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Aug 16, 2014
08/14
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he was not a good student in yale. he was popular. he had good friends there, but he was warned repeatedly that he was on the edge of being kicked out just for poor grades and things. eventually, he left at one point with the encouragement of the administration of yale. they said, "come back when you are a little more ready. he tried coming back area did not work again. he went back and actually worked as a lineman for power companies in wyoming. that's a rough life with rough people. he lived that way. spent some time in bars. gotten a little but of trouble, , and eventually found himself in a jail cell in rock spring. this is a big element in dick cheney's life and the things that shaped him. at that point, you could say this is a guy with a pretty limited future. but he came back to casper with , hisncouragement of lynn future spouse. changed his ways. went back to school. started at casper college, ended out at the university of wyoming. pulled himself together. who were now married, went to the university of wisconsin for graduat
he was not a good student in yale. he was popular. he had good friends there, but he was warned repeatedly that he was on the edge of being kicked out just for poor grades and things. eventually, he left at one point with the encouragement of the administration of yale. they said, "come back when you are a little more ready. he tried coming back area did not work again. he went back and actually worked as a lineman for power companies in wyoming. that's a rough life with rough people. he...
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Aug 24, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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yale was a disaster. he didn't do well at yale. so if he'd been a good student t casper, he was not a good student at yale. he was popular. good friends there. epeatedly on the edge of being kicked out. little coming back a ready. he went back, went to work again. a came back and worked as lineman for power companies in wyoming. that's a rough life with rough people. he lived that way. spent some time in bars. little bit of trouble, ncluding d.u.i.s, and eventually found himself in a jail cell in rock springs. his is a big element in dick cheney's life and the things that shaped him. because, you know at that point, say this is a guy with limited future. came back to casper. with the encouragement of lynn, future spouse. he and lynn now married went in case,aduate work, in this political science. he got an internship with the wisconsin congressman who took washington, d.c. while he was in d.c., more opportunities of that kind presented themselves. one of which was a chance to which r donald rumsfeld is a kind of young up and coming
yale was a disaster. he didn't do well at yale. so if he'd been a good student t casper, he was not a good student at yale. he was popular. good friends there. epeatedly on the edge of being kicked out. little coming back a ready. he went back, went to work again. a came back and worked as lineman for power companies in wyoming. that's a rough life with rough people. he lived that way. spent some time in bars. little bit of trouble, ncluding d.u.i.s, and eventually found himself in a jail cell...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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doug, a former yaleie, is is a great advantage however for a joint like yale in that it steals a confidenceperhaps an arrogance that serves one later. my son is going to uva, fantastic public school and where i went to dprad school and now hgrad school andit's no coio go there. >> universities are often considered the holy grail of higher ed. staffs back that up. according to u.s. news and world report, harvard 'and upenn, princeton, harvard and brown have high pay scales, but not all of them are sold on their merits, including one who were part of the system. one columbia alum wrote an article on the pitfalls of chasing an elite degree, it says, produces a robotic directionless career. don't send your kids to ivy league. it was shared 10010,000 times on facebook. and prompted some to write competing pieces. bill excellent sheep. the way to a meaningful life. on set is andrew jim broney, a journalism fellow. and lawrence aja, an '06 hard of grad. and nina terero. currently a correspondent for entertainment weekly. glad to have you all here. so bill, you're basically the ivy league equivalen
doug, a former yaleie, is is a great advantage however for a joint like yale in that it steals a confidenceperhaps an arrogance that serves one later. my son is going to uva, fantastic public school and where i went to dprad school and now hgrad school andit's no coio go there. >> universities are often considered the holy grail of higher ed. staffs back that up. according to u.s. news and world report, harvard 'and upenn, princeton, harvard and brown have high pay scales, but not all of...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN3
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yale was a disaster. yale.n't do well at if he had been a good student at a good he was not studental yale. had goodpular and friends but he was warned repeatedly of being kicked out of poor grades. the administration said come back when you are ready. tried coming back and it did not work again. he worked as a lineman as power companies in wyoming. that is a rough life with rough people. he spent time in bars and got trouble, kin colluding d inclu a guy with a limited future at that point. to casper with the encouragement of lynn, his future spouse. he changed his ways. he went back to school. at casper college and pulled himself together. he and lynn who were now married of wisconsinrsity for graduate work, in his case political science. an internship with a congressman who took him to washington, d.c. opportunities presented himself, one was a chance to for donald rumsfeld who was and coming congressman. he became working at the white house with donald rumsfeld. he held a number of jobs in the nixon ad
yale was a disaster. yale.n't do well at if he had been a good student at a good he was not studental yale. had goodpular and friends but he was warned repeatedly of being kicked out of poor grades. the administration said come back when you are ready. tried coming back and it did not work again. he worked as a lineman as power companies in wyoming. that is a rough life with rough people. he spent time in bars and got trouble, kin colluding d inclu a guy with a limited future at that point. to...
