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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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and if it comes as part of the university and all that money that comes in sort of helps university out of its financial crisis. this is not true. it is basically, it actually operates very similarly to how nike operates as a corporation where they spend all of their money on advertising. then try and spell -- they try to spend as little as possible on what they make you think is a luxury item. which is really made in an indonesian factory with minuscule wages. the point of these big football programs is not just to attract money from the donors and you know, income from these television contracts. it is also -- and it is not even just to make money from like i said, licensing the brand. i mean for example, the university of oregon brand which was literally created by nike, it is one of the more valuable brands in college football. i think it is something like fourth or fifth or something like that. only very few schools do better. in new york, there are more people than should care about oregon football care about oregon football in new york state. i mean, you talk to the people who ru
and if it comes as part of the university and all that money that comes in sort of helps university out of its financial crisis. this is not true. it is basically, it actually operates very similarly to how nike operates as a corporation where they spend all of their money on advertising. then try and spell -- they try to spend as little as possible on what they make you think is a luxury item. which is really made in an indonesian factory with minuscule wages. the point of these big football...
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Dec 9, 2018
12/18
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>> a lot of these land-grant universities, which is sort of a model for the american public university, one of the better ideas that america has ever had, she was too great, a lot of them were agricultural schools initially and they were a kind of a trade school almost but a trade school that offered sort of a broader education, but they were very much focused on what someone this -- i can't recalle name now, educating sons of toil. people who are from the working classes, you know, these schools were meant to be a path for them to get an education, not just either going to agriculture and be better, more profitable farmers or to go into some other kind of trade. it was breaking the mold of the philly aristocratic mold of what universities had been before that. where they were either purely religious schools or they were very aristocratic and just the sons and daughters of very wealthy important people getting educated at the same level as their parents had. over the years we added all kinds are great things to this idea, like the g.i. bill and stuff like that, and student loan program
>> a lot of these land-grant universities, which is sort of a model for the american public university, one of the better ideas that america has ever had, she was too great, a lot of them were agricultural schools initially and they were a kind of a trade school almost but a trade school that offered sort of a broader education, but they were very much focused on what someone this -- i can't recalle name now, educating sons of toil. people who are from the working classes, you know, these...
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Dec 2, 2018
12/18
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not far away from the university of oregon. went to springfield high school, on the other side of the bridge from eugene. as a young kid, i had an opportunity to see what eugene looked like before it became nike town, usa. if you go there today, there are swooshes everywhere and it is sort of like a tremendous branding exercise. not just in terms of the university but the town itself. a good deal, but people in the town are employed by the university or rely on the university in some way. so the beginnings of us, really go back to -- well, financially the beginnings of this goes back to it a this piece of legislation. passed in 1990 by organ taxpayers and that this piece of legislation did was pushed by these really conservative organ anti- tax activists, was pushed by these groups as kind of a, why are we paying so much in property taxes? they were basically what kept public schools going in oregon. this had a really bad effect on funding for all kinds of public education or especially higher education because it pitted k-12 ag
not far away from the university of oregon. went to springfield high school, on the other side of the bridge from eugene. as a young kid, i had an opportunity to see what eugene looked like before it became nike town, usa. if you go there today, there are swooshes everywhere and it is sort of like a tremendous branding exercise. not just in terms of the university but the town itself. a good deal, but people in the town are employed by the university or rely on the university in some way. so...
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Dec 19, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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the university of ghana the of adelie was part of the statue of the university of god i must come down to see that such of can and i say many around the world when you look at him represented like this what do you say. i think but then it is correct to point out that the politics of why the statues are put up in the first place is complicated and we should point out that the indian government currently has a far right radical internationalist government in fact a party that has close links to the man who killed gandhi so it is unfortunate to see how he's been appropriated in such a narrow internationalist frame and if that was the basis for which people were challenging his legacy i would have no objection but i think that you know the ways in which the critique of gandhi in guyana and elsewhere in africa has been prefer it is largely based on a fabrication that emphasizes his politics early in his career when he was very much a racist in line with british colonial values at the time and he ignores his much longer history of engaging with black political figures about his thinkers that
the university of ghana the of adelie was part of the statue of the university of god i must come down to see that such of can and i say many around the world when you look at him represented like this what do you say. i think but then it is correct to point out that the politics of why the statues are put up in the first place is complicated and we should point out that the indian government currently has a far right radical internationalist government in fact a party that has close links to...
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Dec 23, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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a lot of universities call their sports programs the front porch of the university. here's our sports program. check it out. and then you'll come further in and you'll see the nursing school and whatever it is that's going on in english department. the academics. and that's an interesting theory, and but -- but also become an article of faith and so many of these universities, this sports program does not give money back to the general fund. almost never gives money back to general fund and they blow up and they explode, because no college president who is honest will tell you that he really has control over his big-time sports programs. how could he? the college presidents making a then hundred a year their coach is making $8 million a year. money talks. real power is in the athletic programs. but they're also very, very difficult to unwinds. you create this infrastructure, you build a stadium for 80,000 people. you build a practice facility. you raise the money. you promise the people in your city, well, when 80,000 people come fill this stadium, they're going to s
a lot of universities call their sports programs the front porch of the university. here's our sports program. check it out. and then you'll come further in and you'll see the nursing school and whatever it is that's going on in english department. the academics. and that's an interesting theory, and but -- but also become an article of faith and so many of these universities, this sports program does not give money back to the general fund. almost never gives money back to general fund and...
