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Mar 18, 2019
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princeton. 24 hours a day, on air and at tictoc on twitter, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. i'm kailey leinz. this is bloomberg. you.e: thank markets are holding steady today at the start of a busy week. joining us with more is bloomberg's stocks editor dave wilson. the s&p 500 is holding up again for another monday, up 4/10 of 1%. where does this end? dave: that is the big question. at the end of last week we got above the highs we saw in october, november and december. people were talking about that in technical to return -- technical terms as an area of resistance. go?much further do we as you suggest, it is only about 100 points away from the record in september, so we will see if there's enough momentum in stocks to get there. guy: what do you do if you are a bear?do you fault ? do you go all in? give me a sense of the strategy some people will be think about. dave: it is probably going to take patience. you seen such a down move at the end of
princeton. 24 hours a day, on air and at tictoc on twitter, powered by more than 2700 journalists and analysts in more than 120 countries. i'm kailey leinz. this is bloomberg. you.e: thank markets are holding steady today at the start of a busy week. joining us with more is bloomberg's stocks editor dave wilson. the s&p 500 is holding up again for another monday, up 4/10 of 1%. where does this end? dave: that is the big question. at the end of last week we got above the highs we saw in...
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Mar 29, 2019
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ken: my father's business partner was a princeton graduate. princeton was my first choice.y father had a falling out with his business partner. that was just before the time i was picking where to go to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton. i went to harvard. [laughter] david: well, that has broken the heart of the princeton development people. [laughter] ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i have had the pleasure of working with for two decades, served on princeton 's investment committee oversight and has done wonders to help princeton feel better. david: the legend is you began trading convertible bonds out of your dorm room. ken: that is true. my freshman year, and i am at bloomberg, so i have to say my gratitude for the press, i read this article saying the home shopping network was overpriced. having read this article, i contracts and home shopping network, and low and behold, the stock cratered shortly after i bought these puts. when you make a few thousand dollars as a freshman, you are rich. this is the moment you have dreamed of
ken: my father's business partner was a princeton graduate. princeton was my first choice.y father had a falling out with his business partner. that was just before the time i was picking where to go to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton. i went to harvard. [laughter] david: well, that has broken the heart of the princeton development people. [laughter] ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i have had the pleasure of working with for two decades, served on...
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Mar 30, 2019
03/19
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ken: my father's business partner was a princeton graduate. princeton was my first choice.y father had a falling out with his business partner. that was just before the time i was picking where to go to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton. i went to harvard. [laughter] david: well, that has broken the heart of the princeton development people. [laughter] ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i have had the pleasure of working with for two decades, served on princeton's investment committee oversight and has done wonders to help princeton feel better. david: the legend is you began trading convertible bonds out of your dorm room. ken: that is true. my freshman year, and i am at bloomberg, so i have to say my gratitude for the press, i read this article saying the home shopping network was overpriced. having read this article, i bought contracts and home shopping network, and low and behold, the stock cratered shortly after i bought these puts. when you make a few thousand dollars as a freshman, you are rich. this is the moment you have drea
ken: my father's business partner was a princeton graduate. princeton was my first choice.y father had a falling out with his business partner. that was just before the time i was picking where to go to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton. i went to harvard. [laughter] david: well, that has broken the heart of the princeton development people. [laughter] ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i have had the pleasure of working with for two decades, served on...
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Mar 28, 2019
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[laughter] has broken theat heart of the princeton development people.ughter] ken: one of my partners at had the who i have pleasure of working with for two decades served on princeton investment committee's oversight and has done wonders to help princeton feel better. david: the legend is you began trading convertible bonds out of your dorm room. ken: that is true. and i am atyear, bloomberg, so i have to say my gratitude for the press. article sayings the home shopping network was overpriced. low and behold the stock created shortly after i bought these put whens. -- puts when you make a few thousand dollars. as a freshman, you are rich. david: you have never been that involved in it before? ken: i never traded a financial asset before then. are doingr classmates other things, not worried about convertible bonds and arbitrage. what did they think about you? ken: i was an anomaly. my classmates and i, we debate politics. we would play soccer in the yard and hope not to run into a tree. and you have your friday night fun. it was a college experience. tim
[laughter] has broken theat heart of the princeton development people.ughter] ken: one of my partners at had the who i have pleasure of working with for two decades served on princeton investment committee's oversight and has done wonders to help princeton feel better. david: the legend is you began trading convertible bonds out of your dorm room. ken: that is true. and i am atyear, bloomberg, so i have to say my gratitude for the press. article sayings the home shopping network was overpriced....
