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18
Jul 5, 2023
07/23
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IRINN
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today, in relation to this topic, a time has been given to the professors , the honorable professors, the staff who are present , god willing, they will comment on the topic of a part of the year for the next period in the period that is behind. the professors themselves were faculty members. have you considered that for preliminary training , we have a two-hour preliminary set for the region, which is a total of 48 hours of the preliminary course, god willing, it will be a continuous plan so that we can achieve the desired balance point that the staff members actually pointed out and emphasized, god willing, rahman behesht. we will get to the faculty members held questions my question is, do you, on the part of faculty members , use these excellence courses, which are knowledge, skill and professional courses, and passing them as a bonus for your faculty members, or are they considered to be merely in-service training for them? surely, with the shots set in the document of the islamic university, the islamic council of universities will become the supreme council of the cultural revo
today, in relation to this topic, a time has been given to the professors , the honorable professors, the staff who are present , god willing, they will comment on the topic of a part of the year for the next period in the period that is behind. the professors themselves were faculty members. have you considered that for preliminary training , we have a two-hour preliminary set for the region, which is a total of 48 hours of the preliminary course, god willing, it will be a continuous plan so...
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Jul 3, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN
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i'm going to ask and extra question of professor sample. and professor sherman. with respect to professor thimble the new statement on ethics, principles, and practices that the justices put forward posits a duty to sit. explain to me why it is preferable to have a conflicted just a sit on a case than to have the conflicted justice recused? >> senator, i think the statement on the duty to sit is, respectfully, overstated. they have lots of empirical references. we had a recent bloomberg study indicated that justices recused from approximately 3% of the cases the duty to sit in is not trumping basic recusal requirements in those cases we have explored the fact that we have gone more than a year with only eight justices on the court. the very same individuals who are now championing this extraordinarily row busk of the duties dissent and seem to have a problem with only eight justices. i do not think that the duty to sit argument holes water when battled against the importance. the fundamental due process and an impartial judiciary. >> mister chairman, let me offer
i'm going to ask and extra question of professor sample. and professor sherman. with respect to professor thimble the new statement on ethics, principles, and practices that the justices put forward posits a duty to sit. explain to me why it is preferable to have a conflicted just a sit on a case than to have the conflicted justice recused? >> senator, i think the statement on the duty to sit is, respectfully, overstated. they have lots of empirical references. we had a recent bloomberg...
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Jul 30, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN2
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thank you, professor. our panelist is judge edith jones fifth circuit judge for the states court of appeals. judge, thank you. already heard coolidge's undergraduate education was during a time of foment. he became a lawyer at what is just what i would call the fulcrum of american legal history. the founders view of law was being challenged by the scion pick approach which spread among law schools from its home base. harvard. progressive theories about direct democracy in active government regulation, economic affairs were pressing constitutional change, but largely at the framework of constitutional amendment. coolidge, however, his ideas and ideas from the common law tradition and homage to the written constant fusion. his lessons law were first taught at home and school. john coolidge, his young son with not just local governance as you have heard from schooled to the town council as well as officers of justice of the peace and county sheriff john held. coolidge in his autobiography that his broad knowl
thank you, professor. our panelist is judge edith jones fifth circuit judge for the states court of appeals. judge, thank you. already heard coolidge's undergraduate education was during a time of foment. he became a lawyer at what is just what i would call the fulcrum of american legal history. the founders view of law was being challenged by the scion pick approach which spread among law schools from its home base. harvard. progressive theories about direct democracy in active government...
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47
Jul 28, 2023
07/23
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CNBC
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professor, nice to see you again. >> good afternoon, scott >> we head towards new highs, professor? >> i think so. this is such a strong market you hear the guidance from the firms that was so tentative, you know in the first and second quarter, a lot of it is so much more confidence. the internals are improving. it's broadening out. the eci, you know, that employment cost measure that chairman powell mentioned a couple of days ago came in below expectations as well as the others goldilocks, lower inflation and stronger economy and good guidance and good profits, what's to stop this market now >> i don't know. jay powell and company maybe do you think they're done? >> i am not sure that they're done, but what i'm pleased about is that he acknowledges that there are two-sided risks that he is going to -- every meeting is a live meeting. there is no preconceived notion about whether they are going up or down. they will look at the data, which is something that i urged for quite a while. frankly, as you know, i was -- when i saw the money supply go down decelerate by the greatest amoun
professor, nice to see you again. >> good afternoon, scott >> we head towards new highs, professor? >> i think so. this is such a strong market you hear the guidance from the firms that was so tentative, you know in the first and second quarter, a lot of it is so much more confidence. the internals are improving. it's broadening out. the eci, you know, that employment cost measure that chairman powell mentioned a couple of days ago came in below expectations as well as the...