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Dec 11, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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let me bring in you had his head of i guess i've had to say is it time then full a refreshing of the universal declaration of human rights or is the document itself profound enough to last another seventy is. well it's quite astonishing how well it was formulated needs was mentioned yeah there are probably room for improvements but thinking of other things written seventy years ago it's quite amazing how well it's it can be used to adopt also to new challenges and. i think the major problem is not changing any and or do it making any amendments to the universal declaration of human rights it's really comes down to the political willingness we have heard about you know that the u.n. security council has one of the major obstacles moving ahead and yeah i think it really comes down to two states to show another type of courage and politico willingness to actually respect the rights we have rather than a great need to sit down everyone together and reformulated professor jeffco there in the political willingness that we seem to keep coming back to that but without enforceability political willingn
let me bring in you had his head of i guess i've had to say is it time then full a refreshing of the universal declaration of human rights or is the document itself profound enough to last another seventy is. well it's quite astonishing how well it was formulated needs was mentioned yeah there are probably room for improvements but thinking of other things written seventy years ago it's quite amazing how well it's it can be used to adopt also to new challenges and. i think the major problem is...
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Dec 19, 2018
12/18
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she goes to university of alabama, seeks a counselor. the counselor finds out who the perpetrator was and the counselor said, i can't help you. this is conflict of interest. i know this person. the university of alabama didn't provide her another counselor. she goes into depression. she leaves the university of alabama. she transfers to s.m.u. in dallas, texas. and shortly after she transferred to s.m.u., megan rondini took her own life. you see, mr. speaker, she got the death penalty for being a victim of crime. perpetrator, in her mind, alleged perpetrator, nothing ever happened to him. so there are a lot of problems and issues that came up during the way she was not treated at the hospital, the sheriff's department, and by the university. there was at the hospital, not a sexual assault forensic examiner or a sexual assault forensic nurse there to take care of her. who are these people? these are wonderful people who are trained to deal with sexual assault victims. the hospital didn't have one of those for her. and it turns out, there a
she goes to university of alabama, seeks a counselor. the counselor finds out who the perpetrator was and the counselor said, i can't help you. this is conflict of interest. i know this person. the university of alabama didn't provide her another counselor. she goes into depression. she leaves the university of alabama. she transfers to s.m.u. in dallas, texas. and shortly after she transferred to s.m.u., megan rondini took her own life. you see, mr. speaker, she got the death penalty for being...
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Dec 21, 2018
12/18
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of the mortgage bankers association. he received his b.a. from yale university. mr. jerry howard is chief executive officer of the national association of home builders. he earned his b.a. from the university of vice president and his j.d. from the university of south carolina. miss lindsay johnson is president of the u.s. mortgage insurers. he received her m.b.a. from georgetown university. mr. alex pollock is the senior fellow of financial markets. he received his bachelor's from williams college and his masters from the university of chicago and m.b.a. from princeton university. dr. norbert michelle is director of the center for data analysis at the heritage foundation. received hiss b.a. from loyal ya university and doctoral degree from the university of new orleans. mr. don is president of local ending group loans and vice president of the community-owned association. he received his b.a. from villanova university. mr. rick stafford is president and chief executive officer of tower federal credit union and is testifying today on behalf of the nationally insured c
of the mortgage bankers association. he received his b.a. from yale university. mr. jerry howard is chief executive officer of the national association of home builders. he earned his b.a. from the university of vice president and his j.d. from the university of south carolina. miss lindsay johnson is president of the u.s. mortgage insurers. he received her m.b.a. from georgetown university. mr. alex pollock is the senior fellow of financial markets. he received his bachelor's from williams...
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many of the cutting edge devices at the rice university bridge used only briefly. following the liberation of strasbourg in one thousand nine hundred forty four one of america's priorities was to examine the results of the university's nuclear research but they found little of substance. after the war fight second moved away from nuclear research instead devoting himself to more philosophical issues. in strasbourg by teka like many of his colleagues took up residence in a villa in the northeast of the city he was joined by his wife and their three children. who just calls us hall i can still remember this big house we had in a big garden you know i can still see the chickens running around i remember we were happy there and if you're here we had a happy childhood he sighed thoughtfully. living next door to the vide checkers was anatomist to hear it and his family. relations between the two families were not always congenial vied secor would later tell her daughter. to pursue want out needed to months or even a professor here would come by and talk about the characte
many of the cutting edge devices at the rice university bridge used only briefly. following the liberation of strasbourg in one thousand nine hundred forty four one of america's priorities was to examine the results of the university's nuclear research but they found little of substance. after the war fight second moved away from nuclear research instead devoting himself to more philosophical issues. in strasbourg by teka like many of his colleagues took up residence in a villa in the northeast...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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of thing. maybe not assuming they'd ever go to a university. sherman institute was originally established at paris, which is just to the southeast of us here. and the 1890s. frank miller, though, wanting to get -- because he was a real advocate of the hearts -- arts d crafts movement and his hotel was redesigned in the missionary bible style based on california missions roughly. wanted to get a real mission, he thoughts, or real indians to riverside and that's not to denigrate his intent, but he was always a promoter as well as a progressive for his time. so, he convinced the federal governments, they ought to move sherman institute from paris to riverside. riverside lost its stats tuesday as an elite city maybe about the early 1970s. but it's gaining its back again and as it gains its back it's taking on a 21st century look, mixed in with the historic district buildings. now we're kind of re-establishing and refocusing, like a lot of cities are, toward at the digital world ask the digital future. and clean energy. we're going to turn up here in
of thing. maybe not assuming they'd ever go to a university. sherman institute was originally established at paris, which is just to the southeast of us here. and the 1890s. frank miller, though, wanting to get -- because he was a real advocate of the hearts -- arts d crafts movement and his hotel was redesigned in the missionary bible style based on california missions roughly. wanted to get a real mission, he thoughts, or real indians to riverside and that's not to denigrate his intent, but...