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Mar 18, 2019
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. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of historians on social media and what he feels is their duty to provide context to issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970s. this 13-minute interview was recorded in chicago at the annual american historic association meeting. >> kevin kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a new book this movement the title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. what's the premise behind it? >> it comes from a course we taught for a couple of years. that course was developed on the idea that this period in post-1974 history is distinct. one that historians need to treat at its own thing rather than a postscript. it's a discreet area that we need to dig into on its own terms. >> you had the resignation of richard nixon in 1974. the first and only appointed president, gerald ford, and the cold war that was at its peak. >> that's right. the cold war in some ways, it goes into de taunt, and that period, in a period of flux but global affairs are in a real state of turmoil. you'v
. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of historians on social media and what he feels is their duty to provide context to issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970s. this 13-minute interview was recorded in chicago at the annual american historic association meeting. >> kevin kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a new book this movement the title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. what's...
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Mar 17, 2019
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kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a the ook this movement title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. the premise behind it? >> it comes from a course we years.for a couple of post 1974 in history is distinct. historians need to treat at its own thing rather than a postscript. a discreet area that we need to dig into on its own terms. the resignation of richard nixon in 1974. the first and only appointed ford, and the d cold war that was at its peak. >> that's right. cold war in some ways, it goes into de taunt, and that in a period of flux but global affairs are in a real state of turmoil. ou've got the end of the vietnam war. really taking place. 1973 to 1975. opec oil crisis. there is a great deal of chaos a it seemed to us to be moment that was right for seeing the start of the unmaking of the war order that governed not just the u.s. but the entire think about , and new trends that came about. >> what did you learn? >> i learned a lot. we learned in this book is that -- at first it was a real adventure because we were about the history of our own li
kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a the ook this movement title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. the premise behind it? >> it comes from a course we years.for a couple of post 1974 in history is distinct. historians need to treat at its own thing rather than a postscript. a discreet area that we need to dig into on its own terms. the resignation of richard nixon in 1974. the first and only appointed ford, and the d cold war that was at its peak. >>...
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Mar 14, 2019
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my father's business partner was a princeton graduate.rinceton was my first choice and my father had a falling out with his business partner just before the time you pick when you are going to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton and i went to harvard. david: that has broken the heart of the princeton development people, i assume. ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i had the pleasure of working with for two decades served on princeton's investment committee oversight and i think he has done wonders to help princeton feel better. david: you go to harvard and most people go to harvard and don't know when they get there, whether they will be smarter than everybody else or not as smart. when you got there, did you say these people are not as smart as i thought they would be? ken: i am pausing because i never actually thought about that. i am soharvard, fortunate, i am at one of the greatest institutions of higher education in the world. david: the legend is uv game -- you began trading convertible bonds ou
my father's business partner was a princeton graduate.rinceton was my first choice and my father had a falling out with his business partner just before the time you pick when you are going to college. my dad said it would break his heart if i went to princeton and i went to harvard. david: that has broken the heart of the princeton development people, i assume. ken: one of my partners at citadel, who i had the pleasure of working with for two decades served on princeton's investment committee...
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Mar 18, 2019
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. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of historians on social media and what he feels is their duty to provide context to issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970s. this 13-minute interview was recorded in chicago at the annual american historic association meeting. >> kevin kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a new book this movement the title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. what's the premise behind it? >> it comes from a course we taught for a couple of years. that course was developed on the idea that this period in post-1974 history is distinct.
. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of historians on social media and what he feels is their duty to provide context to issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970s. this 13-minute interview was recorded in chicago at the annual american historic association meeting. >> kevin kruse is a professor at princeton university, out with a new book this movement the title, fault lines, a history of america since 1974. what's...
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Mar 18, 2019
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princeton is not that far away from asbury park, where bruce springsteen got his start.l be sorely missed. he had a real effect in the government. >> there are a lot of economists who do important work but alan krueger's work led to a lot of policy outcomes, particularly on the minimum wage and opioids. he was somebody people listened to and he served as the treasury department chief economist and the chairman of the council of economic advisers. at 58, he had an enormous impact on the world of economics and the world we live in because of the policy changes that came out of his work. david: as you both suggested, a lot left to do. he was far from close to retirement. he was active in contributing. >> people were calling him. you and i were both trying to reach them. david: i emailed with him last tuesday about his book and having them on to talk about it. it is a tragic loss. a real loss to the community. thanks to michael mckee and peter coy. ofn krueger, dead at the age 58. ♪ 30 minutes left in the european trading day. from london, i'm guy johnson. vonnie:, from new
princeton is not that far away from asbury park, where bruce springsteen got his start.l be sorely missed. he had a real effect in the government. >> there are a lot of economists who do important work but alan krueger's work led to a lot of policy outcomes, particularly on the minimum wage and opioids. he was somebody people listened to and he served as the treasury department chief economist and the chairman of the council of economic advisers. at 58, he had an enormous impact on the...