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Aug 14, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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they each had a distinguished father, they each went to yale university, yale college as it was then, they were each talented, they each lived in new york, but they were vastly different in more ways, in more important ways. and yet this bond of friendship was like very little i've ever written about or known about. it's a terrific story. and i felt that not only is it an immensely important painting and interesting painting to say the least, but it's an amazing story. i could are written a whole book -- i could have written a whole book just on this one painting. c-span: how long did it take him? >> guest: he worked on it just about a year. started this the fall of 18 be 1, and -- 1831. c-span: i read it's coming to washington this summer. >> guest: it's coming to the national gallery. it's just been to yale which was a thrill for everybody there because both morse and cooper went to yale. and the cooper -- and the morse papers are at yale. but the fact that it's coming to the national gallery is thrilling. it deserves much more attention than it's getting. for a long time, it's been
they each had a distinguished father, they each went to yale university, yale college as it was then, they were each talented, they each lived in new york, but they were vastly different in more ways, in more important ways. and yet this bond of friendship was like very little i've ever written about or known about. it's a terrific story. and i felt that not only is it an immensely important painting and interesting painting to say the least, but it's an amazing story. i could are written a...
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Aug 23, 2014
08/14
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WRC
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. >>> from oxford and yale to a psychiatric hospital.his week, we're introduced to one woman who is sharing her battle with mental illness. she has schizophrenia. she's overcome a lot of challenges to get to the healthy and successful place where she is now. and she's sharing her story and changing minds. >> reporter: this is el listen sacks today. proud winner of a prestigious award from the american psychological association. she's a law professor at university of southern california, a graduate of yale and oxford. but nearly 30 years ago, doctors told her she might not ever be able to live a so-called normal life. >> i'll have delusional beliefs, like i've killed hundreds of thousands or there's a nuclear explosion going off in my brain. >> reporter: she's been diagnosed with schizophrenia. she says she remembers one day just walking out of school as a teenager and hearing voices. but it wasn't until her first year at law school where she says she officially broke down. >> i just lost it. i said to my friends, let's go out on the roof
. >>> from oxford and yale to a psychiatric hospital.his week, we're introduced to one woman who is sharing her battle with mental illness. she has schizophrenia. she's overcome a lot of challenges to get to the healthy and successful place where she is now. and she's sharing her story and changing minds. >> reporter: this is el listen sacks today. proud winner of a prestigious award from the american psychological association. she's a law professor at university of southern...
