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Feb 10, 2025
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the first thing i did as soon as i got my driver's license before the end of march i drove to the university of maryland. i set up a meeting. i said i want to enroll. it's march. we already chose the class of 2008. i said why would you say that to me. it's 2005. i didn't understand that nomenclature. then he said to me because he realized i had no idea what you're talking about. we're already in the second semester. i went to prison in 16. my high school was on a quarter system. i didn't realize what the word "semester" meant. i said i'm sorry. i just got out of prison. he said you should have gone to community college. i'm not suggesting that you aren't smart enough to go to the university of maryland. you can go to community college because you haven't had a grade since when -- you can prove that you're as smart as then it would be much easier to transfer to to the university of maryland. i did that. got a full tuition to the community college and i full tuition to the university of maryland. i was the commencement speaker. i said 12 years ago nearly to this date when an honorable judge se
the first thing i did as soon as i got my driver's license before the end of march i drove to the university of maryland. i set up a meeting. i said i want to enroll. it's march. we already chose the class of 2008. i said why would you say that to me. it's 2005. i didn't understand that nomenclature. then he said to me because he realized i had no idea what you're talking about. we're already in the second semester. i went to prison in 16. my high school was on a quarter system. i didn't...
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Feb 13, 2025
02/25
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mcmahon: i met with the president of howard university a week ago. we talked through a lot of the different programs offered there. i was very impressed. i understand that i believe i am an honorary board of regent member. that might not be the right description by virtue of if i'm confirmed as the secretary of education, and i look forward to continuing those programs. sen. scott: with my last five minutes? chair cassidy: make it fast. sen. scott: i'm done. chair cassidy: senator hickenlooper jumped in in front of the freshman? sen. hickenlooper: i yield to the freshman in deference to her fresh status. >> thank you, mr. chair and mr. hickenlooper for the sharing of the time. first, i will start out by acknowledging that today, here with us, our representatives from the delaware state education association, and i want to thank them and their members for being here in washington and more importantly for what they do for students and families in delaware. i want to thank you, mrs. mcmahon, for taking the time to meet with me and talk about a myriad of
mcmahon: i met with the president of howard university a week ago. we talked through a lot of the different programs offered there. i was very impressed. i understand that i believe i am an honorary board of regent member. that might not be the right description by virtue of if i'm confirmed as the secretary of education, and i look forward to continuing those programs. sen. scott: with my last five minutes? chair cassidy: make it fast. sen. scott: i'm done. chair cassidy: senator hickenlooper...
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of, well being my name is christine law. i like most of this, i'm a professor in the department of the sciences at the university of i stopped she played a key role in iceland is economic policy shift. it's important to think about the economy in a different way on the economy, which is for people, unemployment, and not just for up upkeep, can to, to show that you're actually using more and more resources selling more and more stuff and people collecting what they actually don't really need 139 indicators have since served as a political basis, guiding decisions on the use of public funds. so all investments need to be shifted to to be good for, for people on planet. and last is very important. so basically the wellbeing coach, calling on me thinking is about re purpose and the economy the doing business, but differently. price alone doesn't make us happy. that's the idea. perhaps a model for germany to germany has one of the most important economies in the world . this is both an opportunity and a challenge and the battle against climate collapse. as a society, we must do something each and every one of us can do something.
of, well being my name is christine law. i like most of this, i'm a professor in the department of the sciences at the university of i stopped she played a key role in iceland is economic policy shift. it's important to think about the economy in a different way on the economy, which is for people, unemployment, and not just for up upkeep, can to, to show that you're actually using more and more resources selling more and more stuff and people collecting what they actually don't really need 139...