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Jul 17, 2023
07/23
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BBCNEWS
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eye 13
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professor, exciting times. thank you so _ the doctor. professor, exciting times.ke a short break. we are going to add to the un next, the secreted council where they are talking about stolen children of ukraine. good evening. there is no sign of any of the heat that's been affecting southern europe heading our way any time soon. but that is probably a good thing when you look at the temperatures that affected large parts of the south of europe and indeed the north of africa during today, temperatures into the middle 40s celsius. but that heat is being trapped in southern europe and north africa. thejet stream is running just about here. to the south of it, a persistent area of high pressure feeding in that warmth. to the north of it, an area of low pressure which today has been bringing us north—westerly winds, quite a cool feel to the weather and also quite a few showers, as you can see on our earlier satellite and radar picture. but those showers are now fading in many places. so overnight we're going to be largely dry with some clear spells, although you can se
professor, exciting times. thank you so _ the doctor. professor, exciting times.ke a short break. we are going to add to the un next, the secreted council where they are talking about stolen children of ukraine. good evening. there is no sign of any of the heat that's been affecting southern europe heading our way any time soon. but that is probably a good thing when you look at the temperatures that affected large parts of the south of europe and indeed the north of africa during today,...
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Jul 15, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN2
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we are so thrilled to have you backh professor. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you, patricia. it is an honor to be with you. >> we are also honored to have judge ludwick. one of the most prominent and highly respected voices in our justice system having served admirably on the u.s. court of appeals for over 15 years. but he showed promise from the start before coming the youngest federal judge at the time of his appointment. he began his service spending a year with the reagan administration before clerking and then working to confirm supreme court justices during his timeur at the justice department. the judget. represents true courage and steadfast commitment to the principles of justice and the rule of law during one of the most critical moments of our democracy. he played a crucial part in upholding our election system when he advised former vice president mike pence that he could not overturn the 2020 election results on januaryjanu, 2021 therebyin adverting a constitutional crisis. also weighing in on one of the c
we are so thrilled to have you backh professor. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you, patricia. it is an honor to be with you. >> we are also honored to have judge ludwick. one of the most prominent and highly respected voices in our justice system having served admirably on the u.s. court of appeals for over 15 years. but he showed promise from the start before coming the youngest federal judge at the time of his appointment. he began his service spending a year with the...
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Jul 2, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN2
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. >> professor francis fukuyama. you were talking in 2000 six about your 1992 book, "the end of history and the last man." what you said, does it stand up today? >> that clip was remarkably coherent. since 2006, i think we have seen a lot of regression in the progress of democracy all over the world. freedom house, which tracks global democracy, has noted we have had 17 consecutive years of decline in the aggregate amount of democracy. i think the world really looks different in many ways than it did back then. but, the question i was trying to raise was not what is going to happen in any given decade or short-term period, but really this longer art. i think there is still an open question as to what kind of destination we are heading to as our societies modernize. >> again, you were referencing your book from 1992, "the end of history and the last man." i want to read from your most recent book, "liberalism and i discontent." "i am writing this bookn period where liberalism has faced numerous critiques and challenge
. >> professor francis fukuyama. you were talking in 2000 six about your 1992 book, "the end of history and the last man." what you said, does it stand up today? >> that clip was remarkably coherent. since 2006, i think we have seen a lot of regression in the progress of democracy all over the world. freedom house, which tracks global democracy, has noted we have had 17 consecutive years of decline in the aggregate amount of democracy. i think the world really looks...
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17
Jul 27, 2023
07/23
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BELARUSTV
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rank professor at stockholm university was guessed by her fortune. kovalevskaya sustrela at the italian yen for smoke demolished at berlin more expensive, and she loved, however, she had a chance to go near the open brooch. sofya froze and fell ill; the cold outgrew the inflammation of her lungs. yes, they didn’t shake it off on 29 jelly, 1891. sofia kovalevskaya passed away she was 41 years old. i have death usurished europe, all of sweden developed with its vigilant memory and skin under a shaky student five criminal universities in sweden to climb a certain left and names were given to schools and skill awards to a crater for a month and an asteroid in the street near different cities and an airplane. and the generic mayotka. polina is a museum of sophia's cavalier franchise that could change history. and not just mathematics. and having glorified the shinezer blue to the sky of the early ones, that during the rules of the race, mlesse, by knives, quarrels take off. they wash the creatures, goodbye, they take them out into the sky, throwing them n
rank professor at stockholm university was guessed by her fortune. kovalevskaya sustrela at the italian yen for smoke demolished at berlin more expensive, and she loved, however, she had a chance to go near the open brooch. sofya froze and fell ill; the cold outgrew the inflammation of her lungs. yes, they didn’t shake it off on 29 jelly, 1891. sofia kovalevskaya passed away she was 41 years old. i have death usurished europe, all of sweden developed with its vigilant memory and skin under a...
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17
Jul 9, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN
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eye 17
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we are thrilled to welcome back professor laurence tribe a scholar in constitutional law. his expertise and voice have shaped the discourse in constitutional law and garnered widespread recognition as one of the foremost legal minds of our time. he is written many amicus briefs and advised on countless cases before the u.s. supreme court. his guidance and insightful analysis always demonstrates his role as a prominent legal luminary. he has inspired and educated generations of students, we are so thrilled to have you back thank you so much for being here. >> thank you, it is an honor to be with you. >> we are also thrilled to have judge michael luttig having served admirably on the u.s. court of appeals for the fourth circuit for over 15 years. he showed promise from the start. for becoming the youngest federal judge at the time of his appointment, he began his service to the law starting with the reagan administration before clerking for antonin scalia a then working to confirm supreme court justices during his time at the justice department. he represents true courage an
we are thrilled to welcome back professor laurence tribe a scholar in constitutional law. his expertise and voice have shaped the discourse in constitutional law and garnered widespread recognition as one of the foremost legal minds of our time. he is written many amicus briefs and advised on countless cases before the u.s. supreme court. his guidance and insightful analysis always demonstrates his role as a prominent legal luminary. he has inspired and educated generations of students, we are...