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635
Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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WPVI
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degrees from an ivy league institution and in addition the author attended columbia, and taught at yale. >> that's why he has issues are. >> i have offices from 9 to 5 and because his child didn't get, we're more than happy to see them. i have a 30-year-old, she is what i am going to do, what's going to happen. i mean everybody has pressure, it's the away society, the world is. we have to learn how to talk to folks and relieve that pressure to take away the stress. >> do you see this at f and m. >> i'm the only college professor here. number one the motivation among young folks is incredible, particularly at the elite schools. what we need in this universe of higher education, a diversity of places for young people to go to that facilities their educational backgrounds and personalities and lifestyles. we have to be careful about the personal pigeon hole. i'm a graduate of public college, i meant to the university of delaware, blue hen! >> everyone of these colleges have a community college play an important role. you have to be careful about that, so you don't go to harvard or yale, yo
degrees from an ivy league institution and in addition the author attended columbia, and taught at yale. >> that's why he has issues are. >> i have offices from 9 to 5 and because his child didn't get, we're more than happy to see them. i have a 30-year-old, she is what i am going to do, what's going to happen. i mean everybody has pressure, it's the away society, the world is. we have to learn how to talk to folks and relieve that pressure to take away the stress. >> do you...
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Aug 17, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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he entered the foreign service immediately on graduation from yale. his education was essentially in the humanities, not international relations. he thought the most valuable course he took in college was a course in economic geography. he was required as a yale student to take a court in dealing with the english civil service. no one pays any attention anymore to english constitutional history. and when he entered the foreign service, his first assignment was in hong kong, in 1960. and hong kong in 1960, it's hard to remember this -- was a place that existed in almost total isolation from china. there were millions of refugees in hong kong but no americans could go to china, and it was no trade. it was a listening post but not a very informative one. but the experience that he had there used to be typical of the experience that foreign service officers had. he was assigned to interview visa applicants. he learned at least rudimentary mandarin chinese, and it was undoubtedly a broadening experience for a graduate of ex-iter and yale so suddenly find t
he entered the foreign service immediately on graduation from yale. his education was essentially in the humanities, not international relations. he thought the most valuable course he took in college was a course in economic geography. he was required as a yale student to take a court in dealing with the english civil service. no one pays any attention anymore to english constitutional history. and when he entered the foreign service, his first assignment was in hong kong, in 1960. and hong...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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BLOOMBERG
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we have the former president of yale university. welcome.ollege system in this country needs the kind of shakeup that activists abroad to corporate america? >> i think it is a strong analogy. education, at higher while we are strong at our best universities, a lot of our higher ed sector is under criticism to an extent i think has never been equaled. criticism is justifiable and it focuses on it being too costly, there is not enough student success, employers complain that even college graduates are not ready to go to work, they are not able to solve problems and think independently. communicate able to what they find. and so, i think this criticism is well taken. it calls on university and college trustees to be more activist. >> to step it up? >> and make sure the colleges are cost-effective and the education they are providing to students is successful and students are actually learning and getting what employers need for them to be successful workers in the global knowledge economy. >> what are trustees doing now? in the last several dec
we have the former president of yale university. welcome.ollege system in this country needs the kind of shakeup that activists abroad to corporate america? >> i think it is a strong analogy. education, at higher while we are strong at our best universities, a lot of our higher ed sector is under criticism to an extent i think has never been equaled. criticism is justifiable and it focuses on it being too costly, there is not enough student success, employers complain that even college...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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i went to yale. >> host: what is a radical at yale. [laughter] there are degrees. this year if there is a black period pirelli -- black panther rally but that is the way it was at that time during our history. radicalism was very excepted that that plan but i consider myself more logical thing conservative or liberal. the most problems are solvable to just kill the label live above the situation when it is not on the ballot. >> and with the mayor's race that is the case. they know how that's baggage. you go to yale and when did you decide i would be a doctor? >> i decided that eight years old of listen to missions stories in church's they seemed like the most noble people on the face of the ears. sacrifice to bring it mental physical spiritual healing to people i said that is what i would do but having growing up in dire poverty i decided to be rich soil decided to bays psychiatrist >> guest: on television day with live-in mansions with a plush office with that a psychiatrist. [laughter] most tv programs they we're doing it to. [laughter] i started to read psycholo
