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i acquiesced and went off to live in princeton. as i say, that had complications it did give me a chance to interact much more with my father, partly because the vacations i spent with them certainly during world war two were mostly spent without him. he was always in los alamos or on a secret trip to england. elsa gave me a chance to go to a really terrific school, something that doesn't exist much now, a sort of all grow private school. doctors will lawyers are professors saddam. the options were open to them and i have to say, when i got harvard that was demanded of me. >> so your father arrives a princeton. he's instantly a sensation. in fact and i think there "in your book is that the department at princeton was divided into three categories in mathematics. that the radical mathematicians, the physicist, and then there was john von norman. were you aware of that? >> i knew that he was a pretty hot shot mathematician. i don't think i was aware of how much he bridged over until i became aware of the existence of the mathematical
i acquiesced and went off to live in princeton. as i say, that had complications it did give me a chance to interact much more with my father, partly because the vacations i spent with them certainly during world war two were mostly spent without him. he was always in los alamos or on a secret trip to england. elsa gave me a chance to go to a really terrific school, something that doesn't exist much now, a sort of all grow private school. doctors will lawyers are professors saddam. the options...
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Jul 10, 2013
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words from wisdom from a princeton mom. there would never be a chance to meet so many worthy men. >> cancer patient grant reid was diagnosed with cancer two years ago. the buckeye fan named the tumor michigan and decided he was going beat it. last week he beat michigan and underwent his final chemo treatment. >> the united states is no longer the most bees nation and skin cancer doesn't stop everyone from going tang. >> hi, shawn. if you ever wonder what models are attracting car thieves the ford f-250 pick up is the most stolen car in the u.s. replacing the cadillac escalade which topped the chart for a decade. pickups were very popular for thieves. >> barnes & noble c.e.o. has announced his resignation. he headed the company three years. unclear who replaces him. his resignation comes weeks after the book seller announced plans to stop making it's nook tablets. >> the u.s. is no longer the world's most bees nation. the title now goes nearly 70 percent are overweight and childhood obesity has tripled in the past decade. >>
words from wisdom from a princeton mom. there would never be a chance to meet so many worthy men. >> cancer patient grant reid was diagnosed with cancer two years ago. the buckeye fan named the tumor michigan and decided he was going beat it. last week he beat michigan and underwent his final chemo treatment. >> the united states is no longer the most bees nation and skin cancer doesn't stop everyone from going tang. >> hi, shawn. if you ever wonder what models are attracting...
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Jul 1, 2013
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, no, i mean, i really didn't like princeton. yeah, i was an irish catholic kid who thought it hadn't changed like you concluded it had. i mean, you know, i admit, i had little -- one of my real dilemmas is i have two kids who went to ivy league schools, i'm not sure my grandfather finnegan will allow me -- forgive me for allowing this to happen. all kidding aside, it's important to understand, at least for my questioning, that's the context in at least i want to ask you my questions. what the l me difference is -- explain to me how that test is distinguishable from just plain old discrimination? chris: it came in under 12 minutes, actually, a little over 12 minutes. that was all one question. wow. and when we come back, our last chris: welcome back. mitt romney rounds out our list of the most fascinating characters in our 11 years on the air. romney was hardly mr. excitement but we found a lot of humor in that now legendary story how he tied his irish setter to the roof of the family car. the obama campaign plans to appeal to do
, no, i mean, i really didn't like princeton. yeah, i was an irish catholic kid who thought it hadn't changed like you concluded it had. i mean, you know, i admit, i had little -- one of my real dilemmas is i have two kids who went to ivy league schools, i'm not sure my grandfather finnegan will allow me -- forgive me for allowing this to happen. all kidding aside, it's important to understand, at least for my questioning, that's the context in at least i want to ask you my questions. what the...
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Jul 7, 2013
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also from princeton university dr.r ra. >> and a 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
also from princeton university dr.r ra. >> and a 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...
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Jul 6, 2013
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he moved from california to princeton, to take directorship of the institute. an ideal job for him in all sorts of ways but one of his main reasons for taking up the job was it moved him away from the west coast to the east coast because what he concentrated on after the second world war was not physics but politics. he spent a lot of time in washington advising the u.s. government on atomic policy, made some enemies by opposing the development of the hydrogen bomb. the hydrogen bomb is thousands of times more powerful than the hiroshima bomb. one argument he used was you don't need to develop this, you can't imagine using a bomb that powerful so why would you ever want to build it? the other argument was nobody knew how to build it at that stage. then the breakthrough, after which oppenheimer grudgingly said okay, it is technically sweet and prepared to see it being developed but by that time he had made very influential enemies in the corridors of power. two of the most important were edward teller, the hungarian physicist and made it his life's work to see t
he moved from california to princeton, to take directorship of the institute. an ideal job for him in all sorts of ways but one of his main reasons for taking up the job was it moved him away from the west coast to the east coast because what he concentrated on after the second world war was not physics but politics. he spent a lot of time in washington advising the u.s. government on atomic policy, made some enemies by opposing the development of the hydrogen bomb. the hydrogen bomb is...
