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that system still exists a princeton. he really did elevate the intellectual quality of the place. >> you are calling it "the moralist." does wilson believe he has a moral vision? how much of that presbyterian background -- does that seep into his leadership skills as president of princeton? and governor of new jersey? what is wilson and religion? >> his father was a preacher and there were others in the family tree. there were lots of branches with other presbyterian preachers. the judeo-christian tradition is part of him. he is a christian all his life. a lot of people, auto biographers have used that to explain his kind of rigidity on certain things. he is unbending because of religion. that struck me as too narrow. it seemed to me that, certainly some of his moral concerns come from religion, but he had a deep faith in democracy as well as in god. he came by it starting in his adolescence. he was fascinated by government, history, politics. he studies these things and goes all the way to the phd level. while he is a g
that system still exists a princeton. he really did elevate the intellectual quality of the place. >> you are calling it "the moralist." does wilson believe he has a moral vision? how much of that presbyterian background -- does that seep into his leadership skills as president of princeton? and governor of new jersey? what is wilson and religion? >> his father was a preacher and there were others in the family tree. there were lots of branches with other presbyterian...
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Aug 17, 2018
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one of the leaders is a princeton professor. it turns out it's at the forefront of the analysis of a large number of middle eastern britain between 700 to 1500 a d.. often times they only have half the documents. it turns out that the documents were returned in this case and in 1897 there were over 200,000 fragments including here in princeton which is one of the great repositories alerting the connectiocollection of the docut the professor was working on. it tells a tantalizing tale of a situation in cairo where a jewish member of the synagogue brought a lawsuit to contest they had been thrown out of the synagogue but the problem is that it was only half of the documents and you couldn't tell what happened. this is where technology has made a difference because over time the images have been copied, digitally stored. they tried to identify how they might be joined the technical term is for how they come together and they recognize because it changed over time you couldn't just look at where the paper would match although that w
one of the leaders is a princeton professor. it turns out it's at the forefront of the analysis of a large number of middle eastern britain between 700 to 1500 a d.. often times they only have half the documents. it turns out that the documents were returned in this case and in 1897 there were over 200,000 fragments including here in princeton which is one of the great repositories alerting the connectiocollection of the docut the professor was working on. it tells a tantalizing tale of a...
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Aug 7, 2018
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joining me are professor cornel west of harvard and princeton and cnn political commentator paris denard, former black outreach for president george w. bush. professor, i'm wondering what you make of this which is just the latest example of the president criticizing a well-known african american person on intelligence. >> well, i think we need to keep the focus where it belongs because it's clear that president trump doesn't focus on what he ought to. the focus is on first gloria marie james, a mother, a magnificent black woman raise as magnificent son and becomes one of the greatest athletes in the history of modern times who then use his greatness to serve others. 230 very precious students of
joining me are professor cornel west of harvard and princeton and cnn political commentator paris denard, former black outreach for president george w. bush. professor, i'm wondering what you make of this which is just the latest example of the president criticizing a well-known african american person on intelligence. >> well, i think we need to keep the focus where it belongs because it's clear that president trump doesn't focus on what he ought to. the focus is on first gloria marie...
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Aug 10, 2018
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the princeton review looks at everything from academics to schools, to the best food and dorms.it is stanford the number one school that kids dream about going to followed by harvard, nyu, princeton, look at that, the university of california los angeles joining us now is the editor and chief of the princeton review. great to see you your reviews, i have a 14-year-old, it's an important ranking. what has been the most surprising thing for you this year >> well, i'll tell you so many students and parents, i'm sure to you and all of your watchers and viewers, people are nervous about debt, nervous about financial aid, they're asking the questions about return on college investment, academic investment and their family's financial investment. >> is there a way to measure roi? >> i think there is. we tried to look at a couple things career development career services what are students doing from first year on campus to last year on campus by way of co-ops, internships. what are students doing outside the classroom to endear what they're learning inside the classroom to make them att
the princeton review looks at everything from academics to schools, to the best food and dorms.it is stanford the number one school that kids dream about going to followed by harvard, nyu, princeton, look at that, the university of california los angeles joining us now is the editor and chief of the princeton review. great to see you your reviews, i have a 14-year-old, it's an important ranking. what has been the most surprising thing for you this year >> well, i'll tell you so many...
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Aug 13, 2018
08/18
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thank you for joining us from princeton university. you have the u.s. ambassador to britain, woody johnson, pressuring britain to pull out of the u.s. nuclear deal following the united states, which trump did, and the imposition of sanctions by the united states last week on iran. know, the iranian nuclear deal was the result of 13 years of negotiation between iran and the world powers. the u.s. engaged in negotiation in 2013 and also had bilateral frequent intrusive, bilateral meetings, from 2013-2015. ultimately, iran and the u.s., iran, the world powers, agreed on the nuclear deal. united nations accused the council passed a resolution after approving the deal. in two years later, iran has fully complied with all of its commitments. the iaea, international atomic energy agency, which is the sole agency responsible for supervising the nuclear program 11 times states, has since 2016 confirmed iran's full compliance with the nuclear deal. now, the u.s. is the only security -- un security council member, withdrew from the deal, violated the deal. this is
thank you for joining us from princeton university. you have the u.s. ambassador to britain, woody johnson, pressuring britain to pull out of the u.s. nuclear deal following the united states, which trump did, and the imposition of sanctions by the united states last week on iran. know, the iranian nuclear deal was the result of 13 years of negotiation between iran and the world powers. the u.s. engaged in negotiation in 2013 and also had bilateral frequent intrusive, bilateral meetings, from...