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Dec 10, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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in cult test jeff gilbert professor of international human rights and humanitarian law at the university of essex and in stockholm you had this mosque in director of communications at the right livelihood award foundation welcome to the program let me begin with you benjamin so wacky in bangkok first is the universal declaration of human rights a gold standard or is that is it the baseline the the bare minimum countries should be adhering to. well it was intended as a baseline minimum in ah seventy years ago in the wake of roadwork to the world was perhaps more memorable than it is seventy years on to consider in these rights in a green almost universally across the board when you look at the number committee that drafted the declaration to accepting these rights and agreeing to hear them seventy years on they're being seen now as in almost an hour and now it was always a declaration it was never an forcible convention or trees that were not sense it would be difficult to press a legal case to begin with although these days even conventions retreat or not it seems were they were seventy yea
in cult test jeff gilbert professor of international human rights and humanitarian law at the university of essex and in stockholm you had this mosque in director of communications at the right livelihood award foundation welcome to the program let me begin with you benjamin so wacky in bangkok first is the universal declaration of human rights a gold standard or is that is it the baseline the the bare minimum countries should be adhering to. well it was intended as a baseline minimum in ah...
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career following the nazi seizure of power in one thousand thirty three the university was brought into line with the regime all jewish professors were dismissed with my grandfather's active involvement. of the you honest i knew how to shine as an example of an academic you furthered his korea under the nazis it was only after nine hundred thirty three that he was granted a full professorship at hyderabad university hued if not more that i'm glad. he has university chancellor and vice rector he assumed a very active role in the school's policy making. on may first nine hundred thirty three my grandfather joined the s.s. opening the doors for his career advancement in an official party assessment my grandfather was described as extremely capable and talented and as a man who ranked among the leading national socialist professors. in the summer of one thousand nine hundred he began making regular visits to strasbourg here he met future university president carr schmidt and ants and i should who would later become dean of the philosophical faculty together they made all pr
career following the nazi seizure of power in one thousand thirty three the university was brought into line with the regime all jewish professors were dismissed with my grandfather's active involvement. of the you honest i knew how to shine as an example of an academic you furthered his korea under the nazis it was only after nine hundred thirty three that he was granted a full professorship at hyderabad university hued if not more that i'm glad. he has university chancellor and vice rector he...
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is the only german university where these kinds of human experiments were carried out. all the other experiments we know about were conducted by as as doctors in concentration camps. but in this case it was university professors who conducted these deadly human experiments mention experiment to do a few on. here it's an atomic institute was just a stone's throw away from the medical faculty headed by my grandfather. surely he must have known what was going on at this faculty and had been aware of the murders and human experiments it's a question to which our family still has no definitive answer. soon from whom i believe that the murder of eighty six jews who helped had ordered from auschwitz for his skeleton collection was kept secret from other people in the university. in addition to being a university professor was also a member of the s s ancestral research agency. so he had his own separate institute his own s. s. institutional way i could carry out these matters it's institute. in the. if you were taught. so it is possible that my grandfather had known about the m
is the only german university where these kinds of human experiments were carried out. all the other experiments we know about were conducted by as as doctors in concentration camps. but in this case it was university professors who conducted these deadly human experiments mention experiment to do a few on. here it's an atomic institute was just a stone's throw away from the medical faculty headed by my grandfather. surely he must have known what was going on at this faculty and had been aware...
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Dec 28, 2018
12/18
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of the mortgage bankers association. he received his b.a. from yale university. mr. jerry howard is chief executive officer of the national association of home builders. he earned his b.a. from the university of vermont and his j.d. from the university of south carolina. ms. lindsey johnson is president of the u.s. mortgage insurers. she received her m.b.a. from georgetown university. mr. alex pollack is distinguished senior fellow of and receives his bachelor's from williams college and master's from university of chicago and m.p.a. from princeton university. and dr. michel received his b.a. from loyola university and his doctorial degree from the university of new orleans. mr. don calcaterra jr. is president of local lending group loans and vice president of community home lender association. he southeast his b.a. from villanova university. mr. rick stafford is president and chief executive of tower federal credit union and testifying today on behalf of the national association of federally insured credit unions. mr. stafford received his b.a. from adrian college an
of the mortgage bankers association. he received his b.a. from yale university. mr. jerry howard is chief executive officer of the national association of home builders. he earned his b.a. from the university of vermont and his j.d. from the university of south carolina. ms. lindsey johnson is president of the u.s. mortgage insurers. she received her m.b.a. from georgetown university. mr. alex pollack is distinguished senior fellow of and receives his bachelor's from williams college and...