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19
Jul 26, 2023
07/23
by
BELARUSTV
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eye 19
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the title of professor at the stockholm university was given to her to live in showa.alevskaya sustrela at the italian yen for smoke demolished at berlin more expensive, and she loved, however, she had a chance to go at the open bridge. sophia froze and fell ill; the cold outgrew the medicines in the inflammation of the lungs. yes, they didn’t blow it away, 29th studio, 1891. sofya kovalevskaya died she was uzyao, 41 years old. i mean, death has usurped europe, all of sweden has developed with its keen memory and skin , here on the bush of the day, five criminal universities in sweden get along with no one left and it was they who named the schools and the university awards a crater for months and an asteroid in the street near different cities and the plane. and tribal mayotka. polina is a folding museum of sophia kovalevskaya jamshina that could change history. and not only mathematics. what are you, i don’t want to go to jail, you want to go to jail, but you won’t get your share. lay underground, and now i ask for me. yes, my natasha in antalya near the bus spotted
the title of professor at the stockholm university was given to her to live in showa.alevskaya sustrela at the italian yen for smoke demolished at berlin more expensive, and she loved, however, she had a chance to go at the open bridge. sophia froze and fell ill; the cold outgrew the medicines in the inflammation of the lungs. yes, they didn’t blow it away, 29th studio, 1891. sofya kovalevskaya died she was uzyao, 41 years old. i mean, death has usurped europe, all of sweden has developed...
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10.0
Jul 10, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN
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eye 10
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professor tribe, judge luttig, kimberly, for such a burning discussion, actually. i would like to see if we can go to neil degrasse tyson first. would you like to ask a question , or shall we -- we'd love to have you ask it on our screen if you're willing. >> yeah, hello. can you hear me now? >> yes, absolutely. grateful to have you. >> yeah, thank you. when i see the resistance to roe v. wade in the public and when i see the resistance to progressive legislation that would support lgbtq rights, those people tend to cite christian values when they come from the christian right, and to see laws uphold this, how does that square with any first amendment statements about not upholding a religion at the federal level? thank you. >> i'll tackle that one and then let professor tribe follow if he wants. you are right that seemingly these views are coming from the christian right, but the cases are not decided on the basis that they are views of the christian right. of course, those views are held by many other americans who are not of the christian right, so i certainly u
professor tribe, judge luttig, kimberly, for such a burning discussion, actually. i would like to see if we can go to neil degrasse tyson first. would you like to ask a question , or shall we -- we'd love to have you ask it on our screen if you're willing. >> yeah, hello. can you hear me now? >> yes, absolutely. grateful to have you. >> yeah, thank you. when i see the resistance to roe v. wade in the public and when i see the resistance to progressive legislation that would...
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27
Jul 21, 2023
07/23
by
BBCNEWS
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eye 27
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professor, thank you for that. jenny. _ another. professor, thank you for that.e are so many angles here. the global trade, the politics of it, the climate change element, it raises so many issues. absolutely, and in the middle are ordinary people, half the world whose staple carbohydrate is rice and the other half whose staple is wheat and food prices are high enough without geopolitics and climate change getting in the way. this is going to, of course, prolong inflationary pressures worldwide. it is going to make it harderfor rishi sunak here in the uk was made so many promises but we know that poor people spend the greatest proportion of their budget on food. you can�*t avoid eating, you can�*t avoid eating staple foods. so, this is really worrying. this morning when i first heard the news about india, i went to look on my online shop to see if i could buy rice and it seems that lots of people had already thought about that because it had already sold out. incredibly worrying and i think everybody is thinking, when things are going to start to get better? when
professor, thank you for that. jenny. _ another. professor, thank you for that.e are so many angles here. the global trade, the politics of it, the climate change element, it raises so many issues. absolutely, and in the middle are ordinary people, half the world whose staple carbohydrate is rice and the other half whose staple is wheat and food prices are high enough without geopolitics and climate change getting in the way. this is going to, of course, prolong inflationary pressures...
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17
Jul 31, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN
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eye 17
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amodei, i don't know whether you can still be called a professor, probably not. >> it was never a professor. >> but we need to train workers to do these jobs and for those who want to pause, and some of the experts have written that we should pause a.i. development, i don't think it's going to happen. we, right, now have a gold rush. let's really much like the gold rush that we had in the wild west, where, in fact there are no rules and everybody is trying to get to the gold without many law enforcers out there preventing the kinds of crimes that can occur. so i am totally in agreement with senator hawley in focusing on keeping its made in america when we're talking about a. i'm thinking it is absolutely right, we need to provide that kind of structure and training and incentive and enable it and informs it. let me come back to this issue of national security. who are our competitors among our adversaries and our allies? is it china? our other advisories out there that could be rogue nations, not just rogue actors, but rogue nations? and who do we need to bring into an international body of
amodei, i don't know whether you can still be called a professor, probably not. >> it was never a professor. >> but we need to train workers to do these jobs and for those who want to pause, and some of the experts have written that we should pause a.i. development, i don't think it's going to happen. we, right, now have a gold rush. let's really much like the gold rush that we had in the wild west, where, in fact there are no rules and everybody is trying to get to the gold without...
