, and things like that, but we put electronics in there to print the bionic ear. >> a funnel, pouring in tissue from a cow and electronics from another angle, and it prints an ear? really? >> in the shape -- whatever shape you design it, in the shape of an ear. that's how we did it. >> how far away are you from creating, printing, something that, if i lose my ear, literally, i can stick this on. how far from that? >> well, i think we're close, maybe five years. the tough part is adding blood flow to it. 3-d printers are shown to do that. >> you can do this? >> i thi
princeton engineers created a functioning ear from a 3-d printer.n assistant professor is michael, and he's here with me in new york city on the set. welcome to the program. >> hi, thanks for having me. >> get pee straight on how this work -- me straight on how this works here, a 3-d print, how much did it cost? >> a thousand dollars. >> off the shelf? >> off the shelf, yes. >> what did you put into the 3-d printer to print an ear? >> well, most use 3-d...
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princeton graduate. harvard law school. he's a bright person. so i think that he is very committed to his cause of trying to keep america free. >> jon: sure. everything you said could have described lex leutor. >> (laughing) jon: here's what i don't get about the senate. so, you know, you cosponsored, what was it, an infrastructure bank with kerry, right? >> i did jon: it's a bipartisan, very moderate, very hard to argue with an infrastructure bank. it gets shot down. background check on guns, gets shot down in the senate so to speak. no pun intended. too maniy comes out and says one of the reasons why is the republicans were told any cooperation with obama is a victory for him so we will give him none. they don't want anything to look bipartisan. how crazy is that? >> well, let me say pat too maniy, the senator from pennsylvania, did a yeoman's job >> jon: he and joe manchin got a compromise bill. >> really the american people are for background checks. they are >> jon: like 90%. ( cheers and applause ) >> jon: right but he has come out and sai
princeton graduate. harvard law school. he's a bright person. so i think that he is very committed to his cause of trying to keep america free. >> jon: sure. everything you said could have described lex leutor. >> (laughing) jon: here's what i don't get about the senate. so, you know, you cosponsored, what was it, an infrastructure bank with kerry, right? >> i did jon: it's a bipartisan, very moderate, very hard to argue with an infrastructure bank. it gets shot down....
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May 12, 2013
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his evening to talk about the new book that we just mentioned, the measure of civilization by the princeton university press a few weeks ago. this book is based on the idea that the past is not a very good guide to the future. so what i'm trying to do is look at how we could identify broad parts of industry and use them to get some kind of sense of what could come across the next 600 years or so. it includes a millennia of a global scale that an that human history will be taking. this book gratify her six years of work that i have been doing trying to answer what has become the biggest question that we have been asking. back in the 1700s, europeans discovered they had a problem. they were taking over the world. no one could quite explain the turkish empire being affected at any moment. so many european intellectuals were scratching their heads. there were new ideas bounced around. eventually came to the conclusion and that is the obvious explanation. and the feeling was that if you look back to .5000 years to the ancient greeks, they create unique civilization that is distant from and bette
his evening to talk about the new book that we just mentioned, the measure of civilization by the princeton university press a few weeks ago. this book is based on the idea that the past is not a very good guide to the future. so what i'm trying to do is look at how we could identify broad parts of industry and use them to get some kind of sense of what could come across the next 600 years or so. it includes a millennia of a global scale that an that human history will be taking. this book...
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May 1, 2013
05/13
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KRON
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." - or "princeton football." - we were 4 and 3 in ivy league play last year.uarterback, henry chang-- it doesn't matter. the point is that without tracy, tgs is going on... a forced hiatus. - forced hiatus? okay. so what should i tell the troops? - it's simple. sit them down individually. tell them the network still supports the show
." - or "princeton football." - we were 4 and 3 in ivy league play last year.uarterback, henry chang-- it doesn't matter. the point is that without tracy, tgs is going on... a forced hiatus. - forced hiatus? okay. so what should i tell the troops? - it's simple. sit them down individually. tell them the network still supports the show
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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there is a young man who is aims ofore, who america, who gets princeton and achieves the american dream and falls in love and has it all. 9/11 happens and suddenly this young man is looked at askance like he could be perhaps a terrorist or whatever. and how does this man then find his voice? that is a story of my film. it is a coming-of-age story but it is a story that in a way is about all of us. we have been taught so much to see ourselves and the other who will will not know and this is the film in which the other is yourself and the human being and a conversation between an american and pakistani, both equally complicated, equally contradictory, equally human. human beings. tavis: what say you about this notion, what we are up against to my read, the obstacle we are most up against is the contesta tion of the humanity of the other. of the others humanity. tommy what your film has to say about that and i want to go further. >> so often we do not know and we do not know the person's family, what they believed in, with a laugh about, whether they are married, whether the coral. there a
there is a young man who is aims ofore, who america, who gets princeton and achieves the american dream and falls in love and has it all. 9/11 happens and suddenly this young man is looked at askance like he could be perhaps a terrorist or whatever. and how does this man then find his voice? that is a story of my film. it is a coming-of-age story but it is a story that in a way is about all of us. we have been taught so much to see ourselves and the other who will will not know and this is the...