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Feb 4, 2025
02/25
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of can be science thing. i think i picked it possibly, but it wasn't something that was around when i never really considered university of you as well. i can 2070 and say yeah, i taught re see myself de academia that might change. but i think a lot of people are losing interest in the universe teasing professorships, a country that careers, including in the he micies i'm so far when it comes to a plan. i mean, katy has a plan there. do people come to you with a plan, or are you finding that these younger generations are, are struggling to actually, i don't know, see themselves in 10 or 20 years and know what they want and where they're headed. and what i find is, whenever i'm speaking to anyone, doesn't matter if they're young or older. and for example, when i worked at google and i would ask them, why are you interested in this position? and they would answer well, google is my dream company. well, they didn't really answer my question, right, right. it's why are you interested in the position now? are you interested in the company? and what i find is that with my coaching clients, it's the same. and so when they're
of can be science thing. i think i picked it possibly, but it wasn't something that was around when i never really considered university of you as well. i can 2070 and say yeah, i taught re see myself de academia that might change. but i think a lot of people are losing interest in the universe teasing professorships, a country that careers, including in the he micies i'm so far when it comes to a plan. i mean, katy has a plan there. do people come to you with a plan, or are you finding that...
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earlier i spoke with mark welder, he's a professor of international law and international constitutional studies at the university of cambridge. i asked him if us president trump has any legal authority to quote, take over the gaza strip. you know, he's speaking without any legal authority, whatever. it sounds like he is thinking in terms of his domestic practice as a property type, coon who can take over some dialect, wasteland, and turn it into a flower to florida. right. or a says florida like races, but here of course it's not an empty cabinetry. this is the territory which belongs to. ready ready palestine i the as a state, if you think it is a state already or is a self determination entity, which means the entities that this entire former state on all of this, the entire series, which includes garza and nobody else can dispose of the stairs. israel has no right . ready of it, and mr. trump has absolutely no claim to the saying, as we said, we own it, we will, we will take it over. so that is uh uh, frontier. well, 1st of all, what would, what would the legal implications be then if the president were to tr
earlier i spoke with mark welder, he's a professor of international law and international constitutional studies at the university of cambridge. i asked him if us president trump has any legal authority to quote, take over the gaza strip. you know, he's speaking without any legal authority, whatever. it sounds like he is thinking in terms of his domestic practice as a property type, coon who can take over some dialect, wasteland, and turn it into a flower to florida. right. or a says florida...
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them the exact same tax or to and the whole is an associate professor in economics at the university of tampa. i asked to what the slightest tariff announcement with me. so in concrete terms, there's things that we can say and things that we can say. so it's unclear precisely what is going to be included within these reciprocal terrorists. but in the context of the european union, one thing that the president has been very specific about is that the value added taxes that are levied by the european union. currently standing at 21.8 percent are going to be matched by the united states. so we can anticipate that this is going to mean a lot more tariffs on the us side, but probably also a lot of parents from others to yeah, talking of the others, the initial focus will look into imposing reciprocal terrace. as the cy on countries that had the largest tried surpluses with the us, is this bad news to hear? this is bad news for the european union, so the european union is the 4th largest trading partner with the united states. last year they did about $1.00 trillion dollars of trade with the us having
them the exact same tax or to and the whole is an associate professor in economics at the university of tampa. i asked to what the slightest tariff announcement with me. so in concrete terms, there's things that we can say and things that we can say. so it's unclear precisely what is going to be included within these reciprocal terrorists. but in the context of the european union, one thing that the president has been very specific about is that the value added taxes that are levied by the...
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Feb 10, 2025
02/25
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and charles allen, of course, shadow university, the betrayal of liberty on campuses and the like. i haven't read them all. so i don't purport to know them all, but it seemed to me those were about universities. and your book is very focused to law schools. of is there with regard to law schools, would you say they're a subset of the same issue that the universities are dealing with or is it something different? well, there's a great deal of overlap, of course, because they share administrations they are governed together. know the dean is part of the the cabinet, if you will, of the president. and they work with the provost and things like that they don't exist in a vacuum. but there are problems unique to law schools. you know, if you're if teaching if you're teaching the rule of law and the attitude is free speech is part of widespread mercy or that, you know, people should be sentenced, you know, equality under the is is a sham and people be sentenced based on their race for equivalent conduct. that's real problem in law. schools more than if you're teaching the exact same to ant
and charles allen, of course, shadow university, the betrayal of liberty on campuses and the like. i haven't read them all. so i don't purport to know them all, but it seemed to me those were about universities. and your book is very focused to law schools. of is there with regard to law schools, would you say they're a subset of the same issue that the universities are dealing with or is it something different? well, there's a great deal of overlap, of course, because they share...