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what, well professor pets are. we have to take a very short break right now, but we'll be back in just a few moments. they tune the the welcome back towards the parts with nikolai attached to a professor of political science at the university of rhode island, an officer of the tribe, beauty of your prey, with classical greek tragedy can teach us about the conflict resolution. professor petro, before the break, we were talking about your plans as a special need to find its own unique national identity, its own national southcourt. and um, many russian thinkers, including, i'm sure you're for the present live, you know, put an argue that the choice that the ukrainian leadership has made so far pretty cautiously is to you know, try those authentic uh, limited facility that existed within the ukraine population against the the soviets or later against the russians and utilize it into a political mechanism of sort of unifying the country, a problem with them and attracting west and financing. i can understand cynical pa
what, well professor pets are. we have to take a very short break right now, but we'll be back in just a few moments. they tune the the welcome back towards the parts with nikolai attached to a professor of political science at the university of rhode island, an officer of the tribe, beauty of your prey, with classical greek tragedy can teach us about the conflict resolution. professor petro, before the break, we were talking about your plans as a special need to find its own unique national...
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22
Jul 8, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN3
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eye 22
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the bill into law with professor arcus in attendance. mere natural law is the eighth book by professor arcus after such well-known titles as first things and beyond the constitution. joining professor arcus is judge neomi rao of the united states of appeals for the d.c. circuit. we're grateful and overjoyed. she's with us tonight. judge roe was confirmed the d.c. circuit in 2019 after having served under president as head of the white house office information and regulatory affairs. she taught as a professor at the antonin law school at george mason university, and while there started the center for study of the administrative state. now named the c boyden gray center for the study of the administrative state. she is a widely published scholar on the subjects of constitutional law and administrative law. and she may now even be said to be dipping into natural law in her scholarship, which we wholly support. she clerked for both judge justice clarence thomas at the u.s. supreme court and judge harvie wilkinson on the u.s. of appeals for t
the bill into law with professor arcus in attendance. mere natural law is the eighth book by professor arcus after such well-known titles as first things and beyond the constitution. joining professor arcus is judge neomi rao of the united states of appeals for the d.c. circuit. we're grateful and overjoyed. she's with us tonight. judge roe was confirmed the d.c. circuit in 2019 after having served under president as head of the white house office information and regulatory affairs. she taught...
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40
Jul 12, 2023
07/23
by
KGO
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eye 40
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joining us live to discuss the trend is robert, economics professor at sonoma. thank you for joining us. let's start with the good news really quickly. inflation shot up so much the last year but data suggests it is slowing down. why? >> we have had interest rates go up and that is meant to push inflation down because we stop spending as much. we are seeing job changes or an increase in jobs starting to slow down and in california specifically jobs have been flat for eight months but that is conspiring to start slowing prices down. >> if that is the case why do grocery prices remain high? let me just show our viewers what were talking about because sfgate checked items at the same grocery stores in san francisco. 2% milk, one gallon of milk, trader joe's text one dozen -- eggs one dozen. a pound of chicken breast, $6.99. a pound of ground beef will run you anywhere from five dollars to eight dollars. first of all, they look high to me but are these all-time highs? >> i don't think they are all-time highs. i don't know for sure but from my shopping experience and
joining us live to discuss the trend is robert, economics professor at sonoma. thank you for joining us. let's start with the good news really quickly. inflation shot up so much the last year but data suggests it is slowing down. why? >> we have had interest rates go up and that is meant to push inflation down because we stop spending as much. we are seeing job changes or an increase in jobs starting to slow down and in california specifically jobs have been flat for eight months but that...
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102
Jul 23, 2023
07/23
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BBCNEWS
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eye 102
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the panel said that professor coleman was | that professor coleman was unable to provide detail on howtice on her article to raise awareness of a possible call problem. her lawyersaid awareness of a possible call problem. her lawyer said she would take any and all legal options available to her if that happened. professor coleman studied action against a differentjournal but retracted another of her papers last december. so far those actions have been rejected by a swiss court. no notice of concern was placed on her 2011 paper and the panel continued its investigation.— its investigation. retracting - a -ers its investigation. retracting papers is — its investigation. retracting papers is not _ its investigation. retracting papers is not something - its investigation. retracting - papers is not something anyone should do lightly but we had enough concerns to suggest it should be retracted, yes. was that unanimous among the panel? yes. fist that unanimous among the panel? yes. �* , ., yes. at this point it would typically _ yes. at this point it would typically be _ yes. at this point it
the panel said that professor coleman was | that professor coleman was unable to provide detail on howtice on her article to raise awareness of a possible call problem. her lawyersaid awareness of a possible call problem. her lawyer said she would take any and all legal options available to her if that happened. professor coleman studied action against a differentjournal but retracted another of her papers last december. so far those actions have been rejected by a swiss court. no notice of...