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Dec 18, 2018
12/18
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KNTV
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the university of nebraska had no comment.at stanford, marianne fa marianne favro, nbc bay area news. >>> the grinch, someone was caught snatching decorations. they are worried the suspect will return, so they've taken down the rest of their decorations. if you recognize this man call martinez police. >>> an unlikely guest. this photo was shown of a coyote walking. police septembnt out a warning g coyotes are often less afraid of people. >>> some new research on vaping. 37% of high school students surveyed say they've tried vaping this year, up nearly 30% from last year. 25% of them don't believe they inhale nicotine when they vape. those students brielieve they'r just vaping flavors. which is wrong. e-cigarettes are getting a whole new generation hooked. it has been declared an epidemic. >> when kids start with vaping, they are more likely to make the transition to combustible, to smoke cigarettes. that's what has us concerned. >> the fda has offered to ban all vaping products unless manufacturers can come up with a solid pla
the university of nebraska had no comment.at stanford, marianne fa marianne favro, nbc bay area news. >>> the grinch, someone was caught snatching decorations. they are worried the suspect will return, so they've taken down the rest of their decorations. if you recognize this man call martinez police. >>> an unlikely guest. this photo was shown of a coyote walking. police septembnt out a warning g coyotes are often less afraid of people. >>> some new research on...
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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olsen: it was 1964 at the university of utah. and i was in a sorority dinner and a return peace corps volunteer stood up -- probably one of the first -- and spoke for 10 minutes about his peace corps experience. he sat down and i put my fork down and i went, oh, i think i want to do that. there was no grand scheme. it was, oh, i think i want to do that. and a year and a half later i was a peace corps volunteer. there are so many memorable experiences as a volunteer. i'm sure any of you who were a volunteer you're going oh, wait a minute, this, or this, or this. but very memorable for me was the family that i ate with every day and we game -- i was part of a household and at a point about three months in, they decided they wanted to give me a very special tunisian dish. they were excited. they had worked a whole week on getting ready for it. and so the friday when i came they had dressed up. i had dressed up. i just knew this was going to be a wonderful time because i loved tunisian food. and so with great fanfare they brought out
olsen: it was 1964 at the university of utah. and i was in a sorority dinner and a return peace corps volunteer stood up -- probably one of the first -- and spoke for 10 minutes about his peace corps experience. he sat down and i put my fork down and i went, oh, i think i want to do that. there was no grand scheme. it was, oh, i think i want to do that. and a year and a half later i was a peace corps volunteer. there are so many memorable experiences as a volunteer. i'm sure any of you who were...
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Dec 26, 2018
12/18
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extreme case of this is the egregious professor nancy mcclain of duke university. written in the resoundingly ignorant book about james buchanan, a great liberal economist taching him for no good reason. she didn't interview anyone she just wanted to attack him. with theories of racism. or charles cook for whom i've worked. i'm the enemy. she has a rule actually which she articulated this year, which is that nancy will not -- she's a historian in the history department. nancy will not speak to anyone who is accepted cook's money. and indeed she won't speak to anyone from any university which is accepted money from charles cook. now the problem with this is that duke university has accepted considerable amounts of money from charles coke. . . >> and with that option. after they have put away their natural and childish emotional toys is a piece of sociology that i wish some sociologists would find out about. and with that trilogy of the rise of income per head have what you would call historically liberalism with the free markets and free minds. and that increases by
extreme case of this is the egregious professor nancy mcclain of duke university. written in the resoundingly ignorant book about james buchanan, a great liberal economist taching him for no good reason. she didn't interview anyone she just wanted to attack him. with theories of racism. or charles cook for whom i've worked. i'm the enemy. she has a rule actually which she articulated this year, which is that nancy will not -- she's a historian in the history department. nancy will not speak to...
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Dec 15, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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when he arrived at the university of kansas, he had for filing cabinets full of material , and he was politically active on campus. he was a member of the stevens for democratic society, but decided he was interested in selling his collection and the university library purchased it. asked to describe the collection, i stress that we collect both the left and right wing and so we tried to present both sides of the issues, and that is actually one of the strengths of the wilcox collection. someone can come here and do research and actually look at materials from both sides. this is a selection of books whose authors used the wilcox collection for their research. we have researchers from all over the world come to use the wilcox collection. this book, american extremists, is a book that laird wrote himself. mid-1990's,in the just before the oklahoma city bombing, and after that terrible event occurred, his publishers wanted him to republish the book , and there is a photo from the bombing site. the other materials i have laid out on the table are materials from the collection itself. thi
when he arrived at the university of kansas, he had for filing cabinets full of material , and he was politically active on campus. he was a member of the stevens for democratic society, but decided he was interested in selling his collection and the university library purchased it. asked to describe the collection, i stress that we collect both the left and right wing and so we tried to present both sides of the issues, and that is actually one of the strengths of the wilcox collection....
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Dec 30, 2018
12/18
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of culture. in a word, the american university is in the grips of a mass hysteria. students actually believe that they are victims of oppression, at risk of their lives from circumambient racism and sexism. the degree of caterwauling is impossible to overstate. at brown students of color occupied the president's office and complained about i having to meet such academic expectations as attending class when they were so focused on, quote, staying alive at brown. [laughter] at yale a mob of minority students surrounded a highly respected sociologist and cursed and screamed at him for three hours because his wife had sent an e-mail suggesting that students could choose their own halloween costumes free from the ministrations of yale's diversity bureaucracy. among the shouts of shut the f up -- and i'm censoring that -- and you are disgusting that were directed at this mild-manneredded, left-wing professor was a cry of we're dying from one offers referring to the -- of the ranters referring to the end dangered standard of yale's minority students. but my favorite moment
of culture. in a word, the american university is in the grips of a mass hysteria. students actually believe that they are victims of oppression, at risk of their lives from circumambient racism and sexism. the degree of caterwauling is impossible to overstate. at brown students of color occupied the president's office and complained about i having to meet such academic expectations as attending class when they were so focused on, quote, staying alive at brown. [laughter] at yale a mob of...