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Aug 13, 2018
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>> well, i was born at princeton, new jersey, the father was at princeton for six years. and when he married my mother, my mother was a very beautiful lady, and i think most of the princeton studented wes were in with her because she was so lovely. then my older brother was born there and i was born there. >> okay. and now, where else did you dwrgrow up? princeton and -- oh, dear. ft. bragg, fort hamilton, washington, ft. sioux, oklahoma. hawaii, back to oklahoma. >> wow. >> ithaca, new york, and i went to cornell because i got free tuition. i guess that was it. then i met my husband again. >> well, we'll get to that in a second, ma'am. one of the questions i always ask people who live through world war ii -- i'm sure you're going to have an interesting take on it. what do you remember about the day pearl harbor was attacked? >> well, we had all been fox -- went to a movie and suddenly we were told that -- and we had just left hawaii. so it was really -- it was just an unbelievable moment in one's life. >> sure. what did your -- what did that event mean to your parents si
>> well, i was born at princeton, new jersey, the father was at princeton for six years. and when he married my mother, my mother was a very beautiful lady, and i think most of the princeton studented wes were in with her because she was so lovely. then my older brother was born there and i was born there. >> okay. and now, where else did you dwrgrow up? princeton and -- oh, dear. ft. bragg, fort hamilton, washington, ft. sioux, oklahoma. hawaii, back to oklahoma. >> wow....
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Aug 7, 2018
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i was hired by a group called princeton research. it had nothing to do with the university of princeton. but, it paid well. i had to get through a questionnaire of about 40 questions, and produce that, and bring them back. >> if you got the proper sampling, you get a very good reading on people's opinion. i went around, door to door, it was not too difficult and sometimes, but i notice even with my own thought, i am talking mill workers, i'm talking university employees, all the people in the middle, one question that struck me at the end is that after they found out they knew there was more than one united states senator in the states, many didn't. after they found out when you vote three or four times, they said would you vote for a presidential candidate who was divorced? even with the bell curve is, it was the perfect bell curve. if you are a woman, protestant, jewish, or other, right there smack in the middle, was a big fat no. i'm thinking that maybe that report went to rockefeller. maybe that report went to his opponents, and
i was hired by a group called princeton research. it had nothing to do with the university of princeton. but, it paid well. i had to get through a questionnaire of about 40 questions, and produce that, and bring them back. >> if you got the proper sampling, you get a very good reading on people's opinion. i went around, door to door, it was not too difficult and sometimes, but i notice even with my own thought, i am talking mill workers, i'm talking university employees, all the people in...
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Aug 18, 2018
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just on a person religious, i went to princeton seminary, led by a systemic theologian. high he recommend, church dog whattics and then doing doh! dogmaities and thing i recommend deidre mccloud ski, and she follows up with the importance of rhetoric, and asks the question, what was the ultimate cause of long-run economic growth in in the west? all of human history made about $500 or a thousand dollars a year, for all of human history-doesn't matter what culture or country, everybody made thousand bucks a year until 1700. then you have massive takeoff in economic forget in thest west in western europe. why did that happen? what were the causes of that? and so mccloskey started off with bourgeois, and then the bourgeois dignity and i don't want to give away too much but the takes on in -- she has six volume set underway but she attacked on every nobel laureate in economics. human capital, education, private property rights, marxist exploitation, trade, geography. all plausible otherwises. she has a very different view -- i love her view -- she says what ultimately caused
just on a person religious, i went to princeton seminary, led by a systemic theologian. high he recommend, church dog whattics and then doing doh! dogmaities and thing i recommend deidre mccloud ski, and she follows up with the importance of rhetoric, and asks the question, what was the ultimate cause of long-run economic growth in in the west? all of human history made about $500 or a thousand dollars a year, for all of human history-doesn't matter what culture or country, everybody made...
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Aug 11, 2018
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began working on at princeton, and in early february while he was puzzling over why the rate of uranium fission that he was observing was some 100 times less than he would have expected, he had one of those bursts of inspiration that characterizes the story. perhaps he reasoned the two isotopes present in uranium, the dominant i238, with 92 protons and the much rarer u2 35 with its 92 protons, but 1 3 -- 133 neutrons, perhaps they were behaving differently when bombarded with neutrons. if it only u2345 had uranium split and .ot the natural uranium was almost entirely composed, this would explain the low rate of fission. bombarding for fissions to find a suitable target. afterr began talking row row on his blackboard, he made his calculations, his underlying hope that was if he was right u235 wasare isotope the key to nuclear fission, this an atomic bomb unviable. massive industrial effort would be required to separate out sufficient quantities of the isotope from natural uranium. u235ngth, convinced that was essential, bohr told a group who had gathered in his office princeton that, quo
began working on at princeton, and in early february while he was puzzling over why the rate of uranium fission that he was observing was some 100 times less than he would have expected, he had one of those bursts of inspiration that characterizes the story. perhaps he reasoned the two isotopes present in uranium, the dominant i238, with 92 protons and the much rarer u2 35 with its 92 protons, but 1 3 -- 133 neutrons, perhaps they were behaving differently when bombarded with neutrons. if it...
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Aug 4, 2018
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historians talk about his time at princeton university, his family, intellectual influences and his political values in domestic and foreign policy. societyyork historical hosted this program. >> we are honored to welcome three acclaimed historians to new york historical. patricia o'toole is a fellow of the society of american historians and the author of five books, including "when trumpets call." and "tiv
historians talk about his time at princeton university, his family, intellectual influences and his political values in domestic and foreign policy. societyyork historical hosted this program. >> we are honored to welcome three acclaimed historians to new york historical. patricia o'toole is a fellow of the society of american historians and the author of five books, including "when trumpets call." and "tiv
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and the prevalence also of the online media coming up after the break i speak to a professor from princeton university and the find of the oldest online newspaper in the whole of europe. shows seemed wrong. well let's just don't call. it. just a shape out just to educate and in detroit equals a trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. finally the military can't ever leave now how does it let the balance point. line you feel you would be very easy to find a friend out and you. just said can't you see like this is. what i've done my duty by my little bit that they want you not that i would carry out the trip that i might be coming over i'd like to wait for tomorrow i've got to go but it. was like. somebody. to see. welcome back and attempting to answer the question what is catalonia alex is trying to portray and to do for him now he works academia and online publications to find out what the people are telling the pollsters and what they're tweeting coast bush was a professor of political science at princeton university has a doctorate from harvard
and the prevalence also of the online media coming up after the break i speak to a professor from princeton university and the find of the oldest online newspaper in the whole of europe. shows seemed wrong. well let's just don't call. it. just a shape out just to educate and in detroit equals a trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. finally the military can't ever leave now how does it let the balance point. line you feel you would be very easy to...