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46
Jul 26, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN
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eye 46
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professor rosser, -- professor russell, i want to come to you because the u.s. -- we are really behindur colleagues in the e.u., the u.k., new zealand, australia, canada when it comes to online consumer privacy. and having a way for consumers to protect that name, image, voice. having a way for them to protect their data, their writing so that ai is not trained on their data. so talk for just a minute about how we keep our position as a global leader in generative ai and at the same time protect consumer privacy. with a federal privacy standard help? what are your recommendations? prof. russell: i think there needs to be absolutely a requirement to disclose if the system is harvesting the data from individual conversations and my guess is immediately people would stop using a system that says i am taking your conversation. i am putting into the next version of the model and anyone can listen into the conversation. sen. blackburn: do you think the industry is mature enough to self regulate? prof. russell: no. sen. blackburn: so it is going to be necessary for us to mandate a structure?
professor rosser, -- professor russell, i want to come to you because the u.s. -- we are really behindur colleagues in the e.u., the u.k., new zealand, australia, canada when it comes to online consumer privacy. and having a way for consumers to protect that name, image, voice. having a way for them to protect their data, their writing so that ai is not trained on their data. so talk for just a minute about how we keep our position as a global leader in generative ai and at the same time...
45
45
Jul 10, 2023
07/23
by
CSPAN3
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eye 45
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all parmi invented by professor. l0we lo the first official aeronaut of the us government. note the small box is boyle's washing machines to get rid of the sulfuric acid. here is world war one no gas generator. the hydrogen is forced under high pressure into cylinders which can then be stored or carried anywhere the same system is used today. now we come to the second half of the first problem. the question fabric to hold the gas. curiously enough, the best balloon material is a kind of tissue. it is called gold, beta skin found in cattle just after the appendix called beta skin is cemented. the balloon clasp is a lining. it is very light thin, tough and almost completely impermeable to hydrogen. but it is hard to get in sufficient quantity and expensive. so it's not surprising the next best fabric, namely silk, took an early lead, remained a favorite up through civil war time. one of the most colorful incidents in the war was the use of a so-called petticoat balloon made of the beautiful gowns of southern bell. through a fortunate combination economics and science. cotton
all parmi invented by professor. l0we lo the first official aeronaut of the us government. note the small box is boyle's washing machines to get rid of the sulfuric acid. here is world war one no gas generator. the hydrogen is forced under high pressure into cylinders which can then be stored or carried anywhere the same system is used today. now we come to the second half of the first problem. the question fabric to hold the gas. curiously enough, the best balloon material is a kind of tissue....
25
25
Jul 9, 2023
07/23
by
CSPAN3
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eye 25
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all parmi invented by professor. l0we lo the first official aeronaut of the us government. note the small box is boyle's washing machines to get rid of the sulfuric acid. here is world war one no gas generator. the hydrogen is forced under high pressure into cylinders which can then be stored or carried anywhere the same system is used today. now we come to the second half of the first problem. the question fabric to hold the gas. curiously enough, the best balloon material is a kind of tissue. it is called gold, beta skin found in cattle just after the appendix called beta skin is cemented. the balloon clasp is a lining. it is very light thin, tough and almost completely impermeable to hydrogen. but it is hard to get in sufficient quantity and expensive. so it's not surprising the next best fabric, namely silk, took an early lead, remained a favorite up through civil war time. one of the most colorful incidents in the war was the use of a so-called petticoat balloon made of the beautiful gowns of southern bell. through a fortunate combination economics and science. cotton
all parmi invented by professor. l0we lo the first official aeronaut of the us government. note the small box is boyle's washing machines to get rid of the sulfuric acid. here is world war one no gas generator. the hydrogen is forced under high pressure into cylinders which can then be stored or carried anywhere the same system is used today. now we come to the second half of the first problem. the question fabric to hold the gas. curiously enough, the best balloon material is a kind of tissue....
46
46
Jul 2, 2023
07/23
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CSPAN2
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eye 46
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professor fukuyama: yeah, well, i agree completely with that.s funny, i agree with most of these kind of broad statements and principles that obama has made, both as president and subsequently. in a democracy, you have to worry about not just the equality of formal rights, but the substantive equality. people begin to lose faith in the legitimacy of the system. i think that some or a good deal of what was driving the populisms of both the right and the left in the 2010s was the inequality that was the byproduct of what is called neoliberal economic policy. what had been pursued in the late 1970's, 19 80's and 1990's, the created a lot of -- that created a lot of inequality. as a solution, i agree with what obama said. you need more redistribution. you need protections that equalize outcomes and not simply opportunities like obamacare, like the affordable care act, that try to provide a certain minimal level of health care for all americans. that is something that every other modern democracy provides for its citizens, except for the united state
professor fukuyama: yeah, well, i agree completely with that.s funny, i agree with most of these kind of broad statements and principles that obama has made, both as president and subsequently. in a democracy, you have to worry about not just the equality of formal rights, but the substantive equality. people begin to lose faith in the legitimacy of the system. i think that some or a good deal of what was driving the populisms of both the right and the left in the 2010s was the inequality that...