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Dec 3, 2018
12/18
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BBCNEWS
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—— university of lancaster. ther side of the retail story. if we are buying things online, it needs to get to us somehow. deliveries, for example. it's the changing nature of retail. it's the changing nature of retail. it is not that people are necessarily leaving the industry completely, it's the nature of the jobs changing. talking to the professor of economics from the university of lancaster about these fixings, he has been looking at these figures for five years and he says there has been hollowing out of the retail industry. you are still seeing low skilljobs, people who need to clean muscles and high end jobs as well but a real hollowing out of those middle jobs. -- people who need to clean, for example, and high end jobs as well. while we are talking retail of this is someone who is getting more of a grip on the high street, mike ashley, the founder of sportsdirect. he will be appearing before a panel of mps later today to answer their questions about the future of the high street. he has a big stake in d
—— university of lancaster. ther side of the retail story. if we are buying things online, it needs to get to us somehow. deliveries, for example. it's the changing nature of retail. it's the changing nature of retail. it is not that people are necessarily leaving the industry completely, it's the nature of the jobs changing. talking to the professor of economics from the university of lancaster about these fixings, he has been looking at these figures for five years and he says there has...
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Dec 3, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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this always happens on the level of the universities. this is a famous professor named richard rority. he says no past achievement, not plato's or even christ's, can tell us about the ultimate significance of human life. the future will widen endlessly. experiments with new forms of individual and social life will interact and reinforce one another. individual life will become unthinkably diverse, and social life unthinkably free. that would be the fullness of dignity in practice. now, the critical component -- this i want to emphasize. the critical component of this view of dignity is that without others recognizing your identity, there cannot be self-respect. human beings are all frail beings who must live through the eyes of others so they can respect themselves. in fact, others must be made to respect them as they would like to be respected. this becomes the new standard. without protection from harsh words you cannot be your authentic self. this means that all identities must not only be tolerated but must be celebrated and any denia
this always happens on the level of the universities. this is a famous professor named richard rority. he says no past achievement, not plato's or even christ's, can tell us about the ultimate significance of human life. the future will widen endlessly. experiments with new forms of individual and social life will interact and reinforce one another. individual life will become unthinkably diverse, and social life unthinkably free. that would be the fullness of dignity in practice. now, the...
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130
Dec 8, 2018
12/18
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mccloskey has the chat length task of teaching my price theirry at the university of chicago. that was any good fortune. she was also a professor of economics and history at the university of iowa. dr. mccloskey's many boxes are unusually well-written, particularly when it comes to economics, which is written isn't always a discipline that has the very finest writing, although lawyers do pretty bad, too. spending time with these books is always both deeplied identifying and a genuine pressure, and i want to bring a few to your attention. first, the huge would trilogy, the mow recent bourgeois equality, how ideas and capital, not capital or institutions enripped the world, bourgeois dignity. why economics cannot explain the modern welder, and the first, bourgeois virtues, written in 2006. theseburgs argue that new ideas are the explanation for the great enrichment from 1800 to the present. liberty and dignity for ordinary people. classical liberal jim, led to an explosion of what she calls trade tested better: she argues that material explanation such as capital, humiliation, ex
mccloskey has the chat length task of teaching my price theirry at the university of chicago. that was any good fortune. she was also a professor of economics and history at the university of iowa. dr. mccloskey's many boxes are unusually well-written, particularly when it comes to economics, which is written isn't always a discipline that has the very finest writing, although lawyers do pretty bad, too. spending time with these books is always both deeplied identifying and a genuine pressure,...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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she is assistant professor at the university of chicago's school of social service administration, and has had her work published in new yorker, "the new york times," the atlantic and the "washington post," joining prefer ewing in conversation is professor michael ralph. a teacher at the new york university's department of social and cultural analysis as well as the school of medicine. professor ralph is also the author of forensics of capital, which looks at the interpersonal politics of debt in senegal and how the country has become a leader of political and economic reform in africa and we have those books for sale. his research at large focused on debt, slavery, insurance, for instance, and incarceration and is at work for two other books on the u.s. insurance industry as well as the history of convict leasing. strand is honored to play host to these two scholars on the cutting edge of their fields, and we're greatful for the nyu department of social and cultural analysissing are flays public space and the institute for public knowledge for their sponsorship of tonight's event. we'
she is assistant professor at the university of chicago's school of social service administration, and has had her work published in new yorker, "the new york times," the atlantic and the "washington post," joining prefer ewing in conversation is professor michael ralph. a teacher at the new york university's department of social and cultural analysis as well as the school of medicine. professor ralph is also the author of forensics of capital, which looks at the...