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telling the posters and what they're saying coast bush with a professor of political science at princeton university has a doctorate from harvard university and was an advisor to the world bank an internet a can do about my bank he's been a member of the american academy of arts and sciences since october twenty ten and was awarded the twenty twelfth or bar to find price. professor explaining catalonia the feelings of people in catalonia you know as the independence supporters go and have the cattle and feelings of identity as a nation increased you're right that the sentiment for independence has grown ten years ago it was only about. fifteen percent of the population that would be favor of voting for a separate country or a nation and now it's close to fifty percent i don't think that national identity has changed that much it has become stronger and especially the support for these more radical solution has grown catalans always felt a nation or at least seemed to modern politics but they always thought that it would be possible to leave as a set of nations within a spain and that was
telling the posters and what they're saying coast bush with a professor of political science at princeton university has a doctorate from harvard university and was an advisor to the world bank an internet a can do about my bank he's been a member of the american academy of arts and sciences since october twenty ten and was awarded the twenty twelfth or bar to find price. professor explaining catalonia the feelings of people in catalonia you know as the independence supporters go and have the...
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Aug 6, 2018
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the friendship of princeton president woodrow wilson. wilson, as president of the united states called on him to lead the field administration during world war i. while that does not seem like all of that, it was a very powerful position of command and control. managing distribution of coal .upplies in the country he held the position and resigned in december of 1919. james, agarfield son, lawyer and also a politician served in several republican administrations. first, on the initial services commission during william mckinley's presidency. then on theodore roosevelt, nurse and laser -- commerce and labor. james decided to leave at the end of roosevelt's term, rather taft.erve under ca -- abram, the youngest surviving helped to resurrect washington's development directly. quietly behind the scenes. cleveland, heg quietly had a connection to roosevelt. he was appointed to the national council of fine arts. stardent roosevelt still predecessor to the national commission of fine arts. the council, through presidential executive order met o
the friendship of princeton president woodrow wilson. wilson, as president of the united states called on him to lead the field administration during world war i. while that does not seem like all of that, it was a very powerful position of command and control. managing distribution of coal .upplies in the country he held the position and resigned in december of 1919. james, agarfield son, lawyer and also a politician served in several republican administrations. first, on the initial services...
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this mr monk in princeton that will have to be tested in the same way we've done here i'm not surprised that it works on a construction site with it when someone has experience with digging the divine iran strike there and only there in places where you consciously or subconsciously expect something to be of all ideas but it was thank you for coming home. the how are they not well they didn't work so. well living. at it was he right when he said it was just your imagination but i think said it when. i was a rap and i don't know what it was a test fair. go on living. so. you think wonder your prerogative and thousand euro's. your national probably not that we've been doing these tests since two thousand and four for fourteen years since then the laws of nature have always worked the same way and i'm guessing they'll continue to do so i think fortunately it's is this it's our goal to make it clear that we're fighting against these winds spread superstition side. on can we also want to show people that they can prove with a simple test if a claim is credible or not. hope to. the next morni
this mr monk in princeton that will have to be tested in the same way we've done here i'm not surprised that it works on a construction site with it when someone has experience with digging the divine iran strike there and only there in places where you consciously or subconsciously expect something to be of all ideas but it was thank you for coming home. the how are they not well they didn't work so. well living. at it was he right when he said it was just your imagination but i think said it...
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Aug 28, 2018
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. >> up next, princeton university professor keith whittington on his books up to where he makes the case for defending free speech on college campuses.
. >> up next, princeton university professor keith whittington on his books up to where he makes the case for defending free speech on college campuses.
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i went to princeton seminary, did a ph.d. in economics, so i taught for 20 years. so i love sharing books. destined for war by graham, and that's the graph that ought to catch your attention the, right? that's the chinese surpassing the united states in about 2050 in terms of gdp, purchasing power parity. that's what the world bank and the international comparisons and economists use. so they surpass us in gdp. not per capita, right? there's a difference there. but folks can read the book. and i talkinged one other to get a little sense of the thesis of the book. in this chart he's got about 16 or 20 the periods in history where you have a dominant power and then a rising power. so the analogy right now the u.s. is the dominant power in the world, without question. china's on the rise. and in the bulk, two-thirds of the cases the rising power goes to war against the dominant power. and in about four or five cases, this is no war. and so that's the title, right? destined for war, question mark, we'll see. hopefully not, but the empirical record wakes you up a little
i went to princeton seminary, did a ph.d. in economics, so i taught for 20 years. so i love sharing books. destined for war by graham, and that's the graph that ought to catch your attention the, right? that's the chinese surpassing the united states in about 2050 in terms of gdp, purchasing power parity. that's what the world bank and the international comparisons and economists use. so they surpass us in gdp. not per capita, right? there's a difference there. but folks can read the book. and...