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Jul 26, 2013
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bad for princeton, plus for harvard. >> that shows real diversity. we should look at diversity, not skin color, not gender. as a woman i don't want people to think i got where i am because you're a female or your skin color. that's a degrading way to look at things. >> janet yellen of course is qualified. but the president does not want to get a phone call from nancy pelosi and dianne feinstein and say we're going to come over and discuss with you the future of your legislative -- >> don't forget barbara boxer. >> larry summers supporters are outside of congress, janet yellen supporters are inside of congress. >> this is the way it's going to work. this is a democratic party thing, no matter how you slice the pie, i'm not taking sides intellectually. i think yellen is very, very smart. i think she's a big dove. i think summers is less of a dove but he's also very, very smart. is john fund right? are we going to have the california ladies, boxer and pelosi and feinstein crashing into the white house saying he attacked blacks, he attacked women and the
bad for princeton, plus for harvard. >> that shows real diversity. we should look at diversity, not skin color, not gender. as a woman i don't want people to think i got where i am because you're a female or your skin color. that's a degrading way to look at things. >> janet yellen of course is qualified. but the president does not want to get a phone call from nancy pelosi and dianne feinstein and say we're going to come over and discuss with you the future of your legislative --...
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Jul 5, 2013
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he turned and made a big loop around and came up at princeton and started again. two victories one right on top of the other. and that combination just changed the morale of everything. you can read hit in the letters of abigail adams. you can read in the all kinds of people, ministers and attorneys, people in all walks of life writing about what it meant to get the word that we had won at trenton. and princeton was important, the one of the most important events in the war and consequently one of the most important events in history it would truly change the world. that little attack on trenton, which was a little village. >> rose: and he took 2,500 men over. >> yes. and two other attacks were launched farther down the river. the. >> rose: and in this case washington was the field commander? >> he wrod with the troops but he was not immediately. general green and general sullivan were in command of the two prongs of the attack and our old friend the boston book seller henry knox was in charge of the artillery and the artillery really were decisive in that battle.
he turned and made a big loop around and came up at princeton and started again. two victories one right on top of the other. and that combination just changed the morale of everything. you can read hit in the letters of abigail adams. you can read in the all kinds of people, ministers and attorneys, people in all walks of life writing about what it meant to get the word that we had won at trenton. and princeton was important, the one of the most important events in the war and consequently one...
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Jul 14, 2013
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madison did not learn at all, princeton, madison just and read a lot. this book is not written for those folks. arguably i guess based on the evidence from what i can tell from the jobs book and other profiles of successful people, you should live in a ranch house in california, use your grosz, play the guitar or invent machines and you will make it much more likely. statistically at think that may be true. >> a question here. >> just kidding. >> hi. i just wanted to thank you all for being here today and making this presentation. have a question. by the way, and also avoid duty alum. two questions. we were talking about the liberal arts education and health it has changed, i was curious to know how it changed and how you think that this is impacting students in terms of their ability to get a job. my second question is that you seem to come in my opinion, over emphasize the economic benefits of an education but under emphasize the ability to think critically which in my humble opinion is the primary reason for going to college. yes, it's important to m
madison did not learn at all, princeton, madison just and read a lot. this book is not written for those folks. arguably i guess based on the evidence from what i can tell from the jobs book and other profiles of successful people, you should live in a ranch house in california, use your grosz, play the guitar or invent machines and you will make it much more likely. statistically at think that may be true. >> a question here. >> just kidding. >> hi. i just wanted to thank...
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Jul 15, 2013
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and went to princeton for a good number of years. thiokol life in the beginning of the 20th century it was for much of the revolution coming he had one year that was called the miracle year but yet he had another very he set the foundation for much of modern physics with the theory of special relativity , a general relativity, and the effect that sets the foundation for quantum mechanics that atoms are not just mathematical but like putting a the molecule's in water but to do things is no aspect of physics that einstein did not touch on. a well-known pacifist even though he did write a letter to president roosevelt that led to the construction of the atomic bomb he regretted that later even though he said there was some justification because there was a fear that the germans had won but having seen what atomic bombs can do, he was horrified of what came matt of that but the entire possibility of using energy cave at out of his famous equations where equals mc squared. you cannot blame him for writing with it leads to the nuclear reac
and went to princeton for a good number of years. thiokol life in the beginning of the 20th century it was for much of the revolution coming he had one year that was called the miracle year but yet he had another very he set the foundation for much of modern physics with the theory of special relativity , a general relativity, and the effect that sets the foundation for quantum mechanics that atoms are not just mathematical but like putting a the molecule's in water but to do things is no...