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my son were ahead of me, my son who went to princeton, he certainly didn't get it there.n he was in business in new york and he said this is the guy. my other son went princeton and he came around after that he joined the marine corps and they said this is the guy. i think he's doing a great job. i have a great perspective i've been living in the swamp from 1981 so i have good perspective i've never seen someone have to take as much as he's taking, constant barrage, but he takes it, gets up in the morning, goes back to work, get back in the fight. there's a great thing they say about the irish, family told me this was my style. they figure like the irishman who walks down the street, sees a fight going on and says is this a private right and if not you get in. and yet trump looks for fights, he starts them but he usually has good reason, good cause but he's resilient, he's tough and i admire him very much for what he's doing. i know he means it when he talks about american greatness and how he wants to make this country great again and i think he's done great things. >> i
my son were ahead of me, my son who went to princeton, he certainly didn't get it there.n he was in business in new york and he said this is the guy. my other son went princeton and he came around after that he joined the marine corps and they said this is the guy. i think he's doing a great job. i have a great perspective i've been living in the swamp from 1981 so i have good perspective i've never seen someone have to take as much as he's taking, constant barrage, but he takes it, gets up in...
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Mar 23, 2019
03/19
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. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of -- the role of historians on social media. he discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970's. this 13 minute interview was recorded in chicago at the american historical association meeting. is a professor at princeton university and he's out with a new book this month, "faultlines: the history of america since 1974." that we taught was developed on the idea that this period was really a distinct period, something that should be treated as a distinct thing. it is a discrete entity that we need to dig into on its own terms. >> you have the resignation of nixon in 1974. the first of and only appointed president in gerald ford, and the cold war at its peak. kevin: it goes into detente at that period but it is in a state of flux. you got the end of the vietnam 1973 tong place over 1975, the opec oil crisis. there was a great deal of chaos. it seemed to be a moment that theripe for making post-cold war order and think about new trends that came about. steve: what did you learn? kevin: i learned a lot. fo
. >> princeton university professor kevin kruse talks about the role of -- the role of historians on social media. he discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970's. this 13 minute interview was recorded in chicago at the american historical association meeting. is a professor at princeton university and he's out with a new book this month, "faultlines: the history of america since 1974." that we taught was developed on the idea that this period was really a...
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Mar 17, 2019
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this week and on american history tv, princeton university professor kevin cruise talks about the role of historians on social media. and what he feels is their duty to provide context to current issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970's. here is a preview. i think historians are using social media to provide fact checking that only historians can provide. there is a sturgeon duty historians have. the same duties that scientists have to push back against climate change deniers or doctors against those who are fight against the role of vaccines. that historians have a special expertise, it knowledge about our past. and there are mistruths being the about that in both popular media and social media. we have a duty to correct those. >> how do you use that or apply that in your own craft? >> a lot of that happens reactively. when i see the president or another politician or a cable ast or guest make misstatement about the american past which i know well, i can offer a correction on twitter. not just by read the people who follow me but hopefully can be sp
this week and on american history tv, princeton university professor kevin cruise talks about the role of historians on social media. and what he feels is their duty to provide context to current issues. he also discusses how media consumption has changed since the 1970's. here is a preview. i think historians are using social media to provide fact checking that only historians can provide. there is a sturgeon duty historians have. the same duties that scientists have to push back against...
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Mar 18, 2019
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use rock 'n' roll and concerts in his freshman economics course in princeton.d a book out -- coming out rockonomics."led " he was a huge fan of springsteen. it will be a while before his full legacy is completely understood. how much will it be what you were talking about, seeking out different kinds of data, sifting them in different ways rather than a specific area about an approach that other generations of economists will take? >> i think it is an understanding in macro economics that pure theorizing has run its course and we have to go back and gather data. economist.abor he was one of the leaders in bringing that style of thinking to economics. caroline: peter, thank you. this is bloomberg. ♪ joe: canadian cannabis company tilray releasing fourth quarter numbers with revenue 2.6% above estimates. here with more on the company and the cannabis space overall, cb one capital management founding partner todd harrison. the products.d in before we get to the market overall, how are these companies, when you look at a tilray, how is the market treating them? byi
use rock 'n' roll and concerts in his freshman economics course in princeton.d a book out -- coming out rockonomics."led " he was a huge fan of springsteen. it will be a while before his full legacy is completely understood. how much will it be what you were talking about, seeking out different kinds of data, sifting them in different ways rather than a specific area about an approach that other generations of economists will take? >> i think it is an understanding in macro...
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Mar 9, 2019
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one of the most prominent commentators for princeton university was on morning joe today and said thish the sentencing gap and the wealth gap is a value gap. that's the belief that white people matter purpose other. particularly white people with money. >> laura: white people with money. in solitary confinement since last year. >> i am a princeton graduate and don't agree with that characterization. this is all being done for political reasons. by the way, your point, that judge ellis has a problem with these long sentences particularly when the loss calculation determines what the sentence will be under the guidelines. he is not the only judge that has a problem with that, with those calculations. that's true with regard to a broad-spectrum of the federal judiciary on both the left and the right based upon appointments made by democrat and republican presidents. just ask jay in the southern district of new york a clinton appointee about his views on branching fraud sentences. -- on bank fraud sentences. he will say this got ratcheted up. the sentences have gotten out of control. it wa
one of the most prominent commentators for princeton university was on morning joe today and said thish the sentencing gap and the wealth gap is a value gap. that's the belief that white people matter purpose other. particularly white people with money. >> laura: white people with money. in solitary confinement since last year. >> i am a princeton graduate and don't agree with that characterization. this is all being done for political reasons. by the way, your point, that judge...