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but i do think that it's when you go from scholarship and teaching to kind of openly confronting the university through activism for protests and even civil disobedience. then we've seen that the repression has been quite severe. i'm what i know you really don't like donald trump. i have had some why do you think it was that it was only donald trump, that stuff the aerial bombardment of gods are these horrific pictures of genocide and do you know how silly i'm sure you were looking at them to on our phones as a live streamed a continuous, massive cuz trump got it stopped. not the democrats. yeah. i mean i, i think that i think looking at was scared of trump in a way that he was not scared of by that because trump is extremely erratic and vindictive and, and also that trump really cares. press primarily really about himself. and so i think trump saw that coming into office and having a hostage a deal, some kind of ceasefire deal would make him look good. and this idea of who want it to make trump look good in order to ingratiate himself withdrawn. and of course, he's allied to, i don't know what
but i do think that it's when you go from scholarship and teaching to kind of openly confronting the university through activism for protests and even civil disobedience. then we've seen that the repression has been quite severe. i'm what i know you really don't like donald trump. i have had some why do you think it was that it was only donald trump, that stuff the aerial bombardment of gods are these horrific pictures of genocide and do you know how silly i'm sure you were looking at them to...
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in india, 44 percent of undergraduates say they have used a i said the university tasks, even more interesting. 60 percent of teachers in the country are using a i to, to everything from lesson planning to student management. so if so many people are using it, what's the problem? that's a fine line between using a i for help for the cheating i'm plagiarism. if you let an a complete an assignment entirely for you, your knowledge level will likely be misrepresented answers a, i use this existing sources. you could end up presenting someone else's ideas as your own without crediting them. nevertheless, your tax would look new and unique to most human eyes for universities, this is a huge problem. they've got a big responsibility which are as doctors and lawyers because of the institutions that gave them that diplomas. if people change that way through degrees, they can become dangerous to others because of the missing knowledge. so why don't universities you software to catch a generated works spot thing a i generate to text why it's difficult? firstly, a line models are becoming more and more so
in india, 44 percent of undergraduates say they have used a i said the university tasks, even more interesting. 60 percent of teachers in the country are using a i to, to everything from lesson planning to student management. so if so many people are using it, what's the problem? that's a fine line between using a i for help for the cheating i'm plagiarism. if you let an a complete an assignment entirely for you, your knowledge level will likely be misrepresented answers a, i use this existing...
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Feb 15, 2025
02/25
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. >> yes, i met with the president of howard university a week ago. we talked through the different programs offered there. i was very impressed, and i believe i'm an honorary board of regent member. that may not be the right description by virtue of if i'm concerned as secretary of education for it i look forward to continuing those programs. >> with my last five minutes. -- i'm done. >> thank you, senator scott. senator hickenlooper jumped in front of the freshman. -- i yield to the freshman. out of deference to her status. >> senator rochester, you are recognized for five minutes. >> thank you, mr. chair and mr. hickenlooper for that sharing of the time. i will first start out by acknowledging that today here with us our representatives from the delaware state education association. i want to thank them and all of their members for being here in washington, but more important for what they do for the students and families in delaware. i also want to thank you, miss mcmahon, for meeting with me and talking about a myriad of issues. i especially appre
. >> yes, i met with the president of howard university a week ago. we talked through the different programs offered there. i was very impressed, and i believe i'm an honorary board of regent member. that may not be the right description by virtue of if i'm concerned as secretary of education for it i look forward to continuing those programs. >> with my last five minutes. -- i'm done. >> thank you, senator scott. senator hickenlooper jumped in front of the freshman. -- i...