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randi kaye, cnn, princeton, indiana. >> "cnn money" spoke to sydney elaineleters confidant who leaked conversations with weiner and her decision to go public. listen to this. >> i'm a would-be journalist and i do get paid for what i put out in the public and i told her listen, this is an opportunity if this story does come out, you should make money from it. it's your story. that was absolutely my position with her. i don't know if she's profiting from the story now. i know i'm personally not profiting from any of this whatsoever, but i didn't think that was unreasonable for her to tell her story in the media. in my opinion her life is going to be ruined because of this. she'll be forever tainted by this so if she could make a couple dollars i would have saw that as a silver lining and i did counsel her to that fact. >> if you want to see the full conversation logon to cnnmoney.com. >>> it is mysterious and frustrating, als, better known as lou gehrig's disease it ravages the body but not the mind. my mother was diagnosed a year and a half ago and she like others rely on life saving m
randi kaye, cnn, princeton, indiana. >> "cnn money" spoke to sydney elaineleters confidant who leaked conversations with weiner and her decision to go public. listen to this. >> i'm a would-be journalist and i do get paid for what i put out in the public and i told her listen, this is an opportunity if this story does come out, you should make money from it. it's your story. that was absolutely my position with her. i don't know if she's profiting from the story now. i...
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Jul 20, 2013
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from princeton. why did you do that? >> well, i definitely believed that i knew how to market.i wanted the credentials, which wouldn't be checked out very well, and, in fact, in princeton they don't have a marketing degree. >> reporter: while eric is living a lofty ivy league fraud, his former family has a lowly reality back in the desert. remember, they had declared him legally dead and are trying to put their grief behind them. but anne myers has no clue that a grenade is about to blow her world apart. >> she says that her first reaction was, oh, my god, the anti-christ has returned. he got away clean, but he came back and destroyed everybody's life in the process. >> he's a sick, psychotic person who has only ever acted for himself. >> stay with us. [ male announcer ] monopoly's back at mcdonald's this summer and the food you love is serving up fantastic prizes. like red box movies... ♪ a chance to win a million dollar prize on a big mac... [ cheers and applause ] ♪ plus beaches luxury resort vacation packages. so pull up a chair. we're serving up more monopoly fun at mcdona
from princeton. why did you do that? >> well, i definitely believed that i knew how to market.i wanted the credentials, which wouldn't be checked out very well, and, in fact, in princeton they don't have a marketing degree. >> reporter: while eric is living a lofty ivy league fraud, his former family has a lowly reality back in the desert. remember, they had declared him legally dead and are trying to put their grief behind them. but anne myers has no clue that a grenade is about to...
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columbia, yale, princeton, pomona college. and at number one stanford. people are happiest in life when they're 23 and again when they hit 69 years of age. that is according to a new study from the london school of economics. happiness, they say, goes in waves throughout our lives. it dips in our 50s and then peaks again when we're able to not sweat the small stuff anymore. that's right. we shouldn't sweat the small stuff. straight ahead, jimmy fallon on his new baby girl. you're watching early today. >>> thank you guys so much. i hope i don't screw this up. but i'm just so happy. and it's just the past 24 hours has been -- just really exciting for i and my wife. we haven't had a chance to respond to everyone's calls and messages, but let me just say, yes, william and kate will definitely set up a play date. stop bothering me. >> he didn't screw it up. jimmy fallon talking about his baby daughter, winnie rose fallon. congratulations to him and his new family there. he still looks awake, too. here are some sports he had lines. soccer team usa winning stre
columbia, yale, princeton, pomona college. and at number one stanford. people are happiest in life when they're 23 and again when they hit 69 years of age. that is according to a new study from the london school of economics. happiness, they say, goes in waves throughout our lives. it dips in our 50s and then peaks again when we're able to not sweat the small stuff anymore. that's right. we shouldn't sweat the small stuff. straight ahead, jimmy fallon on his new baby girl. you're watching early...
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Jul 25, 2013
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he is a princeton professor and the former chief economist of the u.s. treasury department. he is currently chairman of the president's council of economic advisers and a member of the cabinet. i am pleased to have him back here. welcome. >> my pleasure. >> rose: tell me-- because you know the president. i'm sure you spoke to him about this-- how-- what's going on? how did he approach this, and what should we know from the inside about how they felt-- what they felt was significant and what they're trying to do? >> i think the president firmly feels that we need to grow the economy from the middle out. i think if you go back to the remarks he made in his first speech at knoxx college, he articulated that view. because of the economic crisis, it's taken us some time to get back-- our footing, to get the economy back in a place where we're not just seeking stability but we want to improve middle class security. and the president didn't run for office just to get things back to where they were. he has, i think, a much more ambitious agenda, and i think he believes it's critical
he is a princeton professor and the former chief economist of the u.s. treasury department. he is currently chairman of the president's council of economic advisers and a member of the cabinet. i am pleased to have him back here. welcome. >> my pleasure. >> rose: tell me-- because you know the president. i'm sure you spoke to him about this-- how-- what's going on? how did he approach this, and what should we know from the inside about how they felt-- what they felt was significant...
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. >> sanford beat princeton, yale, and harvard. >> berkeley ranks best as the best state school. >> they bested rankings on what they get out of college, including a number of topics. >>> congress is looking at an overhaul of the mail delivery system, debating a bill that would move delivery to cluster mailboxes and cutting delivery says from fix to five days. >> the postal service lost billions of dollars. >> they say it would save $4 billion every year. >>> how the league handles testing hgh, union officials say they favor testing but have concerns about the appeals process and how players would be discipline. >> both sides say they hope to have guidelines in place for the 2013 season. >>> well, by george, the newest prince of england has a name, goernl george alexander louis. >> what's in a name? a lot if you're the future heir to the english thrown. >> meet george alexander, press george of cambridge. >> the announcement came this afternoon. >> they were delighted to share the name, which has significance in the ancestor of the family. >> george is the name he chose when he was king.