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18
Jul 20, 2023
07/23
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NTV
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the ambulance in which the professor was brought had a sticker with an inscription.iseases latin saying. so we look, we look, we look. that's the nature, sanat is an international company that unites a pharmaceutical laboratory, a network of pharmacies , a clinic, the company has its own ambulance. yes, there are, so it’s them who owns the clinic to see, the owner of the company, a canadian citizen george, corrulled, by the way, the other day he came to moscow, he tells us the main page of the company's official website that asya may not be my daughter. i learned from my wife's ex-girlfriend. she found our family photo on a social network and guessed everything about my wife’s connection with meshchersky, but she was silent, and when she saw it at that moment. i didn't know what to do. directly ask i was afraid, but to conduct a genetic examination, the results must be expected. a whole week of pain. and in the evening after work , this sergey was already waiting for me. you see, the meshchersky thief, he stole my new idea for an antiviral drug. i was just a graduate
the ambulance in which the professor was brought had a sticker with an inscription.iseases latin saying. so we look, we look, we look. that's the nature, sanat is an international company that unites a pharmaceutical laboratory, a network of pharmacies , a clinic, the company has its own ambulance. yes, there are, so it’s them who owns the clinic to see, the owner of the company, a canadian citizen george, corrulled, by the way, the other day he came to moscow, he tells us the main page of...
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Jul 11, 2023
07/23
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IRINN
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also, at the service of professor mohaddasi khorasani, mustafa mohaddasi khorasani, professor habibi and that institution of libraries will also be present in the program as always . young people will be next to veteran poets. in this ceremony, tell me how many young poets are in this ceremony and how many countries have reached you and how did we choose you so that they can present their poems in today's ceremony or are they economical along with the book launch. are in the institutions of libraries and the programs of the literary circles that we have are always book-centered, and the unveiling of the book mubahat takes place. among the poets who are mentioned in these poems, there is master mujahidi, who is the father of ritual poetry, and we are at your service virtually from qom, and the youth. in 2010, he was an outstanding poet who was collected in the mubahat collection by professor haj ali mansi and mr. habibi kasbi, who is a hard worker and collected his poems, and in fact , he is a friend of the distinguished professors who are present in this program, all of their poems a
also, at the service of professor mohaddasi khorasani, mustafa mohaddasi khorasani, professor habibi and that institution of libraries will also be present in the program as always . young people will be next to veteran poets. in this ceremony, tell me how many young poets are in this ceremony and how many countries have reached you and how did we choose you so that they can present their poems in today's ceremony or are they economical along with the book launch. are in the institutions of...
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10.0
Jul 1, 2023
07/23
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RUSSIA1
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professor kogan mb, professor feldman a and professor etinger ya, doctors and criminals tried, first of all, to undermine the health of the soviet leading military personnel, put them out of action and weaken the country's defense. however, the arrest frustrated their villainous plans and the criminals failed to achieve their goal. of the arrested woman, he completely stated to the investigation that he received a directive on the extermination of the leading cadres of the ussr from the united states from the joint organization through a doctor in moscow, shemirovich and a well-known bourgeois nationalist, as a result of which completed soon. i have all thanks. well, that is, things like this. as you can see, at the moment of a heavy, intensified class struggle, the vigilance of a citizen should be combined with you. with the professional duty of a doctor let's run rozhkov. finished convincingly appeared from seven moscow medical clinic relying on a group of corrupt jewish bourgeois nationalists, professional spies and heartburn terrorists on the instructions and under the guidance o
professor kogan mb, professor feldman a and professor etinger ya, doctors and criminals tried, first of all, to undermine the health of the soviet leading military personnel, put them out of action and weaken the country's defense. however, the arrest frustrated their villainous plans and the criminals failed to achieve their goal. of the arrested woman, he completely stated to the investigation that he received a directive on the extermination of the leading cadres of the ussr from the united...
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Jul 22, 2023
07/23
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KNTV
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professor emeritus jon else and professor emeritus jon else and uc berkeley, thank you so much.y's now slilicing their memeats fresh.h. thatat's why sububway's profofd by thihis champ. and this futurure champ. anand if we prproffer it,, wewe know you'u'll profferer i. he's cockyky for a a nineteen y year old. >>> i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. we do want to update you on that breaking news we brought you earlier in the show. a fire out here on the altamont pass. it's right near north flynn road. we have a hot 94, 15 to 24-mile-per-hour winds. any smoke would be moving off toward the east, away from livermore. more details at nbcbayarea.com. otherwise, we start it off with some fog tomorrow and then high clouds stream across for the afternoon. i do see us with the hottest weather on saturday, 101. drop down to 93 on sunday. then plenty of 80s next week. so sunday probably the better day to be outside right now if you're looking to avoid that heat. >> thank you so much, jeff. that's going to do wewe've got onone hope. a bomb.. 4.4... 3.3... 2...1... they jusust fired aa sta
professor emeritus jon else and professor emeritus jon else and uc berkeley, thank you so much.y's now slilicing their memeats fresh.h. thatat's why sububway's profofd by thihis champ. and this futurure champ. anand if we prproffer it,, wewe know you'u'll profferer i. he's cockyky for a a nineteen y year old. >>> i'm chief meteorologist jeff ranieri. we do want to update you on that breaking news we brought you earlier in the show. a fire out here on the altamont pass. it's right near...