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Feb 9, 2025
02/25
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reading a lot is a good habit i developed very young. the dewey decimal system. the universal history ofhat looks good. come on, you'd better take it out of this library! wow. wasn't going that well, and a clever teacher sent you to the library, and you ended up getting very good at putting library books back and sort of filing. you know, i had a lot of energy, and they weren't sure how to help me to focus it. and so because i was checking a lot of books out of the library, the woman who ran the library kind of embraced me and said, "oh, you know, i need your help." the whole way that books are kind of categorised, you know, so i hung out there quite a bit. you know what? does that mean that if you looked at this book and this number, would you know where it went? sure. i mean, it's a sequential numeric system. i mean, i would also know, you know, what type of book, what the subject matter of the book is. have to use really long numbers. it's a science book. yeah. well, i mean... this goes in nonfiction. i mean, i'm impressed youjust recognised it. and is it... 0k, yeah. yeah. so this, t
reading a lot is a good habit i developed very young. the dewey decimal system. the universal history ofhat looks good. come on, you'd better take it out of this library! wow. wasn't going that well, and a clever teacher sent you to the library, and you ended up getting very good at putting library books back and sort of filing. you know, i had a lot of energy, and they weren't sure how to help me to focus it. and so because i was checking a lot of books out of the library, the woman who ran...
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the other one does border most of the in, oh, i don't to go my airport quite as close to live now to try. so i'm not who and yeah, professor of public low at the university of go my i'm interested. oh nice. of course. uh on go my way. you teach. i mean, the 1st thing i do want to ask you the summit that's taking place in tons and yeah, how hurtful are you that it will reach any, at least, got any type of pre owned loan law, steering resolution to the conflict. it's obviously been going on for a very long time. yes, of course that i've been talk stokes and talks about the same process of this same conflict. so you've seen and i will be processed in the one the process. and now we have the stuff that come joins uh process which this solid of uh, solid enough it ended up and decided our old form. we are as we meant to really be seeing the men paulette. and here is the, the guys, the government does want to, to have it by lots of discussion with them to do 3. i rather groups. what disability is that one day is the one field in conflicts which has to be the most sort of august reports and, and what the government is great to discuss. we flew out under the sea
the other one does border most of the in, oh, i don't to go my airport quite as close to live now to try. so i'm not who and yeah, professor of public low at the university of go my i'm interested. oh nice. of course. uh on go my way. you teach. i mean, the 1st thing i do want to ask you the summit that's taking place in tons and yeah, how hurtful are you that it will reach any, at least, got any type of pre owned loan law, steering resolution to the conflict. it's obviously been going on for a...
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Feb 8, 2025
02/25
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the fact of the matter is, when i was responsible as incident commander at the university of arizona, where i am now, one of the things we decided, we need to have one person that the public trusts communicating. more or less like franklin roosevelt with his fireside chats, and would give information from a trusted source. instead, so many people were speaking, many of them politicians who had no subject-matter expertise. people didn't know who to believe and it divided us even more. so communication is key. when and if something like this happens again, subject matter experts should be there communicating. they should be in coordination with the political leaders so we make sure we are all aligned, and the public sees a clearly focused, scientifically-driven message that will reduce their morbidity and mortality. that's probably the best thing that we've learned from the last four years with covid. - i mean, i want to ask you about that, though, because dr. fauci was highly communicative. i mean, there was hardly a television program, a cable news show, a radio show, a podcast, that
the fact of the matter is, when i was responsible as incident commander at the university of arizona, where i am now, one of the things we decided, we need to have one person that the public trusts communicating. more or less like franklin roosevelt with his fireside chats, and would give information from a trusted source. instead, so many people were speaking, many of them politicians who had no subject-matter expertise. people didn't know who to believe and it divided us even more. so...