. >> sanford beat princeton, yale, and harvard. >> berkeley ranks best as the best state school. >> they bested rankings on what they get out of college, including a number of topics. >>> congress is looking at an overhaul of the mail delivery system, debating a bill that would move delivery to cluster mailboxes and cutting delivery says from fix to five days. >> the postal service lost billions of dollars. >> they say it would save $4 billion every year....
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Jul 25, 2013
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stanford university comes in number one followed by pomono college with princeton and yale following. best public university, uc berkeley. forbes magazine says it reflects a shift to stem majors stem signs for science, technology, engineering and math. >> listen to this. san francisco and google teeming up to provide free wi-fi at dozens of locations throughout the city. official as announced they received a gift to put transmitters in 31 parks and recreation centers. >> a lot of the prior debate that never moved forward was because of questions over business models this is a free gift of financial benefits to the city of san francisco. with no string as tached. >> very nice. so some areas which will have free wi-fi include city center plaza, justin herman plaza. those transmitters will be installed in december and service should be up and running by spring. >> two tech pioneers are honored. oracle ceo and steve jobs. jobs co-founded apple in 1977 and ellison turned or area cell into one of the world's largest hardware and software companies. other bay area leaders include george luca
stanford university comes in number one followed by pomono college with princeton and yale following. best public university, uc berkeley. forbes magazine says it reflects a shift to stem majors stem signs for science, technology, engineering and math. >> listen to this. san francisco and google teeming up to provide free wi-fi at dozens of locations throughout the city. official as announced they received a gift to put transmitters in 31 parks and recreation centers. >> a lot of...
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eddie glove chair of the center of african-american studies at princeton university.ank 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 like the nati
eddie glove chair of the center of african-american studies at princeton university.ank 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...
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. >> we live on princeton way d n down, and we were shook. >> my whole apartment was like -- >> fire officials did tell us that it was a natural gas leak that happened in the home, but they are trying to pinpoint where. >> some people were pulled to safety by mike obenhouse at a nearby restaurant. >> we saved a little boy and girl and dad and then another house that started to catch on fire, and there was another guy in the initial part of it hwas n fire, and was bleeding. >> what i cannot believe is that nobody perished. is. am surprised with the force >>> thioms huron huv or unmanned ariel drone. this is in afghanistan in 2010. keep a look at the flight personnel on the tarmac up ahead, but before you know it, they run out of the way as this drone takes off and you realize that the thing is completely out of control, and up ahead, you see a transport airplane, a c-160 sitting on the runway, and smash. >> oh, no. >> reports now say that the guy driving this was recently out of training. he accidentally engaged the auto start program and he could not turn it off in time before it wen
. >> we live on princeton way d n down, and we were shook. >> my whole apartment was like -- >> fire officials did tell us that it was a natural gas leak that happened in the home, but they are trying to pinpoint where. >> some people were pulled to safety by mike obenhouse at a nearby restaurant. >> we saved a little boy and girl and dad and then another house that started to catch on fire, and there was another guy in the initial part of it hwas n fire, and was...
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Jul 30, 2013
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class i went back to prince -- >> i went back to princeton university to teach. of the president's council of economic advisers. we start with the news of the day. congress is in its final week before it goes on is on sabbatical. everybody is wondering, september 30, are we going to have a government shut down? this administration always feels like republicans do not listen. you only have so many levers from making republicans listen. i wonder if this administration wants the government shutdown. >> clearly what the administration wants is what is in the interest of the middle class. it is hard to see how a government shutdown is in the interest of the middle class. >> how do you make the congress listen? >> the president is doing his best. he went to illinois and then to jacksonville, florida. i went on that trip with him. tomorrow he is speaking on jobs in the economy. he is focused on the number one problem facing america today, providing more opportunities for people to get into the middle class. we try to make the case as best we can to the american people a
class i went back to prince -- >> i went back to princeton university to teach. of the president's council of economic advisers. we start with the news of the day. congress is in its final week before it goes on is on sabbatical. everybody is wondering, september 30, are we going to have a government shut down? this administration always feels like republicans do not listen. you only have so many levers from making republicans listen. i wonder if this administration wants the government...
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Jul 25, 2013
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randi kaye, cnn, princeton, indiana. >>> to the aaron hernandez case.other grand jury investigates him the patriots' head coach talks about the former player and the tattoos under scrutiny. does the nfl have the right to weed out players because of their body art? we talked to one former player who is also an attorney. it starts with little things. tiny changes in the brain. little things anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. ensures support, a breakthrough. and sooner than you'd like. sooner than you'd think. you die from alzheimer's disease. we cure alzheimer's disease. every little click, call or donation adds up to something big. really? 25 grams of protein. what do we have? all four of us, together? 24. he's low fat, too, and has 5 grams of sugars. i'll believe it when i--- [ both ] oooooh... what's shakin'? [ female announcer ] as you get older, protein is an important part of staying active and strong. ensure high protein... fifty percent of your daily value of protein. low fat and five grams of sugars. see? he's a good egg.
randi kaye, cnn, princeton, indiana. >>> to the aaron hernandez case.other grand jury investigates him the patriots' head coach talks about the former player and the tattoos under scrutiny. does the nfl have the right to weed out players because of their body art? we talked to one former player who is also an attorney. it starts with little things. tiny changes in the brain. little things anyone can do. it steals your memories. your independence. ensures support, a breakthrough. and...