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Dec 18, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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[applause] weinberg: when i was teaching at the university of michigan in ann arbor periodically i was drawn into a great deal of administrative work. we so, my wife and i decided ad to get out of town in distance in the summer so we would not be called. i would not be called in quite as often. of property piece in colorado not far from fort collins where there is a good library at colorado state university, and that got me interested in the west. i began to acquire some native american artifacts, including bolo ties. and thereafter, it occurred to me that this was one good way i could make sure that on any significant occasion like this, at least one of the men would be properly dressed. [laughter] [applause] on behalf of, i know you're going to be thanked also by colonel crane. thank you for this wonderful session. thank you for everything you have done for the national world war ii museum. and your guidance and your mentorship of all of us here at the world war ii museum, the presidential counselors are deeply in your debt. we will carry on with your vision for the future of this in
[applause] weinberg: when i was teaching at the university of michigan in ann arbor periodically i was drawn into a great deal of administrative work. we so, my wife and i decided ad to get out of town in distance in the summer so we would not be called. i would not be called in quite as often. of property piece in colorado not far from fort collins where there is a good library at colorado state university, and that got me interested in the west. i began to acquire some native american...
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Dec 1, 2018
12/18
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[applause] weinberg: when i was teaching at the university of michigan in ann arbor periodically i was drawn into a great deal of administrative work. we so, my wife and i decided ad to get out of town in distance in the summer so we would not be called. i would not be called in quite as often. of property piece in colorado not far from fort collins where there is a good library at colorado state university, and that got me interested in the west. i began to acquire some native american artifacts, including bolo ties. and thereafter, it occurred to me that this was one good way i could make sure that on any significant occasion like this, at least one of the men would be properly dressed. [laughter] [applause] on behalf of, i know you're going to be thanked also by colonel crane. thank you for this wonderful session. thank you for everything you have done for the national world war ii museum. and your guidance and your mentorship of all of us here at the world war ii museum, the presidential counselors are deeply in your debt. we will carry on with your vision for the future of this in
[applause] weinberg: when i was teaching at the university of michigan in ann arbor periodically i was drawn into a great deal of administrative work. we so, my wife and i decided ad to get out of town in distance in the summer so we would not be called. i would not be called in quite as often. of property piece in colorado not far from fort collins where there is a good library at colorado state university, and that got me interested in the west. i began to acquire some native american...
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Dec 31, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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the university of michigan established the forerunner of the school we are in today in 1914. more than 100 years ago in the progressive era. it was the first of its kind in the country and has really been a model ever since. as you know, gerald ford captured the michigan football team here in the 1930s, went on to raise a family of four with ms. betty ford and has spent his life in principle public service in congress. the family has revisited here many times in students and faculty have come to talk often about what we called to further deceive. a commitment to hard work in getting the facts right. having the courage and wisdom as leaders to do what is right we are gathered here at one of our larger stations were event the betty ford classroom known informally with affection by our students simply as betty. i hope you got a chance to see some of the wonderful photos of mrs. ford in the vestibule. they capture at least some part of the strength and joy and love with which she lived her life. i'm honored to introduce today's featured guest here to tell us more about mrs. ford'
the university of michigan established the forerunner of the school we are in today in 1914. more than 100 years ago in the progressive era. it was the first of its kind in the country and has really been a model ever since. as you know, gerald ford captured the michigan football team here in the 1930s, went on to raise a family of four with ms. betty ford and has spent his life in principle public service in congress. the family has revisited here many times in students and faculty have come...
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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KNTV
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the airport is back and operating on a full schedule as the investigation continues. >>> the university ofryland is working during this holiday break to contain a virus that has led to the death of one student and made dozens of others sick. nbc's matt bradley looks at what the virus does and what they're doing to stop it. >> she is just -- she's just a free spirited kind girl. >> reporter: it's been more than a month since ian perigal's 18-year-old daughter olivia died. >> we watched her just get weaker and weaker and that's the worst experience you can possibly have as a parent. >> pierre: olivia developed complications related to the adenovirus during her freshman year at the university of maryland where the number of infected students now stands at 40, leaving an entire campus on edge. >> there'sball one case of fatal -- being fatal. and it's kind of worrying that more people are getting it. >> reporter: another outbreak last month killed 11 children in a pediatric center in new jersey. the virus itself is common but it rarely leads to death. the admonth virus can cause the common cold
the airport is back and operating on a full schedule as the investigation continues. >>> the university ofryland is working during this holiday break to contain a virus that has led to the death of one student and made dozens of others sick. nbc's matt bradley looks at what the virus does and what they're doing to stop it. >> she is just -- she's just a free spirited kind girl. >> reporter: it's been more than a month since ian perigal's 18-year-old daughter olivia died....
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. >>> happening today, general -- a new era university of maryland football team. megan mcgrath is on campus ahead of that press conference. we know they're going to announce the new coach today, but is h completely done with his old job?r: >> repor not quite yet, but he's going to be coming after he aps things up with his current team. the university of maryland has chosen michael locksley as the new head football coach. he's currently the offensive coordinator with alabama. he's going tohe finish up, finish up the playoffs before o coming here t maryland. the name mayo sound familiar maryland fans. he was the offensiveoo cinator from 2012 to 2015 here at maryland. he was also just named top assistant coach in the country. he served as interim head coach before d.j. durkinook over here. at maryland now, durkin, of course, was ultimately fired following the death of player jordan mcnair. locksley and durkin did not work pgether here at maryland. the universitysident fired coach durkin, going against the recommendation of the board of . regent lowe at that time annou
. >>> happening today, general -- a new era university of maryland football team. megan mcgrath is on campus ahead of that press conference. we know they're going to announce the new coach today, but is h completely done with his old job?r: >> repor not quite yet, but he's going to be coming after he aps things up with his current team. the university of maryland has chosen michael locksley as the new head football coach. he's currently the offensive coordinator with alabama....