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Feb 2, 2025
02/25
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i went to san diego state university in the school of social work. i have spoken in two radio stations in denver and i have also spoken to c-span before. i was a farmworker during my high school years. and this is what i encountered. when, in the wintertime, the watermelons are blended. and to protect the watermelons, to protect the seedlings, you have to carve a groove around the dirt and then you put sticks , a bending stick, a stick that bends and then you push it in the ground and then you put wax paper and you push it. host: bronson, can you get to your question? caller: oh. i didn't have a question. i just wanted to share my experiences as a farmworker. host: where were you planting watermelons, bronson? caller: in southern california, in the desert. your fingers, at the end of the day, your fingers get raw from digging up the groove around them. host: do you think you are paid a fair wage? caller: i don't think so. i don't think so. you know, on another occasion, a plane, we were working on a great plantation. around coastal palm springs. the p
i went to san diego state university in the school of social work. i have spoken in two radio stations in denver and i have also spoken to c-span before. i was a farmworker during my high school years. and this is what i encountered. when, in the wintertime, the watermelons are blended. and to protect the watermelons, to protect the seedlings, you have to carve a groove around the dirt and then you put sticks , a bending stick, a stick that bends and then you push it in the ground and then you...
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Feb 9, 2025
02/25
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i went to san diego state university in the school of social work. i have spoken in two radio stations in denver and i have also spoken to c-span before. i was a farmworker during my high school years. and this is what i encountered. when, in the wintertime, the watermelons are blended. and to protect the watermelons, to protect the seedlings, you have to carve a groove around the dirt and then you put sticks , a bending stick, a stick that bends and then you push it in the ground and then you put wax paper and you push it. host: bronson, can you get to your question? caller: oh. i didn't have a question. i just wanted to share my experiences as a farmworker. host: where were you planting watermelons, bronson? caller: in southern california, in the desert. your fingers, at the end of the day, your fingers get raw from digging up the groove around them. host: do you think you are paid a fair wage? caller: i don't think so. i don't think so. you know, on another occasion, a plane, we were working on a great plantation. around coastal palm springs. the p
i went to san diego state university in the school of social work. i have spoken in two radio stations in denver and i have also spoken to c-span before. i was a farmworker during my high school years. and this is what i encountered. when, in the wintertime, the watermelons are blended. and to protect the watermelons, to protect the seedlings, you have to carve a groove around the dirt and then you put sticks , a bending stick, a stick that bends and then you push it in the ground and then you...
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i wouldn't be frustrated for uh, kind of region the project. yeah. this but i'm a, i can see that it's around. so is it transforming the universe? it is not only the police to be an issue. he's the point of shooting. the american government is changing the climate to international regime and many things as we need going for them. so i think you, we are facing in you and you are the annual, but it is going to at the same con, which is continue with the, for an older project or for i think, a cleansing and gets a when you say a new reality is there any world, any reality in which you can see trumps gauze, the idea actually happening and getting off the ground. i know i accidentally actually i don't is see uh anything will happen unless that is it wouldn't be uh, he was much like the chasms with luckily and even under any circumstances and the other people, including. so the idea made a very clear position that we are not accepting any uh, new regional dealer. there was also a listing of the state order scanners that must have is the west bank gazda on the east jerusalem. and even if president trump uh, voice this idea as a trial ba
i wouldn't be frustrated for uh, kind of region the project. yeah. this but i'm a, i can see that it's around. so is it transforming the universe? it is not only the police to be an issue. he's the point of shooting. the american government is changing the climate to international regime and many things as we need going for them. so i think you, we are facing in you and you are the annual, but it is going to at the same con, which is continue with the, for an older project or for i think, a...
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Feb 18, 2025
02/25
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when i was at the university of notre dame, i was thinking about what to do after college, and i decided ultimately to go to the university, cambridge in england to get a master's at the encouragement of small. and i studied winston churchill and i spent a year at queen's and a lot of time at churchill college. and i studied anglo-american relationship. so almost 20 years later, after i first met professor shmuel, now he is now writing about in the white house and we spent a lot of time today in washington, d.c., taping a really special conversation on churchill that will air on cbs saturday morning the following saturday. i believe that would be july 13th, if i'm correct. that will air on cbs saturday morning. so anyway, welcome, professor small, the washington, d.c. politics and prose. mr. churchill in the white house has so many funny about sir winston churchill, the former british prime minister. it has story after story, what it was like to encounter churchill in the white house. but what your book also is the urgency of the moment. in late 1941, when this prime decides to come acro
when i was at the university of notre dame, i was thinking about what to do after college, and i decided ultimately to go to the university, cambridge in england to get a master's at the encouragement of small. and i studied winston churchill and i spent a year at queen's and a lot of time at churchill college. and i studied anglo-american relationship. so almost 20 years later, after i first met professor shmuel, now he is now writing about in the white house and we spent a lot of time today...