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jackson a louisiana native hold to 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 here in moderation. b.p.'s penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released and why the head of the v.a. so if you say i would to 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 farm well if you can wait how much oil is released they might be able to get those privileges down from twenty five billion to maybe one or two billion billion dollars here a billion dollars are you talking real moving. the company that makes correct said now coke is a
jackson a louisiana native hold to 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 here in moderation. b.p.'s penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released and why the head of the v.a. so if you say i would to either ban or limit the use of dispersants could you have the...
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princeton university slipped to third place from first last year. any help came in at no. 4.l, which is 22nd on the list was ranked as the best date school and the country. the forbes ranking 650 u.s. colleges and universities is based on this dissatisfaction postgraduate success student at graduation rate in national competitive awards. >>mark:two female u-s-c students who were raped have accused the university of trying to sweep it under the rug. that accusation has led to a civil rights investigation by the department of education. the student say the school basically mishandled their complaints. one of the victims says she has proof, in an email and recorded conversations with the suspect.where she says he admits that the sex was not consensual. >> very interesting to note that a victim can come forward with a binder of evidence that supports their claim that they were subjected to a violent attack but the school will choose to believe completely unsubstantiated claim from a male student who denies it. usc said in a statement, "the university of southern california takes
princeton university slipped to third place from first last year. any help came in at no. 4.l, which is 22nd on the list was ranked as the best date school and the country. the forbes ranking 650 u.s. colleges and universities is based on this dissatisfaction postgraduate success student at graduation rate in national competitive awards. >>mark:two female u-s-c students who were raped have accused the university of trying to sweep it under the rug. that accusation has led to a civil...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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right now is burton malkiel, the author of "the investing guide, a random walk down wall street," princeton professor. good to have you on the program. >> thank you so much. >> thank you so much for joining us. it's been a busy week, hasn't it? we saw the federal insider trading charges against the huge hedge fund s.a.c. capital. do you think that has any impact on the retail investor? >> oh, i think it certainly does. i think people get scared, that the insiders have a real advantage over the public, and i think it drives people away from the market. >> i mean, i guess it does shake confidence, and once again people feel like the game is not a playing field -- an even playing field. >> i think that's right. and, therefore, i think the s.e.c. coming down very hard on this, i don't know exactly what's going to happen, but the fact that this is in the sights of the s.e.c. and they're going to try to make this as fair as possible is probably a good thing, not a bad thing. >> they probably certainly have been working on this a long time. >> you bet. >> let me ask you about this upcoming week. t
right now is burton malkiel, the author of "the investing guide, a random walk down wall street," princeton professor. good to have you on the program. >> thank you so much. >> thank you so much for joining us. it's been a busy week, hasn't it? we saw the federal insider trading charges against the huge hedge fund s.a.c. capital. do you think that has any impact on the retail investor? >> oh, i think it certainly does. i think people get scared, that the insiders...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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no one thinks the underage drinking crime of a princeton student ought to be criminalized.e therapy, maybe work to -- but no one thinks we should put them in jail, including me. >> i never liked princeton kids. >> they get a second chance. if you've got some advantages. >> yeah. >> and a hoodie, talk about a thing -- you know -- >> they're all wearing hoodies. >> i mean, hoodies are worn by many kinds of young people. >> we have a -- the polling on this got some attention. i want to show, first of all, the polling on the zimmerman verdict, an abc/washington post poll. white as prove of the verdict 51% to 31%. blacks approve, 86% disapprove. what we thought was interesting is if you match this up, sort of how politicized this becomes, if you match this up with the breakdown of the 2012 election, doesn't look that much different. whites with with a 20-point difference for romney. same thing,. i'm trying to figure out if this is because the verdict and because of obama's reaction to it has been filtered through the political media and everybody has gotten the message they're s
no one thinks the underage drinking crime of a princeton student ought to be criminalized.e therapy, maybe work to -- but no one thinks we should put them in jail, including me. >> i never liked princeton kids. >> they get a second chance. if you've got some advantages. >> yeah. >> and a hoodie, talk about a thing -- you know -- >> they're all wearing hoodies. >> i mean, hoodies are worn by many kinds of young people. >> we have a -- the polling on this...