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Aug 3, 2018
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alan krueger from princeton and michael mckee in washington.is making headlines outside of the world of business. emma chandra is here. >> thank you. china is ready to retaliate if the u.s. goes ahead with tariffs on chinese products. beijing plans to lead the tariffs from 5% to 25% on about $50 billion worth of u.s. imports. china is trying to keep trade friction from escalating. singapore for in a regional summit that will spotlight challenges involving north korea and iran. the u.s. must keep pressure on both. north korea has been attending these meetings sense 2000. they will join a special prominence this year following the summit with trump in june. aere ran just signed friendship pact. enter reason he takes another step to get a brexit deal. she needs with french president and metal macron at his vacation home. u.k. officials say they are working on a new proposal. i'm emma chandra. julie: thank you. just wanted to recap the jobs' numbers. more than 160,000 jobs added last month. below the 190,000 consensus, but we had an upward revision
alan krueger from princeton and michael mckee in washington.is making headlines outside of the world of business. emma chandra is here. >> thank you. china is ready to retaliate if the u.s. goes ahead with tariffs on chinese products. beijing plans to lead the tariffs from 5% to 25% on about $50 billion worth of u.s. imports. china is trying to keep trade friction from escalating. singapore for in a regional summit that will spotlight challenges involving north korea and iran. the u.s....
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he is the founding director of the princeton university survey research center.addition, he previously served as chairman of president barack obama's council of economic advisers. assistant secretary for economic policy and chief economist of the u.s. department of the treasury, chief economist of the u.s. department of labor, and vice president of the american economic association just last year. please welcome doctor krueger. [applause] >> thank you very much. glad you invited me à [inaudible] we are meeting at a time when the unemployment rate is down four percent, economic growth for the second quarter looks like it could be around four percent. there are many reasons to be concerned about the state of the job market. wage growth remains too low. wage growth is barely keeping up with inflation. laborforce participation is too low. the u.s. has the second lowest laborforce participation rate in the la cd second only to italy. and third and most important, the economy is not generating enough opportunities for middle-class workers and for workers for more disad
he is the founding director of the princeton university survey research center.addition, he previously served as chairman of president barack obama's council of economic advisers. assistant secretary for economic policy and chief economist of the u.s. department of the treasury, chief economist of the u.s. department of labor, and vice president of the american economic association just last year. please welcome doctor krueger. [applause] >> thank you very much. glad you invited me Ã...
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Aug 27, 2018
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forthright that certain people are not equal to others, a personhood theory like peter singer at princeton and many other bioethicists embrace that humans are only valuable if they have rationality. many admit that human inequality goes along with their viewpoint, and i show how that's changed in secular thought. >> how do you show that. >> by looking at their own works and showing that many of them admit that it's the implication of their view. when i tried to show is that many of them contradict themselves because many of them do, at some level think the human life has value. the philosophy claims it doesn't, but they will say it does. let me give you a great example. it really blew me away, one of the most amos philosophers, they said quite forthright that humans were insignificant , even call them parasites on this planet, he made clear that human life has no specific meaning, no transcendent purpose, and he also claim that morality is just an emotion, a feeling that we have. then you find out that he was a moral absolutist. she wrote a book where she said he was him oral absolutist in
forthright that certain people are not equal to others, a personhood theory like peter singer at princeton and many other bioethicists embrace that humans are only valuable if they have rationality. many admit that human inequality goes along with their viewpoint, and i show how that's changed in secular thought. >> how do you show that. >> by looking at their own works and showing that many of them admit that it's the implication of their view. when i tried to show is that many of...
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sus paos >> no sabía eso >> una investigación de prensa asociada validada por la universidad de princetonl teléfono, desde las 3 >> con este tipo de información, y un poco resbaloso porque la necesidad del público, alrededor de 2 mil dueños de celulares y tabletas. >> que miedo que te estén rastreando >> google dice que no, informes dicen que sí pero lo más importante es protegernos. >> con la cuenta de sus padres con la imagen que le gusta y no solo ar'ticulos muchos a un costo de 300 dólares? >> para que le diera permiso para una muñeca, pero la mamá después encontró que habían pedido 10 muñecas, la familia los iba a devolver pero al final los donaron, imagino que pasa porque te vuelves meter a la cuenta >> una muñeca diferente de cada clase >> no sé siento porque mis sobrinas harían lo misom mismo >> en tu cuenta >> sí >> puede cumplir usted con el sueño, este sábado, al volver le decimos cuándo y cómo. ♪ (ver información en pantalla) ♪ >> se unen a la campaña de desocupar los albergues, si usted piensa asistir, el la que estos animalitos llegan a texas son diferentes algunos son resca
sus paos >> no sabía eso >> una investigación de prensa asociada validada por la universidad de princetonl teléfono, desde las 3 >> con este tipo de información, y un poco resbaloso porque la necesidad del público, alrededor de 2 mil dueños de celulares y tabletas. >> que miedo que te estén rastreando >> google dice que no, informes dicen que sí pero lo más importante es protegernos. >> con la cuenta de sus padres con la imagen que le gusta y no solo...
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steve: how many conservatives are there at princeton? >> not many. not many.o identify yourself because people are going to think you are an idiot? >> that's true. one of the things i should say princeton has been generally really good at this. the administration is really good at promoting free speech and there is a lot of dialogue. we have conservative professors. we have robby george. keith whitington. top tenured professors. steve: at princeton. >> they do a good job of encouraging intellectual diversity. the culture still is very much a liberal orthodoxy as you see it. steve: so, have you got some advice in your report with the republican party should do because you are -- you have been so disappointed in the reaction from the campus. >> yeah. i think republicans should go the exact opposite way. i think should -- i think republicans should sort of embrace the moderates and if you have to alienate anyone, you should do it to the extremists it should go the opposite way and stop polarizing within your own party because that's just going to -- and i was rea
steve: how many conservatives are there at princeton? >> not many. not many.o identify yourself because people are going to think you are an idiot? >> that's true. one of the things i should say princeton has been generally really good at this. the administration is really good at promoting free speech and there is a lot of dialogue. we have conservative professors. we have robby george. keith whitington. top tenured professors. steve: at princeton. >> they do a good job of...