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princeton university, where he was a professor of political economy, announced krueger's passing sayingue leader in his field, known and admired for his research and teaching. in addition to his scholarship, alan's life exemplified a commitment to public service. a value member of the princeton university community for over three decades, alan will be deeply missed by his students and colleagues. alan krueger was 58 years old. thank you for watching. "deadline: white house" with nicolle wallace starts right now. >>> well, everyone, aloha and namaste. it's 4:00 in new york city and i'm john heilemann in this chair for the missing in action nicolle wallace. we will officially usher in the dangerous chapter of donald trump's pregnancy that can be spoiled by mueller's report to be handed over any day now. will that be the beginning of the existential peril for president trump, which could come with more indictments criminal referrals and intensifying investigations on capitol hill, and if any of the findings of any those inquiries are damning enough, impeachment. so it's against that grim b
princeton university, where he was a professor of political economy, announced krueger's passing sayingue leader in his field, known and admired for his research and teaching. in addition to his scholarship, alan's life exemplified a commitment to public service. a value member of the princeton university community for over three decades, alan will be deeply missed by his students and colleagues. alan krueger was 58 years old. thank you for watching. "deadline: white house" with...
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dream grid to princeton which are old enough to remember that it was most of my family were unemployed. and it wasn't it was bed you know much worse objectively today but there was an expectation of the things were going to get better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the turn principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy attack solo down engineer elections manufacture consent and other principles according to no on. one set of rules for the rich opposite. that's what happens when you put her into the. narrow sector of wilf which is dedicated to increasing power for chills just as you'd expect one of the most influential intellectuals of our time speaks about the modern civilization of america. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy fun fun tahsin let it be an arms race is often spearing dramatic development only closely i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical of time time to sit down and talk. although the latest skirmish on the indian p
dream grid to princeton which are old enough to remember that it was most of my family were unemployed. and it wasn't it was bed you know much worse objectively today but there was an expectation of the things were going to get better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the turn principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy attack solo down engineer elections manufacture consent and other principles according to no on. one...
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Mar 11, 2019
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. >> after graduation, mueller enrolled at princeton. where he befriended an upper class man. that relationship would shape the rest of his life. >> he was not necessarily the best on the team. he was a determined and natural leader. david graduated that spring and was far from our thoughts as we went onto our senior year. >> in 1965, he graduated. and volunteered to fight in the conflict in vietnam. after he reenlisted for a second tour. he was killed in the spring of 1967. by a sniper bullet. >> one would have thought the life of a marine and the death in vietnam would argue strongly against following in his footsteps. many of us saw him the person we wanted to be. everyone before his untime dlit. and a number of his friend and teammates joined the marine core because of him. as did i. >> after graduation, robert mueller married his high school sweetheart. and enlisted in the marines. >> absolutely inspiring. because he was a person who came from privilege. he did something that people rarely did. during that period. he volunteered for vietnam. >> it is well known that it wa
. >> after graduation, mueller enrolled at princeton. where he befriended an upper class man. that relationship would shape the rest of his life. >> he was not necessarily the best on the team. he was a determined and natural leader. david graduated that spring and was far from our thoughts as we went onto our senior year. >> in 1965, he graduated. and volunteered to fight in the conflict in vietnam. after he reenlisted for a second tour. he was killed in the spring of 1967....
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Mar 18, 2019
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. >>> princeton university professor alan krueger has died. he was also the chairman of the council of economic advisers under president obama. he was known for his work on workplace economics, including the impact of minimum wage alan krueger was 58 years old. >> way too young they haven't said what the cause was at this point. a labor economist. jamie dimon was talking about the bifurcation of the economy that was precisely the research alan krueger had done during his career to find out the impact of the minimum wage and whether it in fact leads to a higher unemployment rate for lower-wage employees which he said it did not. >> correct. >> and finding ways to bring up the lower minimum wage part of the economy here i mean, he was a great guy, very, very smart obviously out of princeton there >> 58 years old. way too young. >> a big loss that will be felt. >>> we'll take a break here. when we come back, we'll be joined by the ceo of the company behind such an abrdss arby's and buffalo wild wings stay with us see that's funny, i thought you t
. >>> princeton university professor alan krueger has died. he was also the chairman of the council of economic advisers under president obama. he was known for his work on workplace economics, including the impact of minimum wage alan krueger was 58 years old. >> way too young they haven't said what the cause was at this point. a labor economist. jamie dimon was talking about the bifurcation of the economy that was precisely the research alan krueger had done during his career...