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so our guest is steven cohen professor of russian studies and history at new york university and princeton university's stephen it's really great to have you with us today i'm happy to be with you so right so at this point who is snowden more of a problem for the united states or russia. well in my perspective he's a problem for both if we put this in historical context since the end of the soviet union twenty two years ago we've lost several opportunities to create a meaningful cooperative relationship between washington and moscow it appeared a few weeks ago that we had another opportunity the opportunity began with the tragedy the bombings in boston when it was clear that we needed a lot of cooperation in counterterrorism between moscow and washington and then as the syrian civil war or whatever it is spun out of control certainly the worst crisis in the middle east in many years it also appeared that washington and moscow were ready to try to do something about that and then came snowden not only snow but he clearly is a setback and i would say both for president putin and president ob
so our guest is steven cohen professor of russian studies and history at new york university and princeton university's stephen it's really great to have you with us today i'm happy to be with you so right so at this point who is snowden more of a problem for the united states or russia. well in my perspective he's a problem for both if we put this in historical context since the end of the soviet union twenty two years ago we've lost several opportunities to create a meaningful cooperative...
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so our guest is stephen cohen professor of russian studies and history at new york university and princeton university steven it's really great to have you with us today i'm happy to be with you so at this point who is snowden more of a problem for the united states or russia. well in my perspective he's a problem for both if we put this in historical context since the end of the soviet union twenty two years ago we've lost several opportunities to create a meaningful cooperative relationship between washington and moscow it appeared a few weeks ago that we had another opportunity the opportunity began with the tragedy the bombings in boston when it was clear that we needed a lot of cooperation in counterterrorism between moscow and washington and then as the syrian civil war whatever it is spun out of control certainly the worst crisis in the middle east in many years it also appeared that washington and moscow were ready to try to do something about that and then came snowden not only snow but he clearly is a setback and i would say both for president putin and president obama but do you
so our guest is stephen cohen professor of russian studies and history at new york university and princeton university steven it's really great to have you with us today i'm happy to be with you so at this point who is snowden more of a problem for the united states or russia. well in my perspective he's a problem for both if we put this in historical context since the end of the soviet union twenty two years ago we've lost several opportunities to create a meaningful cooperative relationship...
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Jul 30, 2013
07/13
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politico's mike allen spoke with alan krueger about a week before he returns to princeton university. [applause] >> thank you much for coming in, really appreciate it. thank you so much for coming out on your final week as a member of the president's cabinet. you've been there almost from day one, alan krueger was chief economist at treasury for the first part of administration, and then you went awol, is that what they call it? >> i called it sabbatical. >> okay. so a little sabbatical. what'd you do? >> i went back to princeton university to teach. >> and then came back to be chairman of the president's council of the economic advisers. playbook we always start with the news of the day, and washington -- especially with congress in its final week before it dose on its own swat -- it goes on its own sabbatical -- everybody's wondering september 30th, are we going to have a goth shutdown? and we've started to wonder, you know, this administration always feels like republicans don't listen. you only have so many levers for making relins listen -- republicans listen. i wonder if this ad
politico's mike allen spoke with alan krueger about a week before he returns to princeton university. [applause] >> thank you much for coming in, really appreciate it. thank you so much for coming out on your final week as a member of the president's cabinet. you've been there almost from day one, alan krueger was chief economist at treasury for the first part of administration, and then you went awol, is that what they call it? >> i called it sabbatical. >> okay. so a little...
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and walked the halls of some of the most prestigious universities he received as an undergrad from princeton university and a law degree from harvard to prevailing in academia he went on to conquer white collar crime in the manhattan district attorney's office he became the chief of the labor racketeering unit and led the investigation that brought down the gambino mafia on an organized crime scene sting he soon took an interest in politics and successfully ran for state attorney general this is where he dug himself the sheriff of wall street where you played an untraditional role and prosecuted the federal cases against the most powerful firms on wall street using the more inactive one nine hundred twenty one spitzer used a greater than usual powers to step in where the federal government normally has jurisdiction he joined the f.c.c. to secure more than a billion dollars in fines during a late trading investigation and the global settlement for inflating stock prices he levy the penalties from j.p. morgan chase goldman sachs deutsche bank just to name a few he also went after dick grasso t
and walked the halls of some of the most prestigious universities he received as an undergrad from princeton university and a law degree from harvard to prevailing in academia he went on to conquer white collar crime in the manhattan district attorney's office he became the chief of the labor racketeering unit and led the investigation that brought down the gambino mafia on an organized crime scene sting he soon took an interest in politics and successfully ran for state attorney general this...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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and princeton they would be busy and set off to change an industry. here's how it works.nstead of dropping your car off at long-term parking you drop it off with them for free. while you're gone, they'll rent your car out to someone else reggie chaing less money than companies like hertz and a vis and they'll give you a percentage of the fee. ♪ >> it's definitely a new way of thinking. it's part of what's been dubbed the sharing economy and the way they launched their company is modern, as well. instead of waiting till everything was perfect, they launched with as little in place as possible. with what's called a minimum viable product or mvp. >> well, if i'm going to do this, is i need to have some people who can help with the transactions, i need to have the insurance squared away. and you know, preferably a parking lot. it doesn't have to happen. >> that's right. they launched their company with no official place to park the cars they were collecting. in the beginning they would meet their clients at short term parking which is why they got the cease and desist order f
and princeton they would be busy and set off to change an industry. here's how it works.nstead of dropping your car off at long-term parking you drop it off with them for free. while you're gone, they'll rent your car out to someone else reggie chaing less money than companies like hertz and a vis and they'll give you a percentage of the fee. ♪ >> it's definitely a new way of thinking. it's part of what's been dubbed the sharing economy and the way they launched their company is modern,...