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Dec 11, 2018
12/18
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ALJAZ
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in cult test jeff gilbert professor of international human rights and humanitarian law at the university of essex and in stockholm you had this mosque and director of communications at the right livelihood award foundation welcome to the program let me begin with you benjamin so wacky in bangkok first is the universal declaration of human rights a gold standard or is that is it the baseline the bare minimum countries should be adhering to. well it was intended as a baseline minimum in ah seventy years ago in the wake of roadwork to the world was perhaps more memorable than it is seventy years on to consider in these rights in a green almost universally across the board you look at the number committee that drafted the declaration to accepting these rights and agreeing to hear them seventy years on they're being seen now as in almost an hour and now it was always a declaration it was never an forcible convention or trees that were not sense it would be difficult to press a legal case to begin with although these days even conventions retreat or not it seems were they were seventy years ago e
in cult test jeff gilbert professor of international human rights and humanitarian law at the university of essex and in stockholm you had this mosque and director of communications at the right livelihood award foundation welcome to the program let me begin with you benjamin so wacky in bangkok first is the universal declaration of human rights a gold standard or is that is it the baseline the bare minimum countries should be adhering to. well it was intended as a baseline minimum in ah...
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Dec 11, 2018
12/18
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KRON
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dr faith kerns is a scientist at the university of california.don hankins/pyrogeog rapher, cal state university, chico"yes we are seeing larger fires..."and don haskins teaches the geography of fire at cal state chico.they both agree that california is also paying for the sin of building into the wilderness th no regard for natural cycles.bill weir/ reporting:"but i suppose the lesson is if you don't have a lot of little fires throughout the seasons you're going to have some really big ones."don hankins/pyrogeog rapher, cal state university, chico:"that's right. that's right. in the little fires if you could imagine checker boarding a landscape with a lot of little fires could really do a lot to minimize those bigger fires later." there are around 130 million dead trees in california, controlled burning or cutting them would cost billions.but the risk of leaving them to burn wild is anyone's guess. sheriff kory honea/ butte county sheriff's office:"one of the problems you have is part of human nature is that one we rely upon our past experiences to predict how things are going to go f
dr faith kerns is a scientist at the university of california.don hankins/pyrogeog rapher, cal state university, chico"yes we are seeing larger fires..."and don haskins teaches the geography of fire at cal state chico.they both agree that california is also paying for the sin of building into the wilderness th no regard for natural cycles.bill weir/ reporting:"but i suppose the lesson is if you don't have a lot of little fires throughout the seasons you're going to have some...
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and he was just awarded the marshall scholarship which means he'll be celebrating at th university ofim today. >> unfortunately, ias wrongfully accused and eventually wrongfully convicted of a h homicide that nothing to do with and had no knowledge of. >> he served 11 years in prison for killing a fellow college student. he was released after aop notch group worked on his case for otee. he g the help of eric holder. he learnedirst hand how hard it is to get your high of back after prison. two yrsago, muriel bowserap inted him for the director of orca. he helps recently released prisoners at th resource center. >> i came home. i lost everything. my condover, my car and my kids. >> recently he was awarded a marshall scholarship allowing him to attend university of oxford. he will spend a year in oxford. and then he said he hopes to return with new skills to help the people of the district of columbia released from prison find jobs a social services. >> at this office and the mayor's office in general are setting the trend and the f example what reentry can look like across the country.
and he was just awarded the marshall scholarship which means he'll be celebrating at th university ofim today. >> unfortunately, ias wrongfully accused and eventually wrongfully convicted of a h homicide that nothing to do with and had no knowledge of. >> he served 11 years in prison for killing a fellow college student. he was released after aop notch group worked on his case for otee. he g the help of eric holder. he learnedirst hand how hard it is to get your high of back after...
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Dec 24, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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when he arrived at the university of kansas, he had about four filing cabinets full of material. and he was politically active here on campus, he was a member of the student for democratic society, but decided that he was interested in selling his collection and the university library purchased it. the collection is always for free speech and whenever i am asked to describe the collection i stress that we collect both the left and right wing and so we try to present both sides of issues and that is actually one of the strengths of the will -- the will come collection is that someone can come here and do research and actually look at materials from both sides. this is a selection of books that -- whose authors used the wilcox collection for their research. and we have researchers from all over the world come to use the wilcox collection. this book, american extremists, is a book that laird wrote himself. it came out actually just in the mid-90s before the oklahoma city bombing and after that terrible event occurred his publishers wanted them to republish the book and there is a ph
when he arrived at the university of kansas, he had about four filing cabinets full of material. and he was politically active here on campus, he was a member of the student for democratic society, but decided that he was interested in selling his collection and the university library purchased it. the collection is always for free speech and whenever i am asked to describe the collection i stress that we collect both the left and right wing and so we try to present both sides of issues and...