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Jul 22, 2023
07/23
by
NTV
tv
eye 53
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the professor said the money was in the bank lol. and i always appear as cash right away about i put it in, where does the money come from? and i work in the service engine squandered a wheelbarrow sold a wheelbarrow. and why didn’t they take her away then, and so that no one would believe you when you guess where the unfortunate money came from? remember clients. misha in detail, remember. i'll find it myself, you know. there's also compensation for the head. tell me in general. is there any doubt that they took the money? i should have attacked. youth tv is our favorite show the mask is impossible. only in a mask, beloved, the mask is with us again. i run whether the flight of love is loud all the time we are waiting for today's miracle to come true. ozone delivered with love diapers and panties her kusan eco 749 rub. and three-layer toilet paper zeva for 249 rubles. this is a juicy party of seth and riley. and this challenge is an alcohol-free solution for everyone for everyone every day from vtb, this is an excuse not to miss the
the professor said the money was in the bank lol. and i always appear as cash right away about i put it in, where does the money come from? and i work in the service engine squandered a wheelbarrow sold a wheelbarrow. and why didn’t they take her away then, and so that no one would believe you when you guess where the unfortunate money came from? remember clients. misha in detail, remember. i'll find it myself, you know. there's also compensation for the head. tell me in general. is there any...
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15
Jul 22, 2023
07/23
by
BELARUSTV
tv
eye 15
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researcher of metallic hydrogen professor kulikov professor kulikov oh sorry why are you interested inif i were interested in antisegma minus hypera, so as not to be surprised? it's understandable though. your way is naive without evidence, thank you please by the way what do you do in the evenings? i am engaged in solid state physics result. you just rated. okay, he wants pinworms be like landau. in my laboratory there are round-the-clock experiments. i can offer you instead of a part-time evening laboratory assistant , i agree. don't need money, kovalyov why do you want to appear? not just the way you are? i need money. that i don’t fit into laboratory assistants, go and say, we will consult and decide. and i don't need anything. no need. he got kind of nervous. do pathogen training. listen, let's give you this school good, there was still a school, like yofa landau or kapitsa had it. otherwise , he developed some kind of kindergarten. that you have little work in institute, right? listen, there are interesting teachers here, but stop it. how did you talk to kovalev? oh, what do you
researcher of metallic hydrogen professor kulikov professor kulikov oh sorry why are you interested inif i were interested in antisegma minus hypera, so as not to be surprised? it's understandable though. your way is naive without evidence, thank you please by the way what do you do in the evenings? i am engaged in solid state physics result. you just rated. okay, he wants pinworms be like landau. in my laboratory there are round-the-clock experiments. i can offer you instead of a part-time...
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Jul 11, 2023
07/23
by
KGO
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we will talk with the university of michigan professor to find out. also studies show older folks benefit from relationships with younger buddies and there is a program in san francisco that fosters that unique relationship for those in the lgbtq community. we will have the story of an unlikely pair. first despite billions dollars to help make up for pandemic learning loss, a new study shows that students are not recovering. the lack is most pronounced in students of color. joining us now is jump professor, and cof rise up against racism. this study was done by what do they look at and what did it find? >> the study was focused on primarily students proficiency, gains in the areas of reading and mathematics. i think the findings holistically are not totally surprising for those of us in educational spaces, those of us who are parents. the year we just closed was tremendously challenging. as i continue to drumbeat tremendous disruption that we have all journey through with the pandemic, it's not going to be a quick and easy for fast fix. this take time
we will talk with the university of michigan professor to find out. also studies show older folks benefit from relationships with younger buddies and there is a program in san francisco that fosters that unique relationship for those in the lgbtq community. we will have the story of an unlikely pair. first despite billions dollars to help make up for pandemic learning loss, a new study shows that students are not recovering. the lack is most pronounced in students of color. joining us now is...
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the degree of, of the anger of the russian elite against the western by the professor bradshaw. isn't it understandable that most school would uh, waived or tried to delay the difficult decisions? because you mentioned this the french recital of one minute. you might imagine canon and though, you know, we consider ukrainians, you know, not necessarily our brothers, but most of us have relatives there. so for any russian leader to watch any military operation, there would be a very, very, very difficult choice, both on international grounds and particularly domestic grounds. but i think the crumbling line has been put predicts police. and the, the reason they did it was because the west intensified the weaponized ation the militarization of your grand throughout 2021. do you believe the crumbling narrative there? the way i would say is politics is that a matter of what i believe is what the individual actors believe and their inability to listen to the other side is what makes conflict happen. so i'm sure that the kremlin believes what it believes and the nato, nato capitals, the
the degree of, of the anger of the russian elite against the western by the professor bradshaw. isn't it understandable that most school would uh, waived or tried to delay the difficult decisions? because you mentioned this the french recital of one minute. you might imagine canon and though, you know, we consider ukrainians, you know, not necessarily our brothers, but most of us have relatives there. so for any russian leader to watch any military operation, there would be a very, very, very...
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Jul 15, 2023
07/23
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
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thasunda: yeah, so over time -- we started with professors. but over time, our mission expanded to not just professors on campus but also the janitors, the staff, k-12, hospitals, other nonprofits, and most recently having our product travel into the 401(k) market. and really when you think about our mission to make sure that people can retire with dignity, we think having access to guaranteed income is part of one's retirement portfolio is absolutely critical. david: so, when people retire now if they have a tiaa program, they get a guaranteed income, or they get just whatever they can return on their investments? thasunda: clearly, our participants have choice and it depends on the university or the organization. but what makes tiaa special is within their in-plan portfolio, they can have exposure to guaranteed income. and that means that in addition to stocks and bonds, you have an in-plan annuity that provides you that guarantee, that insurance that you can feel confident regardless of the markets it will not go negative, that you will not
thasunda: yeah, so over time -- we started with professors. but over time, our mission expanded to not just professors on campus but also the janitors, the staff, k-12, hospitals, other nonprofits, and most recently having our product travel into the 401(k) market. and really when you think about our mission to make sure that people can retire with dignity, we think having access to guaranteed income is part of one's retirement portfolio is absolutely critical. david: so, when people retire now...