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Mar 8, 2019
03/19
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let's take you live to princeton, newjersey where we can speak tojo dunkley — an astrophysicist at princetonorjoining us. clearly, this flight has all gone to plan. what is the significance of that?” think it is enormously exciting because it means that we can now send rockets and missions into space, we can send rockets and missions into space, we can actually hope to send astronauts soon and i only can we send them to the international space station, we can hope to go further stuff perhaps we really will get to the moon. this craft had a dummy on board, but how close do you think this takes us through the next command flight? i think it is very soon. command flight? i think it is very soon. the big news about this mission was that this flight was it was in this new spacecraft that was actually prepared for people to go on. so the fact is been a success means we are on. so the fact is been a success means we are expecting injuly this year to see real action knots on board the same dragon spacecraft. this of course was paid for in the brainchild of the line a mess, it was a commercial enterp
let's take you live to princeton, newjersey where we can speak tojo dunkley — an astrophysicist at princetonorjoining us. clearly, this flight has all gone to plan. what is the significance of that?” think it is enormously exciting because it means that we can now send rockets and missions into space, we can send rockets and missions into space, we can actually hope to send astronauts soon and i only can we send them to the international space station, we can hope to go further stuff...
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Mar 23, 2019
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steve: kevin kruse, professor at princeton university, thank you very much. kevin: thank you for having me. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2019] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] remembering george h w bush and the inventor of the world wide web. sunday at 8:00 eastern on the presidency, former secretary of state james baker remembers his longtime friend, president george. >> i was privileged to serve as his secretary of state for four years. i was extraordinarily fortunate to serve a wonderful friend and a beautiful human being, as we all know. to serve as secretary of state to a president who understood that he had to defend me, protect me even when i was wrong. >> at 9:00, on the 30th anniversary of the world wide web, a conversation with its inventor, computer scientist tim berners-lee. >> imagine they have a big problem like how to stop climate change or solve cancer, and the pieces of the problem are in different people's brains. bu
steve: kevin kruse, professor at princeton university, thank you very much. kevin: thank you for having me. [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2019] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] remembering george h w bush and the inventor of the world wide web. sunday at 8:00 eastern on the presidency, former secretary of state james baker remembers his longtime friend, president george....
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Mar 30, 2019
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with her face photoshopped on an athletes body.nats claim gregory and marcia abbott - who went to princeton and duke respectively - were so desperate to get their great schools, they paid 125,000. mrs abbott was freelance fashion editor, but theres no doubt shed rather this story unwritten. (ken)that was john hall reporting.also among those appearing in court today: margie klapper, the co-owner of m&m bling, a jewlery business in menlo park.san francisco entrepeneur todd blake...and marci palatella of healdsburg... founder of preservation distillery in kentucky. (pam) as we reported earlier... another measles case in the bay area today... the santa clara county health department says, another person who returned to the county.... after travelling internationally... has come down with the disease. this is the third case this year for santa clara county.... (pam) this is the latest... in now more than a dozen measles cases which are confirmed across the state. (ken) our capitol bureau reporter ashley zavala caught up with the director of state department of public health to see what's being d
with her face photoshopped on an athletes body.nats claim gregory and marcia abbott - who went to princeton and duke respectively - were so desperate to get their great schools, they paid 125,000. mrs abbott was freelance fashion editor, but theres no doubt shed rather this story unwritten. (ken)that was john hall reporting.also among those appearing in court today: margie klapper, the co-owner of m&m bling, a jewlery business in menlo park.san francisco entrepeneur todd blake...and marci...
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Mar 13, 2019
03/19
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when i taught at princeton i had an article from the "new york times" on my door.erview of the dean of students about the selectivity of eating clubs on campus. their version of fraternities. and the dean of students stated without self-consciousness she stated there is no place for selectivity and elitism on the princeton campus. this is the. [laughter] >> kind of viewpoint one encounters at these kinds of institutions where everyone believes they are the very portrait of egal tear tarrenism. unaware of how profoundly elite they really are. >> tucker: do you think they really believe that or just pro-skyrocketing. they know how rotten and corrupt the system is and that spurs to attack everyone else as rotten and corrupt. >> it's probably a bit of a mix. there is certainly awareness of how difficult it is to get into these kinds of institutions. i think there is also a deep almost self-deception that takes place as soon as you are a part of this ruling class. since in a democracy, it's unacceptable to be a kind of aristocrat, these institutions cry decry and denoun
when i taught at princeton i had an article from the "new york times" on my door.erview of the dean of students about the selectivity of eating clubs on campus. their version of fraternities. and the dean of students stated without self-consciousness she stated there is no place for selectivity and elitism on the princeton campus. this is the. [laughter] >> kind of viewpoint one encounters at these kinds of institutions where everyone believes they are the very portrait of egal...