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May 12, 2013
05/13
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eddie glove chair of the center of african-american studies at princeton university.entlemen, thank you for being here. there's been so much tack over the last year or two that the black church is dead. dr. guard you started the conversation because you wrote a piece called "the black church is dead" is that true? >> i think we need to understand the church as a dynamic institution. that the phrase "the black church is really a myth" that there's always been black churches that differentiated lit your jik landscape. humans after all, progressive, forward. it has to be the center so we can understand exactly what black religious folk are doing. in these political landscape we need to start the conversation. >> i started the conversation. >> i have a slightly different take having been away from the church for a number of years and then returning to the church. i found that the church certainly was not the church of my youth. there were all kinds of models when i returned to the church that i think have responded very well to critiques like dr. glove raised, critiques l
eddie glove chair of the center of african-american studies at princeton university.entlemen, thank you for being here. there's been so much tack over the last year or two that the black church is dead. dr. guard you started the conversation because you wrote a piece called "the black church is dead" is that true? >> i think we need to understand the church as a dynamic institution. that the phrase "the black church is really a myth" that there's always been black...
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the retired general has a doctorate from princeton and will teach classes and mentor students at usc. excuse me, this is footage of general john allen retired marine general who ran the war in afghanistan. general petraeus resigned from the c.i.a. last november after admitting to an extramarital affair. >> coming up, youtube declares victory over television. the bold statement made by google's executive chairman on the future of video entertainment. >> how to stop men from cheating. could the cure >> good morning, everyone, at 4:53. a look at the san francisco camera, a beautiful start to the day but it will be a scorcher. >> youtube is declaring victory over television. the executive chairman of google which own youtube declares internet video has displaced t watch -- tv watching and says unlike tv it has global reach, community engagement and a younger audience than any kindle network. they hit the milestone of a billion visitors each month. can it tell you are about to be late for work? >> i don't think so. but they can rub it in. >> thanks. now the forecast. >> mike has the latest
the retired general has a doctorate from princeton and will teach classes and mentor students at usc. excuse me, this is footage of general john allen retired marine general who ran the war in afghanistan. general petraeus resigned from the c.i.a. last november after admitting to an extramarital affair. >> coming up, youtube declares victory over television. the bold statement made by google's executive chairman on the future of video entertainment. >> how to stop men from cheating....
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jackson a louisiana native holds a graduate degree in chemical engineering from princeton and is very familiar with the a facts of chemicals. because there are scientific unknowns we had to make the decisions that are a series of tradeoffs and basically in common language it was either nothing or in moderation. b.p.'s penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released and why the head of the fisa if you say i would choose either ban or limit the use of dispersants could you have the power to act unilaterally i believe i did chairman but i do want my lawyers to get you a response i know going in but but that's a question you needed to know from day one ms jackson forget about cleaning up forget about the natural resource to average just for releasing that oil just for releasing oil. tins of billions of dollars of foreign well if you can buy. how much oil is released they will get those penalties down from twenty five billion to maybe one or two billion billion dollars here a billion dollars there you talk to real movie. the company that makes correct it now coke is a joint venture
jackson a louisiana native holds a graduate degree in chemical engineering from princeton and is very familiar with the a facts of chemicals. because there are scientific unknowns we had to make the decisions that are a series of tradeoffs and basically in common language it was either nothing or in moderation. b.p.'s penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released and why the head of the fisa if you say i would choose either ban or limit the use of dispersants could you have the power...
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May 19, 2013
05/13
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first we have paul starr, a princeton university and someone who's used to using social science to engage the most significant public debates of our time and often not explicitly political terms. that really is about rigorous thinking in the public realm to promote his liberal politics. there would be a fruitful exchange and then we have nicholas lehman, outgoing dean of the journalism school i'm proud to say will be a fellow next year, so getting a preview of what it will be like to have nick around. makes two is not shy about engaging public and plitical questions and people have a variety of viewpoints on where he comes out too. he's committed to an american-style of objectivity but on occasion taken stances as well. there's nothing that should prevent us from doing that wholeheartedly tonight. i look forward to a terrific conversation. our panel tonight is not just for us in the room. it's also broadcast on c-span. at best the speakers to come speak at the mic and then i will moderate questions afterwards. i ask her to have a question if you could go to the mic so they capture for eve
first we have paul starr, a princeton university and someone who's used to using social science to engage the most significant public debates of our time and often not explicitly political terms. that really is about rigorous thinking in the public realm to promote his liberal politics. there would be a fruitful exchange and then we have nicholas lehman, outgoing dean of the journalism school i'm proud to say will be a fellow next year, so getting a preview of what it will be like to have nick...
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May 14, 2013
05/13
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KNTV
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the princeton high steppers. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ slow it down now!igh steppers, showing us how it's done on the plaza this morning. >>> coming up, we'll show you how to master the trickiest fashion trends, right after the local news. . >>> good morning to you. it is 8:56 now. i'm laura garcia-cannon. early action today in the east bay to prepare for what is expected to be an especially dangerous fire season. fema is hosting two public meetings in oakland. agencies will hear proposal to reduce fire in east bay hills. it's dry, hot, a rough one. today a little cooling, christina? >> yeah, you know we'll see a few degrees of cooling, laura. the real cooldown comes into play thursday and friday. today you'll notice difference, 3 to 5 cooler, bayside r)u around 75, 67 at the coast. by this thursday, struggle to stay in the 70s. cooler on friday. saturday and sunday we start to warm you right back up. hope you have a great day. >>> welcome to "today" on this tuesday morning, another good looking spring day here in the heart of midtown. natalie is bopping h
the princeton high steppers. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ slow it down now!igh steppers, showing us how it's done on the plaza this morning. >>> coming up, we'll show you how to master the trickiest fashion trends, right after the local news. . >>> good morning to you. it is 8:56 now. i'm laura garcia-cannon. early action today in the east bay to prepare for what is expected to be an especially dangerous fire season. fema is hosting two public meetings in oakland. agencies will hear...