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Jul 3, 2013
07/13
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my husband is tending his grave in the princeton cemetery clipping, weeding and breaking and replacing a plant thank. a task to perform twice a year the seventh off with fatally three of his daughter's future to do his part to make sure the father's memory is not neglected. my father's presence was closest in 2003 with a national celebration commemorating the 100th anniversary of his birth. was invited to participate as an honored guest that carried with it one of the most hectic schedules i every encountered. couple of weeks after finishing treatments for breast cancer if found myself at only giving talks about my father at internationally attended meetings of the hon period mathematical in computer science society's of budapest but informal talks in english to students in schools all over hungary. thank goodness it is a small country. we were transported to every country in the cramped vehicle belonging to one of my father self-appointed promoters to it acted as our show for. some schools were actually named after von neumann but all students knew who he was and what he accomplished
my husband is tending his grave in the princeton cemetery clipping, weeding and breaking and replacing a plant thank. a task to perform twice a year the seventh off with fatally three of his daughter's future to do his part to make sure the father's memory is not neglected. my father's presence was closest in 2003 with a national celebration commemorating the 100th anniversary of his birth. was invited to participate as an honored guest that carried with it one of the most hectic schedules i...
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Jul 15, 2013
07/13
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and worked at princeton for a good number of years like call life at the beginning of the 20th century was actually responsible for what we have witnessed some one year is known as his miracle year yet he has another miracle year in which he sets the foundations for much of modern physics and by that i mean the furious of general relativity -- the series of general relativity to set the foundation for quantum mechanics -- mechanics. but this is like putting the of particles in the water. there are atoms there that do things and so on. there is no aspect of physics that einstein did not to touch on. . . >> of course you cannot blame him for writing the same physics that led to that. this includes the nuclear reactor for power and so on today. many other things that we talk about. but you know, he was one that indicated it always led to a nuclear weapons. >> can you comment upon the mentality that took place peace and the respect for life among the great scientists. you had einstein with his intense respect for human life. is there something that they saw in nature and in humans and chem
and worked at princeton for a good number of years like call life at the beginning of the 20th century was actually responsible for what we have witnessed some one year is known as his miracle year yet he has another miracle year in which he sets the foundations for much of modern physics and by that i mean the furious of general relativity -- the series of general relativity to set the foundation for quantum mechanics -- mechanics. but this is like putting the of particles in the water. there...
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Jul 18, 2013
07/13
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FBC
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not just the content, it is interaction with the professor, that is what people will always go to princetonr. we put the lectus online so they can watch the lecture at me, come into the classom already having seated a go into discussions. melissa: thank you for coming on. i am se you are putting together great technology to solve the university to put their courses online. thank yoso much for coming on, we appreciate your time. interesting concept. coming up on "money," rolling stones new cover creates fren of outrage making the boston bomber look a lot more like mick jagger that a terrorist. libya financial boom or bust for the magazine? and should jors be able to profit from their service? from books to interviews, jurors could cash in big time. the top legal mind to weigh in. can you ever have too much "money"? ♪ melissa: o, rolling stone, have you know shame? e cover featuring the face of suspected bomber causing a lot of controversy. the state hit newsstands until friday, but they say they will not seller. would you buy it if you were a buyer or a subscriber would you cancel? it could
not just the content, it is interaction with the professor, that is what people will always go to princetonr. we put the lectus online so they can watch the lecture at me, come into the classom already having seated a go into discussions. melissa: thank you for coming on. i am se you are putting together great technology to solve the university to put their courses online. thank yoso much for coming on, we appreciate your time. interesting concept. coming up on "money," rolling stones...
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Jul 21, 2013
07/13
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he went on to get on a bus at princeton and he was stumbling through his change and he couldn't figure out how much to pay for the bus ride and the driver actually stopped and counted the coins for him and took the fair. tell us about this extreme on both ends where you have someone who fumbles through that, the more simple things in life. >> guest: i am not an expert on how the mind works like that, but i have seen how it works with genius and creativity and i remember the conclusion of that particular study was that it was an extremely creative individual who tends to have these positions which are stemming from each other. and they have extreme humble and proud and quality of personality. and most people find it somewhere in the middle that is where they lie. but the people, many of the people that turn out to be extraordinarily creative, they have the ability to host this to the extreme. it is probably part of what you describe. with everyday life, we do have this concept. words like he or she stumble through life and every other aspect even though they are very smart. so there mus
he went on to get on a bus at princeton and he was stumbling through his change and he couldn't figure out how much to pay for the bus ride and the driver actually stopped and counted the coins for him and took the fair. tell us about this extreme on both ends where you have someone who fumbles through that, the more simple things in life. >> guest: i am not an expert on how the mind works like that, but i have seen how it works with genius and creativity and i remember the conclusion of...