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Dec 2, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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of thing. maybe not the city they would ever go to a university. sherman institute was originally established at paris, which is just to the south east of us. in the 1890s. frank miller though, wanted to get, you can see was a real advocate of the arts and crafts movement and his hotel had just been redesigned and rebuilt in the mission revival style based on california missions roughly,, he wanted to get a real mission he thought of a real intent to riverside and that's not to denigrate his intent but is always a promoter as well as aa progressive for his time. so he convinced the federal government to act in the sherman institute from paris to riverside. riverside lost its status as an elite city may be about the early 1970s, but it's getting it back again. as it gains its packets taking on a more 21st century look mixed in with the historic district buildings. now we're kind of reestablishing and refocusing like a lot of cities are toward the digital world and the digital future. and clean energy. we're going to turn out. in front of solar max. t
of thing. maybe not the city they would ever go to a university. sherman institute was originally established at paris, which is just to the south east of us. in the 1890s. frank miller though, wanted to get, you can see was a real advocate of the arts and crafts movement and his hotel had just been redesigned and rebuilt in the mission revival style based on california missions roughly,, he wanted to get a real mission he thought of a real intent to riverside and that's not to denigrate his...
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Dec 18, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN3
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professional for whom there was enough money, and after a year, i went back to teaching at the university of kentucky. she took over, but i came back in summers. in terms of my own research, after publishing the dissertation, i had decided to write a book on the origins of world war ii because every week, there was one on the origins of world war i, but nobody did the originsious on of world war ii, and in that found in the literature a couple of havingces to hitler written, dictated, another book ampf,"publishing "mein k his well-known book, originally in two volumes, and in this book, allegedly, he discussed foreign policy issues. 1958, whiler of working in the torpedo factory andgoing through records having to decide in each case -- should this be filmed, should it ? -- i came to a volume that was marked as a partial draft of "mein kampf," and when i looked it saw the first paragraph, was perfectly obvious to me that this was not that at all. this was the second book and at the end of the text was attached to it at the time a confiscation officeran american referring to the confiscation o
professional for whom there was enough money, and after a year, i went back to teaching at the university of kentucky. she took over, but i came back in summers. in terms of my own research, after publishing the dissertation, i had decided to write a book on the origins of world war ii because every week, there was one on the origins of world war i, but nobody did the originsious on of world war ii, and in that found in the literature a couple of havingces to hitler written, dictated, another...
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Dec 26, 2018
12/18
by
BLOOMBERG
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drew: it is about being part of the university over a long period of time and living a life in a university where i came to realize the wonder of education and opening minds and contributing to the growth and flourishing of individual talent. and thinking about universities as places where people pursue truth and challenge accepted wisdom and devote themselves to learning and scholarship. so i had come to believe that universities are among the most important institutions in our society. and i began to be invited to take on leadership roles and move from penn to harvard in 2001, to be the head of the radcliffe institute for advanced study, which had just been made a part of harvard university, and then from there, i went on to become president. emily: does being the first woman president part of it, the woman part of the equation, does it come with an extra pressure or sense of responsibility? drew: a lot of eyes were on me andwould i be able to do it what would that say about women generally? not just about could drew faust do this job, but could a woman do this job. i would just have youn
drew: it is about being part of the university over a long period of time and living a life in a university where i came to realize the wonder of education and opening minds and contributing to the growth and flourishing of individual talent. and thinking about universities as places where people pursue truth and challenge accepted wisdom and devote themselves to learning and scholarship. so i had come to believe that universities are among the most important institutions in our society. and i...
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Dec 10, 2018
12/18
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CSPAN2
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so we work with that college of agriculture at the university of tennessee. we are looking for volunteers in education where they know curricula, where the new program design, where the new teacher training. we are invading ourselves further into these colleges of education so that as we get young people, and they are still pretty young, that they come with degrees in fields where we really need them. and in addition, , i want to jut advertise very quickly the peace corps prep program. schools, many more universities are signed up for it and they agree to offer certain set of courses. they are courses that are on campus but they involve cross culture. they involve languages. they involve international, technical training. and at the end of the four years they get a certificate of being prepared for peace corps. what's exciting about this program is it says, peace corps says that these universities we believe in international. we believe in global. we are putting our name to these set of courses that prepare so many students for this work, whether or not they g
so we work with that college of agriculture at the university of tennessee. we are looking for volunteers in education where they know curricula, where the new program design, where the new teacher training. we are invading ourselves further into these colleges of education so that as we get young people, and they are still pretty young, that they come with degrees in fields where we really need them. and in addition, , i want to jut advertise very quickly the peace corps prep program. schools,...
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Dec 18, 2018
12/18
by
BBCNEWS
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using lots of public money to create a venue for the event —— miss universe. winners have come from the philippines and we are expecting a huge pageant and a welcome home ceremony huge pageant and a welcome home ceremony when the catriona gray it returns to the country. indeed. howerd johnson, live in manila. let's go back to the story we were covering earlier. malaysia by link criminal charges against goldman sachs. we have a former associate professor of economics and law in the university of missouri. he was a centralfigure in the university of missouri. he was a central figure in exposing corruption by members of congress in the us. i asked him how signifciant it was that goldman sachs itself, notjust its employees — is being prosecuted. if the bank is found guilty, they could be a bar on doing business in a number of features —— nations and goldman sachs is doing business with nations so it would be a significant hit it had occurred. historically, though, they haven't been successful prosecutions of investment banks ever. why do you think this is differen
using lots of public money to create a venue for the event —— miss universe. winners have come from the philippines and we are expecting a huge pageant and a welcome home ceremony huge pageant and a welcome home ceremony when the catriona gray it returns to the country. indeed. howerd johnson, live in manila. let's go back to the story we were covering earlier. malaysia by link criminal charges against goldman sachs. we have a former associate professor of economics and law in the...