i went to yale. >> host: what is a radical at yale. [laughter] there are degrees. this year if there is a black period pirelli -- black panther rally but that is the way it was at that time during our history. radicalism was very excepted that that plan but i consider myself more logical thing conservative or liberal. the most problems are solvable to just kill the label live above the situation when it is not on the ballot. >> and with the mayor's race that is the case. they know...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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you have a class that you taught at yale. an open class, and i understand that 78,000 people graduated in it. you can look it up. you can still download the last course that you gave, and you'll be teaching it again in january. but the price to earnings ratio is the price of stock compared to how much each share is going to earn. and how is your price to earnings ratio different than the normal ratio? >> because prices are volatile from year to year. typically, it's one year's earning. on the s&p, it has never been negative. it has been negative for a quarter, and one of the years it's going to be negative, and that's going to throw the whole thing off. it's just average, not what a company did, but last year, or the coming year. you want to smooth it. and that's conservative investing. >> by the way, how was that experience teaching that class? >> strange. i wish i could have seen them. maybe i'll try to meet some of it. >> maybe i'm going to take it, bob. >> then we can get together. >> my questions will be smarter the next
you have a class that you taught at yale. an open class, and i understand that 78,000 people graduated in it. you can look it up. you can still download the last course that you gave, and you'll be teaching it again in january. but the price to earnings ratio is the price of stock compared to how much each share is going to earn. and how is your price to earnings ratio different than the normal ratio? >> because prices are volatile from year to year. typically, it's one year's earning. on...
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Aug 9, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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>> forget spending all that time visiting college campuses, you can tour usc, texas a&m, michigan, yale, your pick, on in a matter of minutes. how, next. my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to your doctor and visit crohnsandcolitisadvocates.com to connect with a patient advocate from abbvie for one-to-one support and education. get reait's crabfest atk, dip. red lobster! the years largest variety of crab. like new crab lover's trio! or try new jumbo lump crab over wood-grilled salmon. crabfest is now. but only for a limited time. so hurry in, and sea food differently! for over 19 million people. [ alex ] transamerica helped provide a lifetime of retirement income. so i can focus on what matters most. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real. transamerica. noyou can wa
>> forget spending all that time visiting college campuses, you can tour usc, texas a&m, michigan, yale, your pick, on in a matter of minutes. how, next. my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to...
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Aug 24, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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>> guest: i went to yale. >> host: what is a radical at yale? [laughter] there is degrees, you know? if you told me radical at berkeley -- [laughter] yale? you know. >> guest: there are radicals. >> host: i understand. >> guest: there was a black panther rally, you know? brewster was evil and all this kind of stuff. but it was, it's just the way it was at that time during our history. and radicalism was very much accepted among young people at that point. but, you know, i consider myself really more of a logical person than i am a conservative or a liberal or anything. i'm not all that fond be of labels. -- fond of labels. but i say most of our problems are easily solvable if we could just throw away the labels. i indicated in the book i would love a situation where party designation was not on the ballot. >> host: yeah. >> guest: you had to actually know who that person was. >> host: in a lot of cities for mayors' races that's the case. that is the case, and it's not surprising to me guess who's getting stuff done these days? mayors. >> guest:
>> guest: i went to yale. >> host: what is a radical at yale? [laughter] there is degrees, you know? if you told me radical at berkeley -- [laughter] yale? you know. >> guest: there are radicals. >> host: i understand. >> guest: there was a black panther rally, you know? brewster was evil and all this kind of stuff. but it was, it's just the way it was at that time during our history. and radicalism was very much accepted among young people at that point. but, you...