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Feb 9, 2025
02/25
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begin at the beginning with ariel, who is the daniel 11 professor at the university of chicago harris school of public policy. i went to the university of chicago for my phd work and i love the place and i'm always happy to welcome people who work there to brookings. ariel directs the center for human potential and public policy and codirects the behavioral insights and parenting lab. she is a development of psychologists who studies economic conditions, parenting, and child development. the floor is yours. ariel: thank you so much and let me thank doug for including me in this interesting exercise. i am a develop mental psychologist in my role in the report was to think about children and i also think when we think about children we need to think about families. one of the first impressions i want to leave you with his we were not able to aggregate a lot of these metrics. we have macro economic conditions that we have individual level conditions. one of the things i think about when i read this report, especially when i think about children is they are nested in families and communities and we think about chil
begin at the beginning with ariel, who is the daniel 11 professor at the university of chicago harris school of public policy. i went to the university of chicago for my phd work and i love the place and i'm always happy to welcome people who work there to brookings. ariel directs the center for human potential and public policy and codirects the behavioral insights and parenting lab. she is a development of psychologists who studies economic conditions, parenting, and child development. the...
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Feb 9, 2025
02/25
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indeed that is true, and, of course, we receive no statement whatsoever from old dominion university about that. do you have any message for old dominion university? >> iularly of the norfolk region. i enjoyed my time there i was hoping to make a difference and i was disappointed that i was not allowed to make a difference there. >> obviously, the name of your organization is perfect for this do no harm. >> yeah. yes, and you know, we have a membership organization with 15,000 members around country doctors, nurses, concern citizens we love people to join us because this is sort of thing that we want to make sure never whats again in the united states. charlie: absolutely doctor stanley thank you for joining us. >> great to be with you. go birds. [laughter] charlie: rachel. rachel: thank you charlie. turning now to your headlines, new data showing u.s. flu cases skyrocketed to their highest levels in at least 15 years. the cdc estimates since october 1st there have been at least 24 million illnesses, 310,000 hospitalizations, toking numbers that date back all the way to the early 2000s happening today vice president jd vance is making his first foreign
indeed that is true, and, of course, we receive no statement whatsoever from old dominion university about that. do you have any message for old dominion university? >> iularly of the norfolk region. i enjoyed my time there i was hoping to make a difference and i was disappointed that i was not allowed to make a difference there. >> obviously, the name of your organization is perfect for this do no harm. >> yeah. yes, and you know, we have a membership organization with 15,000...
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Feb 21, 2025
02/25
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but i want to say that one of the things that i think is missing from the conversation about colleges and universities and what it's like to be in leadership is actually there's a great deal of joy on college campuses and as college president i get to the experience that. i don't know if all of my comrades do who are leading their institutions but i feel like i get to be part of an institution that believes in advancing knowledge for the common good. i get to see young men and women develop over four years and become better versions of themselves. i get to work with incredibly smart people who are interest in tackling difficult challenges and who actually engage in fairly robust divergent conversation about them. i don't think there's nearly as much as orthodoxy or monolithic thinking as robert was just suggesting on college campuses and it's a fun place to be. if you love being part of place that takes hard problems, i suspect you do, that's why you're here, it's a fun place to be and i will put it if anybody is thinking of becoming small college president, because you can actually get to know indivi
but i want to say that one of the things that i think is missing from the conversation about colleges and universities and what it's like to be in leadership is actually there's a great deal of joy on college campuses and as college president i get to the experience that. i don't know if all of my comrades do who are leading their institutions but i feel like i get to be part of an institution that believes in advancing knowledge for the common good. i get to see young men and women develop...