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Aug 13, 2018
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thanks to paul sweeney from princeton. road tosla is on the privatization.di arabia may be holding the keys. the latest on this bloomberg scoop, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ live from london, i'm mark barton. julie: from new york, i'm julie hyman. this is "bloomberg markets." mark: let's check in on our bloomberg first word news. >> the president of turkey says the country's economy is under siege and he expects the attacks to continue. he spoke hours after the central bank took steps to stop the lira's slide. there was no mention of raising interest rates and the lira fell to another low. looking to protect its economy from u.s. sanctions. the first deputy prime ministers says moscow will cut you a securities holdings more and its reliance on its u.s. dollar -- on the u.s. dollar. , the supreme leader says the u.s. is talking war and negotiations. he ruled out either outcome. he said when americans want to negotiate, they define the main goal and will not take one step back. president trump has signaled he is willing to negotiate a more comprehensive deal wit
thanks to paul sweeney from princeton. road tosla is on the privatization.di arabia may be holding the keys. the latest on this bloomberg scoop, next. this is bloomberg. ♪ live from london, i'm mark barton. julie: from new york, i'm julie hyman. this is "bloomberg markets." mark: let's check in on our bloomberg first word news. >> the president of turkey says the country's economy is under siege and he expects the attacks to continue. he spoke hours after the central bank took...
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joe went on to princeton and became a marine for five years after princeton. was not a small influence in that. that level of country it seems whatever our differences -- i was watching the people approaching the cass at the time today -- casket today and what was said over the years, a grateful nation thanks you for your service. indeed it does. he gave his service, 5.5 years. not of all of it, lot of the rest of it. i just believe -- i don't mean to reign on the parade of all, i believe a man big enough to be a hero for an age is big enough to have the truth told about him. we can look and celebrate the life of john mccain in the totality of his actions and still say, i like what his name, angus king in maine. he said when i worked at the russell office building name the mccain building, he said we called is the senate office build, s.o.b. for short. he said we're getting the right guy. >> martha: my guess assemble would have -- senator mccain would have a good laugh out of that one. good to see you tonight. thank you so much. always a pleasure. >> thank you
joe went on to princeton and became a marine for five years after princeton. was not a small influence in that. that level of country it seems whatever our differences -- i was watching the people approaching the cass at the time today -- casket today and what was said over the years, a grateful nation thanks you for your service. indeed it does. he gave his service, 5.5 years. not of all of it, lot of the rest of it. i just believe -- i don't mean to reign on the parade of all, i believe a man...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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he left austria when the not over and for a decade he'd been an member of princeton. it was time he decided to become an american citizen. earlier that year he sounded a curious dissolution to einstein's equations, one made face time rotate rather than expand. in this godel universe, you'd arrive back at your starting point before you left. but godel's research into time travel was interrupted by a citizenship hearing scheduled for december 5 in trenton. his character witnesses were to be his close friend albert einstein and author of morgenstern who was one of the cofounders of game theory and who served that day as godel's chauffeur. being a basket is mad, godel decided to make a close study of the american political institutions. on the eve of the hearing, godel called morgenstern in a state of agitation and it sounded a logical inconsistency. morgenstern was amused but he realized godel was dead serious and earth not to mention the matter to the judge . so in the short drive to trenton, einstein and morgenstern tried to distract godel with jokes and einstein being
he left austria when the not over and for a decade he'd been an member of princeton. it was time he decided to become an american citizen. earlier that year he sounded a curious dissolution to einstein's equations, one made face time rotate rather than expand. in this godel universe, you'd arrive back at your starting point before you left. but godel's research into time travel was interrupted by a citizenship hearing scheduled for december 5 in trenton. his character witnesses were to be his...
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Aug 29, 2018
08/18
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the reason my boys went to harvard and princeton is that i married up. my wife was an ap english teacher. she was reading to these boys before they were born. before they were born. i deserve no credit in that. but these kids in urban, they didn't even know what a book looks like, but you get them into schools, that is a very costly program but refunded that first. it cost us $15 million figure for two year for two years and about to start a collegiate academies. it cost us five dollars you define this early childhood program for kids. do you know how long the return on investment is going to be? it's going to be a long time before you can do that. then our fourth strategic initiative is public school choice. you know, when certain elected officials talk about choice and talk about take public dollars and put it for private education. education. when charter schools talk about choice, they say pick us and we will let you know if you get in and we will let you know if you stay in. what's the difference between an urban superintendent and a suburban superi
the reason my boys went to harvard and princeton is that i married up. my wife was an ap english teacher. she was reading to these boys before they were born. before they were born. i deserve no credit in that. but these kids in urban, they didn't even know what a book looks like, but you get them into schools, that is a very costly program but refunded that first. it cost us $15 million figure for two year for two years and about to start a collegiate academies. it cost us five dollars you...
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Aug 19, 2018
08/18
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CSPAN3
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preferring a life with, as einstein said, "no butlers, no evening dress," he accepted a post at princeton. and one french physicist remarked, i think only half in jest, that it's as important an event as would be a transfer of the vatican from rome to the new world. the pope of physics has moved, and the united states will now become the center of the natural sciences. also in 1933, we have frederick and irene -- frederic and irene joliot-curie's, who we see in the next slide here, discovering so-called artificial radioactivity. until then, physicists had known that by bombarding it with a nucleus of sufficient energy, a nucleus could be disintegrated and a new, stable one formed. but no one had realized that, in certain circumstances, an unstable element in the process of nuclear decay could be created. in other words, man could force the elements to release their energy in the form of radioactive decay. over the next few years, as international tensions grew in europe as a result of hitler's territorial ambitions, and as tensions grew in the far east because of those of japan, scientist
preferring a life with, as einstein said, "no butlers, no evening dress," he accepted a post at princeton. and one french physicist remarked, i think only half in jest, that it's as important an event as would be a transfer of the vatican from rome to the new world. the pope of physics has moved, and the united states will now become the center of the natural sciences. also in 1933, we have frederick and irene -- frederic and irene joliot-curie's, who we see in the next slide here,...