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Jul 1, 2013
07/13
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he was getting ready to step down and become the president of princeton university.hen this started to happen, when he started to make motions that he would leave the cia and the government insiders and others contrived a situation in which he was forced out of the administration in a way that was politically grit -- disgraceful that would knock him out of the political game for years to come. that is pretty much what happened. there are people on the seventh floor of the cia who already did not like petraeus because he would often throw his weight around. there were personnel which contrived a legal situation and instigated a legal situation with the fbi to find information which the people close to him already knew existed. everyone knew about paula broadwell, his mistress. that was no secret. they contrive this legal situation on the information they knew already existed. i have heard that there was meeting between john clapper and general petraeus, where there were some pretty harsh words thrown out during the meeting, and that is what it was revealed to general
he was getting ready to step down and become the president of princeton university.hen this started to happen, when he started to make motions that he would leave the cia and the government insiders and others contrived a situation in which he was forced out of the administration in a way that was politically grit -- disgraceful that would knock him out of the political game for years to come. that is pretty much what happened. there are people on the seventh floor of the cia who already did...
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Jul 9, 2013
07/13
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WBAL
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at princeton, researchers found the month in which you conceive your baby could predict their help at birth. i found that infants conceived in may were more likely to be preterm. if you conceive during summer months, they found that babies weighed more because mothers gained more weight during the pregnancies. >> very interesting. an expert on gunshot wounds to the stand for the defense at the george zimmerman murder trial. what he had to say about the byal injuries sustained trayvon martin. >> and something found in martin's system. why it was not admitted in court and what legal experts say, straight ahead. keeping charter schools at bay? i'm tim tooten live in the newsroom. [ female announcer ] at your local subway, summer flavors are served up fresh. like the crisp, delicious orchard chicken salad. you loved it so much, we brought it back as a five dollar footlong and now as a five dollar chopped salad! hurry in today. subway. eat fresh. 11, this is tv breaking news. >> we are following breaking news from harford county. an accident with entrapment. let's send it up to captain roy
at princeton, researchers found the month in which you conceive your baby could predict their help at birth. i found that infants conceived in may were more likely to be preterm. if you conceive during summer months, they found that babies weighed more because mothers gained more weight during the pregnancies. >> very interesting. an expert on gunshot wounds to the stand for the defense at the george zimmerman murder trial. what he had to say about the byal injuries sustained trayvon...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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occasionally in the early phases of the war in the famous crossing of the delaware and the attack towards princeton and beyond and at the end of the active part of the war at yorktown did he, did he come out and stage a success isful action -- a successful action that really turned events. although he came very close on a few other occasions such as brandywine and germantown. but he was, essentially, a guerrilla war leader while maintaining the dig dignity of a career officer. in the case of benjamin franklin, of course, he was a renounced academic and inventer, scientist, printer and a wit, a personality. but he was surely one of the greatest diplomats in the history of the world. and his achievement in assisting persuading the british to evict the french from canada which made the revolution possible and then only less than 20 years later recruiting the french where no parliament or anything like a parliament had met for 170 years, an absolute monarchy, to come into a war in fave of republicanism -- in favor of republicanism and democracy was an astounding achievement. and without the french it w
occasionally in the early phases of the war in the famous crossing of the delaware and the attack towards princeton and beyond and at the end of the active part of the war at yorktown did he, did he come out and stage a success isful action -- a successful action that really turned events. although he came very close on a few other occasions such as brandywine and germantown. but he was, essentially, a guerrilla war leader while maintaining the dig dignity of a career officer. in the case of...
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jackson a louisiana native hold to 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 trade us and basically in common language it was either nothing or in moderation. b.p. . penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released who are the head of the t.s.a. so if you say i would 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 cleanup forget about a natural resource to average just for releasing the oil just for releasing oil. tens of billions of dollars a foreign well if you can see. how much oil is released. those penalties down from twenty five billion to maybe one or two billion billion dollars here a billion dollars are you talking real moving. the company that makes correct it now coke is a joint venture with exxon mobil puts rece
jackson a louisiana native hold to 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 trade us and basically in common language it was either nothing or in moderation. b.p. . penalties. are tied to how much oil. has been released who are the head of the t.s.a. so if you say i would either ban or limit the use of dispersants could you have the power to...
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Jul 22, 2013
07/13
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before that, a professor at princeton university.e is the author of numerous books, co-host of a radio show with tavis smiley. together, they wrote the book "the rich and the rest of us: a poverty manifesto." when we come back, we look at the controversy over the late great howard zinn. stay with us. ♪ [music break] >> we people who are darker than blue, by curtis mayfield. democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. late howardthe zinn, author of many books, including his classic, "a people's history of the united states." the book is still used in high schools and colleges across the country. january 7, 2010. two weeks after his death, indiana governor mitch daniels sought to remove his work from indian schools. the revelation was made public last week after it obtained e- mails from the public's records request. daniels wrote -- gov. daniels asked -- gov. daniels comments have sparked outrage within the academic world, in part, because he recently became the president of purdue university. on frida
before that, a professor at princeton university.e is the author of numerous books, co-host of a radio show with tavis smiley. together, they wrote the book "the rich and the rest of us: a poverty manifesto." when we come back, we look at the controversy over the late great howard zinn. stay with us. ♪ [music break] >> we people who are darker than blue, by curtis mayfield. democracy now!, democracynow.org, the war and peace report. i'm amy goodman. late howardthe zinn, author...