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Aug 27, 2014
08/14
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CNBC
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william, a lot of people will say, wait a minute, former yale professor?nside. i've seen it. i've seen what it does to my students. it's not -- yeah. >> what is it? >> well, right. and it's not even so much the schools. it's what you have to do, who you have to become, who you have to make your kids become to be able to get them to one of these schools. that's why i call my new book "excellent sheep." that was actually a phrase that came from one of my students at yale to describe herself and her peers. >> here's a line as well that you say "our system of elite education manufacturers young people who are smart and talented and driven, yes, but also anxious, timid and lost with little intellectual curiosity and a stunted sense of purpose, trapped in a bubble of privilege, headed meekly in the same direction, great at what they're doing but with no idea why they're doing but with no why they're doing it. some harsh words, some say you should direct them to the local church, not the state college motivated ha, ha, ha. actually, where they're going increasing
william, a lot of people will say, wait a minute, former yale professor?nside. i've seen it. i've seen what it does to my students. it's not -- yeah. >> what is it? >> well, right. and it's not even so much the schools. it's what you have to do, who you have to become, who you have to make your kids become to be able to get them to one of these schools. that's why i call my new book "excellent sheep." that was actually a phrase that came from one of my students at yale to...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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BLOOMBERG
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. -- going from the lacrosse field of yale to the c suite of china's against e-commerce giant.t one of the key figures in alibaba's ipo. ♪ >> i'm cory johnson and this is "bloomberg west." e-commerce giant alibaba will go public -- it could be one of the biggest ipo's ever. not just contact, but ever. behind the company there is , who hasrman joe tsai been instrumental in growing the company's fortune. by more on tsai, i am joined leslie picker in new york. this guy, is he the power behind powers?ne or one of the >> he is the yin to the yang. behind m&a, but also behind their creative legal structures. he is the one who structure their variable interest entity, their way to get around the chinese restriction on foreign ownership. he is also the guy who championed their partnership structure, the one who says that group of individual should have outside control in nominating the majority of the board. he is kind of the brains behind the throne. he is the one making sure that they go with ali baba's best interest. >> and a yale lacrosse player, no less. >> one of those who knew h
. -- going from the lacrosse field of yale to the c suite of china's against e-commerce giant.t one of the key figures in alibaba's ipo. ♪ >> i'm cory johnson and this is "bloomberg west." e-commerce giant alibaba will go public -- it could be one of the biggest ipo's ever. not just contact, but ever. behind the company there is , who hasrman joe tsai been instrumental in growing the company's fortune. by more on tsai, i am joined leslie picker in new york. this guy, is he the...
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Aug 4, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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. >> the foreign service in those days was what they call male, tail and yale.few women, very few minorities and a lot of ivy leaguers and brad bishop was all of those. >> nobody ever denied brad bishop was smart but he was always rather definitive. this is my opinion, it's the correct opinion, and after all, i'm a graduate of yale and middlebury. >> he received quick promotions. he was posted to italy, after that to africa, to be the number two in the embassy. >> when you are sent to an embassy in another part of the world, you have status. it's limousines, it's drivers, it's a beautiful residence and you're treated with respect. >> but it's an up or out system. if you don't get promoted to a certain grade within a certain number of years, then you are let go. we all take that very seriously in the foreign service. brad bishop took it much more seriously than i guess the rest of us did. >> they were coming back to washington. and lobelia was so happy because her grandchildren would discover that they were american. right? the hot fudge sundaes and the hot dogs
. >> the foreign service in those days was what they call male, tail and yale.few women, very few minorities and a lot of ivy leaguers and brad bishop was all of those. >> nobody ever denied brad bishop was smart but he was always rather definitive. this is my opinion, it's the correct opinion, and after all, i'm a graduate of yale and middlebury. >> he received quick promotions. he was posted to italy, after that to africa, to be the number two in the embassy. >> when...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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harvard and yale getting a d? that's pretty bad. you guys have been great. so smart and terrific.r money work for you. that's nex don't go away. >> welcomeack. we're back with the all american labor day stock. >> elizabeth, what could be more all american than a railroad. it's leasing more cars at higher rates for longer period of times. >> bruce, do you like this one? >> i do. a lot of the companies that are making money off of the oil and the transport and so forth, i think it's a good stock. >> bruce? >> if you do not like obama care and you can't wait for the repeal, you might as well invest in a company making money in the space. >> very well run companies. the stock has been a high flier for a while. >> wow. that's it for forbesk.c on fox. thank you for watching. don't forget to pick up a copy of my new book. the life and times of marjory kent. we will continue with cashing in. >> some member of our dan rather reportteam was kidnapped, i would be looking to negotiate for ransom. >> paying ransom to terrorists and isis gets bold, folks like dan rather saying he would rather p