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Aug 27, 2018
08/18
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she teaches anthropology at princeton university, and has a brilliant research agenda of writing abouthropology and law and comparative spirituality. one of her specialties is ghana, and we are about to go to ghana next week. i will follow her on her fieldwork. i will read the dedication. brian: "more than i ever hoped, the happiness i have been granted. love led me wisely through tome, passing its palaces by." brian: we were reading goethe as we fell in love together. i am a very lucky man. jeffrey: you talk about your children reading. brian: hugo and sebastian, they just turned 12. they are fraternal twins. it is so exciting for me to see their love of books, their hunger for cultivating their own faculties. brian: how are they different? jeffrey: completely different. fraternal twins, i think of them as two people who happened to be born at the same time. but i think i will respect their privacy by not talking about them in detail, but they are two beautiful individuals who love books and music. i'm very proud of both of them. brian: given what we have been listening to in our coun
she teaches anthropology at princeton university, and has a brilliant research agenda of writing abouthropology and law and comparative spirituality. one of her specialties is ghana, and we are about to go to ghana next week. i will follow her on her fieldwork. i will read the dedication. brian: "more than i ever hoped, the happiness i have been granted. love led me wisely through tome, passing its palaces by." brian: we were reading goethe as we fell in love together. i am a very...
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Aug 28, 2018
08/18
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>> up next, princeton university professor keith whittington on his books up to where he makes the case for defending free speech on college campuses. >> that afternoon. welcome to the cato institute. my name is john samples here and vice president here at cato. i'd like to begin with an overview of our event today. we shall first hear from our author, keith whittington, about his new book "speak freely." then we shall have some comments from ilya somin and then finally some time for questions and answers for a panelist. we will be taking questions via twitter and direct your queries to #cato one day. you should've received a a piece of paper on it in any case we look forward to your questions either here at the auditorium or online. if you do not wish to use twitter, a we will collect those later. a few more words by way of introduction. the cato institute is a public policy research organization. free-market in peace. those who work here see themselves as working within a long tradition of individualism and limited government. that is a political philosophy sometimes called classical
>> up next, princeton university professor keith whittington on his books up to where he makes the case for defending free speech on college campuses. >> that afternoon. welcome to the cato institute. my name is john samples here and vice president here at cato. i'd like to begin with an overview of our event today. we shall first hear from our author, keith whittington, about his new book "speak freely." then we shall have some comments from ilya somin and then finally...
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Aug 3, 2018
08/18
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i am professor of astronomy at princeton university and managing director of the flatiron institute in new york. my spoken remarks will focus on nasa astrophysics be my written remarks discuss the broader program and with the chairman position i make with my written remarks remain part of the program. a multinational program is the modern version of the construction of the great cathedrals of new york. - - are fundamentally long projects. in cosmology, we've learned that - - is remarkably simple and strange. nearly a century ago, doctor hubbell working at the observatory began our program of measuring the size and shape of the universe. over the past two decades, we find a simple model with only five parameters, the age of the universe, the density of atoms, the density of matter and the properties of the initial fluctuations describe all of the basic properties of the universe. while successful, this model implies that atoms , the stuff that makes us up makes up only five percent of the universe. most of the universe is made of dark matter and energy. we don't know what makes up most
i am professor of astronomy at princeton university and managing director of the flatiron institute in new york. my spoken remarks will focus on nasa astrophysics be my written remarks discuss the broader program and with the chairman position i make with my written remarks remain part of the program. a multinational program is the modern version of the construction of the great cathedrals of new york. - - are fundamentally long projects. in cosmology, we've learned that - - is remarkably...
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Aug 1, 2018
08/18
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david -- charles a young professor of astronomy and astrophysical sciences at princeton university, my alma mater. worked decades, he has on interpretation and analysis of microwave background data to better understand the basic properties of the universe. he is the cochair of the science team for the wide field infrared survey telescope, more commonly known as w-fiorst. been involved in many aspects of the mission and contributed countless hours of telescope that will ultimately lead humanity see further into the universe then ever before. he received his phd in astronomy from harvard. , professor ofeger physics and planetary science at the massachusetts and stick to the technology. a native of toronto, her research has made unprecedented discoveries, gone leaps and bounds to expand humanity's knowledge in the field of astronomy. dr. seger's research has introduced new ideas on the study of xo planets -- of exoplanets. part of the team to detect the first emission of light from an exoplanet. she has committed swabs of research on all kinds of exoplanets. she received her phd in astron
david -- charles a young professor of astronomy and astrophysical sciences at princeton university, my alma mater. worked decades, he has on interpretation and analysis of microwave background data to better understand the basic properties of the universe. he is the cochair of the science team for the wide field infrared survey telescope, more commonly known as w-fiorst. been involved in many aspects of the mission and contributed countless hours of telescope that will ultimately lead humanity...