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Mar 13, 2019
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because that person has studied the way admissions are done at dartmouth, princeton, et cetera and are to make sure your kid is attractive. so how is it then fair if you're not from a background like that? >> that's a very good question. fra frank, stay with me. we have a lot to talk about. we'll get into that with tiffany cross and areva martin. don't go anywhere. , so i can lock in moisture... and keep us protected. we've got to have each other's backs... and fronts. cerave. what your skin craves. >>> so celebrities like felicity huffman and lori loughlin, wealthy parents, coaches, all caught up in what's been called the largest college admissions scam ever prosecuted. frank bruni is back with me. joining me now, tiffany cross and areva martin. areva is the author of "make it rain rain." welcome to the program. i appreciate both of you coming on, as well as frank, of course. are areva, i'll start with you, the sums of money we're talking about here, mind boggling. take a look at this, everyone, areva and everyone else. $500,000 from actress lori loughlin and her husband. $15,000 from
because that person has studied the way admissions are done at dartmouth, princeton, et cetera and are to make sure your kid is attractive. so how is it then fair if you're not from a background like that? >> that's a very good question. fra frank, stay with me. we have a lot to talk about. we'll get into that with tiffany cross and areva martin. don't go anywhere. , so i can lock in moisture... and keep us protected. we've got to have each other's backs... and fronts. cerave. what your...
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Mar 16, 2019
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stone >> it is not set in stone and it is so very important for many students and families when princeton review did a report this year about how many people think that financial is somewhat, very, extremely necessary for them to attend that college, 99% of the people that they surveyed, 11,000 people that they surveyed said, yes, they need that money. so when you're thinking about how you're going to negotiate this when you fill out that federal form, things may have changed. so if there's been a divorce if there's been a job loss, if there are medical bills. >> another baby. >> another baby. something else to deal with. you want to explain that if there are special circumstances about the student's profile, let them know that, too. what awards have you won what major accomplishments have you made in the sciences, in english, in the arts, how do you set up the a pleel process what you don't want to do is drive up to the college admissions office and say, i need more money. gather receipts for medical bills, changes in any of the financial document that you're referring to, awards letters
stone >> it is not set in stone and it is so very important for many students and families when princeton review did a report this year about how many people think that financial is somewhat, very, extremely necessary for them to attend that college, 99% of the people that they surveyed, 11,000 people that they surveyed said, yes, they need that money. so when you're thinking about how you're going to negotiate this when you fill out that federal form, things may have changed. so if...
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Mar 8, 2019
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and also a professor at princeton university joining us. matt, i'll start with you. we just heard part of what the president said on the south lawn. what did you make of his comments? >> i think the president's comment comments are a disgrace. he thinks there should be one set of standards applied to his ale li allege lies. the way he asked for mike flynn -- for the fbi to go easy on mike flynn. and back when michael cohen was still on his side, when the government executed a search warrant on michael cohen's apartment and his office, the president called it an attack on our country. at the same time he wants his opponents to be prosecuted and he thinks groups that he finds unfavorable, immigrants, for the book to be thrown at them. so he has always had a two tiered justice system where he thinks people close to him, department of justice should look the other way and while at the same time going after his enemies. this is more of the same and not the kind of remarks we should expect from the president trump of the united states. >> and again this is video of the pre
and also a professor at princeton university joining us. matt, i'll start with you. we just heard part of what the president said on the south lawn. what did you make of his comments? >> i think the president's comment comments are a disgrace. he thinks there should be one set of standards applied to his ale li allege lies. the way he asked for mike flynn -- for the fbi to go easy on mike flynn. and back when michael cohen was still on his side, when the government executed a search...
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Mar 13, 2019
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because that person has studied the way admissions are done at dartmouth, princeton, et cetera and are trying to make sure your kid is attractive. so how is it then fair if you're not from a background like that? >> that's a very good question. frank, stay with me. we have a lot to talk about. we'll get into that with tiffany cross and areva martin. don't go anywhere. so, you're open all day, that's what 24/7 means, sugar. kind of like how you get 24/7 access to licensed agents with geico. hmm? yeah, you just go online, or give them a call anytime. you don't say. yep. now what will it take to get 24/7 access to that lemon meringue pie? pie! pie's coming! that's what it takes, baby. geico®. great service from licensed agents, 24/7. four zero expense ratio index funds directly to investors. and now we have zero account fees for brokerage accounts. at fidelity, those zeros really add up. ♪ so maybe i'll win, saved by zero ♪ when i had my brother those ztake me places, up. it was always like, we had to get there early so i could smoke a cigarette before we go inside. we always had to stop
because that person has studied the way admissions are done at dartmouth, princeton, et cetera and are trying to make sure your kid is attractive. so how is it then fair if you're not from a background like that? >> that's a very good question. frank, stay with me. we have a lot to talk about. we'll get into that with tiffany cross and areva martin. don't go anywhere. so, you're open all day, that's what 24/7 means, sugar. kind of like how you get 24/7 access to licensed agents with...
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three hundred to princeton which i'm old enough to remember there was most of the family were. there wasn't it was bed much worse objective listen today but there was an expectation the things were going to get better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the ten principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy attack solo down engineer elections manufacture consent and other prince holds according to no i'm jones to one set of rules for the rich opposite set. that's what happens when you put her into the. narrow sector of will switch will is dedicated to increasing power for chills just as you'd expect one of the most influential intellectuals of our time speaks about the modern civilization of america. violent clashes plumes of takeout sound fire the eighteenth weekend of the yellow vests protests in front cover because it was right in the middle of the on the left . this is the eighteenth cum security. we have to feed this fear of the tear gas it is really really wanted. the death toll of the terror attack in
three hundred to princeton which i'm old enough to remember there was most of the family were. there wasn't it was bed much worse objective listen today but there was an expectation the things were going to get better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the ten principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy attack solo down engineer elections manufacture consent and other prince holds according to no i'm jones to one set of...