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well, to discuss it, i'm now enjoyed by geoffrey roberts, professor emeritus of history at the university college court. this is a robert's is great to talk to. thank you very much for your time. thanks for the invitation. as you pointed out in one of your articles at western media are still awash with the theories and narrative of what was on vladimir put his mind when he authorized this incursion into your brain. but according to you, they all missed one important factor which is put into a pots elliptic vision of a nuclear on your brain, imbedded in nato. what do you mean by that? and do you think that vision as apocalyptic as it may be? i have any grounding in reality, it will i describe that the thirty's of decision to go to well with your crime as a decision to to have the type of preventative. what right, to prevent the continued build up of the nature ukrainian on. ready is on rushes rush, just pull it out. yeah. so he's basic perspective was the that build up. why don't the media read the french or russia in the meat are long. so what would actually represent the next essential f
well, to discuss it, i'm now enjoyed by geoffrey roberts, professor emeritus of history at the university college court. this is a robert's is great to talk to. thank you very much for your time. thanks for the invitation. as you pointed out in one of your articles at western media are still awash with the theories and narrative of what was on vladimir put his mind when he authorized this incursion into your brain. but according to you, they all missed one important factor which is put into a...
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but professor pitcher, as far as i understand your faces, it's not just a historical grievance. it's actually a lead reality because as you state in your book, the conflict within the ukraine stems from the states reluctance to recognize the so called all the ukraine. the fact that this 3rd of its population consider themselves russians in terms of the cultural identity um ukrainian in terms of the civic identity. and i think this is actually a crucial point to uh oh, for size the these people considering the ukraine as that own country, the stop. why do you think the state refuse to reciprocate by fool accepting that identity? so regardless of the language, they speak with the books they read because early on out there and in the years that roughly decade i would say i'm more following ukrainian independence. they made the wrong choice. well, they made a nationalist choice rather than a civic choice. at the time of the ideas of federalism in ukraine, we'd go back all the way to the late 19th century. it was recognized that there was a great diversity in the territory of ukraine
but professor pitcher, as far as i understand your faces, it's not just a historical grievance. it's actually a lead reality because as you state in your book, the conflict within the ukraine stems from the states reluctance to recognize the so called all the ukraine. the fact that this 3rd of its population consider themselves russians in terms of the cultural identity um ukrainian in terms of the civic identity. and i think this is actually a crucial point to uh oh, for size the these people...
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Jul 14, 2023
07/23
by
IRINN
tv
eye 35
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and professors who are in the art of presentation and movement design. so let's talk about the national urdu camp. it will start from today until the 25th of dhul-qaida. the camp will be opened in a few moments. shahid mohammad montazeri shahriar will be held and this is a piece of the puzzle of the grand plan of empowering hymn groups , and if we want to divide from one to two categories , productive groups in terms of production, productive groups and groups that we call training-oriented, that is the other they are not education-oriented, but in these very serious training incentives focused on this grand plan for training-oriented groups, which may be, for example, 30-40 times the number of productive groups . the first step is mobile and we are working on the discussion of mentoring and training. in fact, these groups exist in the next stages and throughout the year . from all provinces , there were about 350 people who registered, out of which 600 people were selected, and what is the basis for quickly the basis is that the more history they have i
and professors who are in the art of presentation and movement design. so let's talk about the national urdu camp. it will start from today until the 25th of dhul-qaida. the camp will be opened in a few moments. shahid mohammad montazeri shahriar will be held and this is a piece of the puzzle of the grand plan of empowering hymn groups , and if we want to divide from one to two categories , productive groups in terms of production, productive groups and groups that we call training-oriented,...
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Jul 9, 2023
07/23
by
CSPAN3
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this is the story as told by professor michael jacobs. hes a college professor here at pennsylvania college at the time. professor, mathematics, na philosophy, which is physical sciences at the time, chemistry. and after a number of years, the second meteorological program to stand at a collegiate level in the united states. he records weather observation. and we'll drill down on why he's it, who he's doing it for. and what the records look like. but this a portion of his records for. july 1863 that speaks volumes. great battles of gettysburg and fought right there in the red box. this is a form that he would normally use t detl any thunderstorms, any lightning, any significant weather phenomena. if you look through all those records, you'll see occasions where there auroras he recorded the first flower that bloomed of a certain type each year bird sightings, etc., etc.. but for gettysburg that's what he had to say. and so from that point forward, our story begins. all right. now, if jacobs had these records, everybody must be relying on
this is the story as told by professor michael jacobs. hes a college professor here at pennsylvania college at the time. professor, mathematics, na philosophy, which is physical sciences at the time, chemistry. and after a number of years, the second meteorological program to stand at a collegiate level in the united states. he records weather observation. and we'll drill down on why he's it, who he's doing it for. and what the records look like. but this a portion of his records for. july 1863...