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Aug 5, 2018
08/18
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i went to princeton seminary and studied it in history ideas and did a phd in economics so i talked forars. i love sharing books, destined for war by graham, that's the graph that ought to catch your attention. that's the chinese surpassing the united states and about 2015, in terms of gdp per capita. purchasing power parity, that's what the world bank and international comparisons use and economists use is the best comparison. they surpassed us in gdp, not gdp per capita, there's a difference there. but folks can read the book and that i tagged one other, you get little sense of the thesis of the book. in this chart he's got about 16 Ã20 periods in history where you have dominant power and rising power. the analogy right now u.s. is the dominant power in the world without question, china is on the rise. in the book, two thirds of the case is the rising power goes to war against the dominant power. in about four or five cases there is no war. so that's the title. destined for war? we will see. hopefully not but the empirical record wakes you up a little bit. so then he recommended, you
i went to princeton seminary and studied it in history ideas and did a phd in economics so i talked forars. i love sharing books, destined for war by graham, that's the graph that ought to catch your attention. that's the chinese surpassing the united states and about 2015, in terms of gdp per capita. purchasing power parity, that's what the world bank and international comparisons use and economists use is the best comparison. they surpassed us in gdp, not gdp per capita, there's a difference...
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Aug 13, 2018
08/18
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BLOOMBERG
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here with more from princeton is paul sweeney. give us a sense of how big of a deal this is.is material affect netflix's outlook going forward? >> i don't think so. the stock price is not really moving today. often when you have a c.f.o. announce they are leaving the country -- company, that is typically a negative for a company. it suggests there may be something wrong in the accounting. there is none of that in this case. this appears to be an orderly transition for the company. david is going to stay around until they find the replacement. i am very confident they will have no problem finding and a-list quality c.f.o. joe: nonetheless, netflix has a very aggressive financial strategy. there is a lot of netflix debt, that.of concerns about watching the debt is one proxy on the company. tell us about the financial approach he constructed at netflix. >> the financial model of netflix is one they described as a virtuous circle, which is invest heavily in programming, that will drive subscriber growth. increasing subscribers will drive revenue and ultimately cash flow which wil
here with more from princeton is paul sweeney. give us a sense of how big of a deal this is.is material affect netflix's outlook going forward? >> i don't think so. the stock price is not really moving today. often when you have a c.f.o. announce they are leaving the country -- company, that is typically a negative for a company. it suggests there may be something wrong in the accounting. there is none of that in this case. this appears to be an orderly transition for the company. david...
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Aug 7, 2018
08/18
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so take this guy make it a couple times kevin kruse at princeton. he goes under his desk and rights these twitter blasts at me, ten of them, again ten focus examples. finally i said instead of this kind of twitter squabbling which is too extensive for the outside person to follow, why don't you and i have debate and let's do it on your home campus where you have the home turf advantage in front of your students who you've actually been indoctrinating for years. they will be on your site sidet least to start. probably not at the end but to start. and this guys like no, no, no i can't do that. get do that. why? not just because he's afraid he will be crushed. i do think he's got natural fear. professors have this natural fear when they confront other people who know what they're talking about. not messages in the classroom where the reign supreme but so he won't debate. why? because even to concede there's an argument is ultimately to force people to listen to both sides. he wants people just take it on faith that he's right and he gives a few dubious
so take this guy make it a couple times kevin kruse at princeton. he goes under his desk and rights these twitter blasts at me, ten of them, again ten focus examples. finally i said instead of this kind of twitter squabbling which is too extensive for the outside person to follow, why don't you and i have debate and let's do it on your home campus where you have the home turf advantage in front of your students who you've actually been indoctrinating for years. they will be on your site sidet...
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very karl union isn't it i mean this is a lot of psychobabble who wrote this like some academic princeton
very karl union isn't it i mean this is a lot of psychobabble who wrote this like some academic princeton
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Aug 6, 2018
08/18
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when the princeton historian kruse lists them, he is very cunning. he goes, well, of course jesse helms was a democrat.he became a republican . trent lott became a republican. except none of those three men were dixiecrats. so if you want to have an argument, let's stay on the same plane. in reality, if you make a list of dixiecrats, about 200 of them, governors, senators, congressmen. let's just look at the congress. only one guy switched, strom thurmond. and the entire congress and house, only one person switched, watson. that is two out of 200. the rest of the dixiecrats stayed and died in the democratic party and were lionized in a democratic party. there are buildings and washington, d.c., named after them. that is a fact. so now i turn in conclusion to what i call the democrats's last hope. their refuge. lasthere la -- their refuge is charlottesville. you could see it. they were delighted with charlottesville. not a tragedy. was killed. that is a tragedy. but they were able to say, hey, there are the neo-nazis and kkk guys in trump hats so now
when the princeton historian kruse lists them, he is very cunning. he goes, well, of course jesse helms was a democrat.he became a republican . trent lott became a republican. except none of those three men were dixiecrats. so if you want to have an argument, let's stay on the same plane. in reality, if you make a list of dixiecrats, about 200 of them, governors, senators, congressmen. let's just look at the congress. only one guy switched, strom thurmond. and the entire congress and house,...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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we have a professor from princeton university on your "comunidad del valle." male announcer: nbc bay area presents "comunidad del valle" with damian trujillo. damian: we begin with the monthly visit of the consulate of mexico in san jose. with me is consul rodrigo navarro, the consul de protection for the mexican consulate here in san jose. welcome back to the show. rodrigo navarro: thank you so much. damian: it's good to have you back. so, last week, we spoke with the san francisco consulate about the workers' rights, but it's important to repeat it because there are a lot of people, especially here in silicon valley, who are working who are being taken advantage of, they're not getting paid, they're being underpaid.
we have a professor from princeton university on your "comunidad del valle." male announcer: nbc bay area presents "comunidad del valle" with damian trujillo. damian: we begin with the monthly visit of the consulate of mexico in san jose. with me is consul rodrigo navarro, the consul de protection for the mexican consulate here in san jose. welcome back to the show. rodrigo navarro: thank you so much. damian: it's good to have you back. so, last week, we spoke with the san...