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Mar 15, 2019
03/19
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>> you can negotiate and you should princeton review came out with a study just in the last couple of weeks showing that99% of the parents and the students that they surveyed said that financial aid would be the deciding factor. s an if you are able to negotiate and have an appeal, then you need to take that opportunity and you nee t find out how best to do that with the particular school that you're going to, because in a third of the cases you could get more money. >> how do you do? what are the steps you should take? >> the first thing you do is make sure you know what the school's process is. you don't want to run up there an get to the financial aid office. you want to make sure you know what the appcels p is. gather all the evidence you can to support your case, whyaihe financiapackage doesn' meet the mark. you're thankful to get an offer, you're grateful tbe accepted and very seriously considering going, but you have a case that you need toat >> and what should you say in that case? any doss and don on what to put in that letter? >> one of the most powerfu statements that you c
>> you can negotiate and you should princeton review came out with a study just in the last couple of weeks showing that99% of the parents and the students that they surveyed said that financial aid would be the deciding factor. s an if you are able to negotiate and have an appeal, then you need to take that opportunity and you nee t find out how best to do that with the particular school that you're going to, because in a third of the cases you could get more money. >> how do you...
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Mar 18, 2019
03/19
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ALJAZ
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in princeton you worked at the u.n. but in one thousand nine hundred eighty five i believe you gave up your taiwanese passport and your u.s. green card to become a citizen of the people's republic what made you give up all those liberties and freedoms and move to china. i felt quite oppressed in the u.s. i participated with martin luther king in the civil rights march in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight well and. against the war in vietnam and i have one of my stellar students a princeton beaten to death by rednecks just because i was trying this and you thought china was the place to go to get mono i just thought if they don't want to chinese i'll just be chinese and you participate in the m.l.k. protests civil rights nine hundred sixty eight if you think those protests could ever happen in china. i was actually shocked at how it took two hundred years for the u.s. to be addressing the issue of blacks sitting on the back of busses the chinese mind in the time and you might get those protests but nor and well i ho
in princeton you worked at the u.n. but in one thousand nine hundred eighty five i believe you gave up your taiwanese passport and your u.s. green card to become a citizen of the people's republic what made you give up all those liberties and freedoms and move to china. i felt quite oppressed in the u.s. i participated with martin luther king in the civil rights march in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight well and. against the war in vietnam and i have one of my stellar students a princeton...
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Mar 16, 2019
03/19
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in princeton you worked at the u.n. but in one thousand nine hundred eighty five i believe you gave up your taiwanese passport and your u.s. green card to become a citizen of the people's republic what made you give up all those liberties and freedoms and move to china. i felt quite oppressed in the u.s. i participated with martin luther king in the civil rights march in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight well and. against the war in vietnam and i have one of my stellar students a princeton beaten to death by. red necks just because i was trying this and you thought china was the place to go to get mono i just thought if they don't want to chinese i'll just be chinese and you participate in the m.l.k. protest civil rights nine hundred sixty eight if you think those protests could ever happen in china. i was actually shocked at how it took two hundred years for the u.s. to be addressing the issue of blacks sitting on the back of busses the chinese mind in the time and you might get those protests but nor and well i h
in princeton you worked at the u.n. but in one thousand nine hundred eighty five i believe you gave up your taiwanese passport and your u.s. green card to become a citizen of the people's republic what made you give up all those liberties and freedoms and move to china. i felt quite oppressed in the u.s. i participated with martin luther king in the civil rights march in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight well and. against the war in vietnam and i have one of my stellar students a princeton...
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Mar 18, 2019
03/19
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economic professor passed away according to princeton university we have this quote we just got fromself, when i think does a very good job of describing the importance of alan krueger and the quotes that -- there's a shot of alan, the quotes as he brought us into a new era of empirical economics, looking at data regressions, alan looked at natural experiments, and by that everybody talks about the first thing, the 1994 study he did on minimum wages where he looked at two actual communities side by side, one in new jersey, one in pennsylvania, a paper that is still cited today. during the recent scandal about admittance to colleges, people go back to a paper that alan wrote about the returns to education. he's done a lot of work on the opioid crisis, an awful lost work of whether or not americans are coming back to work. he was a foremost labor economist. alan krueger will be well remembered there's the quote from jason he brought us into a new era of empeekal economics, and one other bit of data, alan has a book forthcoming or had a book forthcoming in june called "roccon ho mics, w
economic professor passed away according to princeton university we have this quote we just got fromself, when i think does a very good job of describing the importance of alan krueger and the quotes that -- there's a shot of alan, the quotes as he brought us into a new era of empirical economics, looking at data regressions, alan looked at natural experiments, and by that everybody talks about the first thing, the 1994 study he did on minimum wages where he looked at two actual communities...
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agencies fandy it was well read well traveled well educated graduated stanford law school i had gone to princeton theology school so it was it was very appealing to be around somebody who i was frankly very impressed with and so fascinated with and eight months later we were getting married at the dallas arboretum and all of our family and friends were there and it was at that point seemed like a dream come true. there were red flags before we got married there were there were frankly there were red flags all along the way sandy has what i consider to be a dual personality and that this other character would emerge whenever i don't literally had to do something radical. the only remedy to remove him from my life was for me to leave dallas i had to leave dallas and i'd leave all my friends behind and completely. move to a different city. sandy. but he wouldn't leave her i just kept saying you know let's be friends let's be friends he wanted to. to be more so told me that he was going to europe and then i never heard anything for a while though word got back to me that he'd been arrested. i hadn't
agencies fandy it was well read well traveled well educated graduated stanford law school i had gone to princeton theology school so it was it was very appealing to be around somebody who i was frankly very impressed with and so fascinated with and eight months later we were getting married at the dallas arboretum and all of our family and friends were there and it was at that point seemed like a dream come true. there were red flags before we got married there were there were frankly there...
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Mar 18, 2019
03/19
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if you got go to yale, princeton, or harvard pedigree, you're usually an assistant e or defense.st there is an advantage to those schools. >> in politics and the supreme court. we've seen that. i have to move on to the death ignalty now, scott. that is the other story this week. despite the fact that california voters have repeatedly upheld the death penalty and in 2016 sped upecution, voted for that. so newsome promised to honor the will of the voters. what happened? >> well, i thinkobviously he feels deeply about this issue. he has had i think in his career we sawhis with same-sex marriage. he broke the law essentially. got reeled in by the courts. i thinkor him, heas looking at the reality of within the next few months of having to sign off on the lethal injection protocol. there were 25 people on death row whose appeals were exhausted. personally ust didn't want to do that. now he's not first politician to do something a little different than he said hgowould when he into office. on the other hand this is never a top layer issue in the gubernatorial campaign. he has been against capi
if you got go to yale, princeton, or harvard pedigree, you're usually an assistant e or defense.st there is an advantage to those schools. >> in politics and the supreme court. we've seen that. i have to move on to the death ignalty now, scott. that is the other story this week. despite the fact that california voters have repeatedly upheld the death penalty and in 2016 sped upecution, voted for that. so newsome promised to honor the will of the voters. what happened? >> well, i...
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Mar 19, 2019
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kruger taught at princeton university for more than three decades. the family in a statement said the cau of death was suicide. he was 58 years old. >>> arlington, virginia, approved a multimillion dollar incentive package for amazon to build its sond headquarters in crystal city, virginia. on friday we told you that this vote was to t place over the weekend. amazon is promising 25,000 jobs in the neighborhood, but some activists wanted to send the company packing, like they did in new york. >>> pet care clearly is very big business these days. people wil do just about anything and spend just about any amount for their furry ifriends, especially whe comes to their health. to help petsn need.ry industry jane wells has our story tonight. >> reporter: this is a dog receiving a blood transfusion, and this i a dog blood bank, a rarehing in the $17 billion u.s. veterinary business. jackie found out how r her beloved lab china suddenly needed emergency surgery for a tumor. the doctor had troubling news. there was no bloo >> i'm ke, what do you mean? there's
kruger taught at princeton university for more than three decades. the family in a statement said the cau of death was suicide. he was 58 years old. >>> arlington, virginia, approved a multimillion dollar incentive package for amazon to build its sond headquarters in crystal city, virginia. on friday we told you that this vote was to t place over the weekend. amazon is promising 25,000 jobs in the neighborhood, but some activists wanted to send the company packing, like they did in new...
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to stay then he designs because it cuts the sides need princeton's a is in the hospital may lead to a game just to eat a tree say to cubicin a quote it's mason a ship built. in eighty days it needs to say that they needed the lead it didn't matter if their first ever meeting is a fascinating one in two metal queens are different in demeanor but do find similarities in the chain scene so. i waiting for a kind of a little. david field if it was. a small a it is good because the a fish should have a stake in this that it made. sense that she's. busy day for the state that he or she will. face they pass the time while waiting perfecting their outfits you can never spend too much time on your look a sizeable metal head group will be arriving soon to pick them up and take them to the festival these meetings are rare occasions and are celebrated in a more rock fashion. people feel. this need he says when feeling plan b. . and that is that it is that time yet they have a lot of energy. so all the expats seeing a lot of the day seeing tirades. it off concedes we should immediately used to symb
to stay then he designs because it cuts the sides need princeton's a is in the hospital may lead to a game just to eat a tree say to cubicin a quote it's mason a ship built. in eighty days it needs to say that they needed the lead it didn't matter if their first ever meeting is a fascinating one in two metal queens are different in demeanor but do find similarities in the chain scene so. i waiting for a kind of a little. david field if it was. a small a it is good because the a fish should have...