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Aug 14, 2018
08/18
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princeton is in the top spot, but look at the rest, four of the top seven colleges are uc schools. berkeley, los angeles, san diego, and irvine. stanford ranks fifth overall. the top schools, quote, deliver a superior education at an affordable price, enabling graduates to avoid heavy debt and succeed in the work place. >> a warning from the fbi. sophisticated hackers about to carry out a worldwide scheme targeting atms. how banks are trying to protect your accounts. >> google wants to move in. residents don't want to move out. what happened at a heatedos or google's proposed mega development. >> the oakland a's are >>> it is 5:00 a.m. good morning to you. thanks for joining us on this tuesday, august 14th. >> you're never more than seven minutes away from your accuweather forecast. drew tuma in for mike nicco today. nice to see you. >>. we're waking up to a lot of fog in most spots. live doppler seven tracking it all for you. you see a lot of gray, that's the cloud cover. the fog right along the coastline. early on this morning, typical august pattern. it is cloudy. outside we go.
princeton is in the top spot, but look at the rest, four of the top seven colleges are uc schools. berkeley, los angeles, san diego, and irvine. stanford ranks fifth overall. the top schools, quote, deliver a superior education at an affordable price, enabling graduates to avoid heavy debt and succeed in the work place. >> a warning from the fbi. sophisticated hackers about to carry out a worldwide scheme targeting atms. how banks are trying to protect your accounts. >> google wants...
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Aug 26, 2018
08/18
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and an economist professor at princeton university. his book is "the political spectrum" the tumultuous liberation of wireless technology, from herbert hoover to the smartphone. this >> book tvs afterwards program at 9:00 p.m., economist offers her thoughts on why democracies around the world are failing to produce economic growth. at ten, fox news host greg gutfeld offers his take on stories he's taken over the years. we wrap up at 11:10 p.m. eastern with observations on the politicals last resistance to the trump presidency. that happens tonight i'm booked to be on c-span2. television for serious readers. this weekend's schedule is available on our website, booktv.org. here is john on the american revolution. [inaudible conversation] [inaudible conversation] >> thank you for joining us. it is nice to see a full house particularly on a beautiful spring
and an economist professor at princeton university. his book is "the political spectrum" the tumultuous liberation of wireless technology, from herbert hoover to the smartphone. this >> book tvs afterwards program at 9:00 p.m., economist offers her thoughts on why democracies around the world are failing to produce economic growth. at ten, fox news host greg gutfeld offers his take on stories he's taken over the years. we wrap up at 11:10 p.m. eastern with observations on the...
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and princeton said in the nation in reality there was no attack no pearl harbor no nine eleven no russian parachuters descending on washington only the kind of meddling and interference in others' domestic politics that both countries have practiced almost ritualistically for nearly one hundred years and that kind of meddling and interference is just like what was revealed again this week when documents provided by whistleblower edward snowden to the intercepts revealed the documents showing that the n.s.a. hacked into encrypted network of news organization al-jazeera why well in the words of the n.s.a.'s own documents recently the n.s.a. has decrypted a number of interesting targets deemed a bible. product lines to have high potential as sources of intelligence the u.s. targeting of al jazeera again is nothing new and whether it's with sanctions or bombs it does nothing to protect democracy so what sanction the nonsense and start watching the hawks. the. real the. liars who are part of. what is like you are going to. love them everybody watching not on top of the wall this is joining me
and princeton said in the nation in reality there was no attack no pearl harbor no nine eleven no russian parachuters descending on washington only the kind of meddling and interference in others' domestic politics that both countries have practiced almost ritualistically for nearly one hundred years and that kind of meddling and interference is just like what was revealed again this week when documents provided by whistleblower edward snowden to the intercepts revealed the documents showing...
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Aug 4, 2018
08/18
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i want to go back in time, because at princeton i remember 1971, paul about o talk in theme t auditorium. everything was falling apart in the economy. inflation had jumped, we were in the session, this was the first of the shocks. president next and imposed raise and price controls. it was a big mistake. import tariffs, etc. i was watching volcker and listening to what he was talking about. i said i want to do that. time, maybe this is still true, but at that time i was the to go to the federal reserve. if you train to be a diplomat or a foreign service officer, it is a very high-quality place, but i want to work at the fed. i got a job offer and took it. i started learning about macro economics, that was my big graduate school extension. i learned a lot. time, i met different , met arthur books laffer and jack kent. by this time, i had moved to wall street as an economist. dids very much in the flow, speech writing for william e simon. that was my introduction to political economy. he had read some stuff i had written. i helped him out with a bunch of speeches. including speeches at the
i want to go back in time, because at princeton i remember 1971, paul about o talk in theme t auditorium. everything was falling apart in the economy. inflation had jumped, we were in the session, this was the first of the shocks. president next and imposed raise and price controls. it was a big mistake. import tariffs, etc. i was watching volcker and listening to what he was talking about. i said i want to do that. time, maybe this is still true, but at that time i was the to go to the federal...
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Aug 14, 2018
08/18
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ALJAZ
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of an investigation by the associated press have been confirmed by computer science research as a princeton study reveal that many google services on the road devices and i phones are storing your location data whether you let them or not our concern is it's not explained very clearly it's not explained in a way that people can find easily in. and their location is being tracked in the background and this is a very. it's a very dangerous piece of information you might enter value. in point where you live where you work where you. are in other places where you maybe don't want to share. all the sport has andy thank you very much well brooks kept his name is on the trophy but the final stages of the p.g.a. championship were all about the player who finished second to tiger woods fell just short of winning his first major title in a decade but woods was still able to energize the fans in missouri and worldwide poorest reports. was no one in golf can get a crowd going like tiger woods. on the hunt for his fifteenth major title but without having won any in the past ten years. woods's back probl
of an investigation by the associated press have been confirmed by computer science research as a princeton study reveal that many google services on the road devices and i phones are storing your location data whether you let them or not our concern is it's not explained very clearly it's not explained in a way that people can find easily in. and their location is being tracked in the background and this is a very. it's a very dangerous piece of information you might enter value. in point...