harvard and yale getting a d? that's pretty bad. you guys have been great. so smart and terrific.r money work for you. that's nex don't go away. >> welcomeack. we're back with the all american labor day stock. >> elizabeth, what could be more all american than a railroad. it's leasing more cars at higher rates for longer period of times. >> bruce, do you like this one? >> i do. a lot of the companies that are making money off of the oil and the transport and so forth, i...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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yale law school was cheap back then by comparison to now and salaries that were lower but not as muchlower as yale law school is more expensive than i have seen this with my own law students which is one thing that got me interested in this problem. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for student i have personally known was $400,000 which i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach but rather at pricey private undergraduate and graduate institutions. when you get out a new old $400,000 a doesn't matter how much you make. a job that pays a salary is brutal. a study of impact of student debt found that students are putting off marriage, putting off car purchases, putting off home purchases and all sorts of things that we normally think of as the thing we think of young and middle -- you can't buy a car when you are making a big car payment in the form of a student loan payment. you can't buy
yale law school was cheap back then by comparison to now and salaries that were lower but not as muchlower as yale law school is more expensive than i have seen this with my own law students which is one thing that got me interested in this problem. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for student i have personally known was $400,000 which i...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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yale law school is more expensive.i see this with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for student i have personally known was $400,000 which i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach but rather a pricey private undergraduate and graduate institutions attended prior to law school. when you get out $400,000 it doesn't matter how much you make in a job that pays the salaries of brutal burden. the federal reserve recently did a study of the impact of student debt and they found students are putting off marriage, putting off car purchases putting off home purchases and all sorts of things we normally think of is as the kind of thing young and middle-aged adults do because they can't afford it. you can buy a car when you are making a big car payment and a former student loan payments. you can buy a house wh
yale law school is more expensive.i see this with my own law students. you see people graduating with a lot of student loan debt and getting good jobs that pay a lot and still being strapped. it's easy to graduate with six-figure debt. the highest debt load for student i have personally known was $400,000 which i stress to add was not accrued at the university of tennessee college of law where i teach but rather a pricey private undergraduate and graduate institutions attended prior to law...
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95
Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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harvard and yale getting a d? that's pretty bad. you guys have been great. so smart and terrific.t ready to let your money work for you. that's next. that's next. don't go away. [ male announcer ] it's one of the most amazing things we build and it doesn't even fly. we build it in classrooms and exhibit halls, mentoring tomorrow's innovators. we build it raising roofs, preserving habitats and serving america's veterans. every day, thousands of boeing volunteers help make their communities the best they can be. building something better for all of us. ♪ when folks think about wthey think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america. press your tonguenture, against it like this. it moves unlike
harvard and yale getting a d? that's pretty bad. you guys have been great. so smart and terrific.t ready to let your money work for you. that's next. that's next. don't go away. [ male announcer ] it's one of the most amazing things we build and it doesn't even fly. we build it in classrooms and exhibit halls, mentoring tomorrow's innovators. we build it raising roofs, preserving habitats and serving america's veterans. every day, thousands of boeing volunteers help make their communities the...
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66
Aug 3, 2014
08/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 66
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. >> the billionaire has donated $65 million to a renewable energy center at yale and stanford, and he has entered into the political arena, spending $10 million to support initiatives and candidates. you have been effective in many of the initiatives you have targeted, and you call some of those initiatives you have put money into some of the best investments you have ever made. is that something you are going to continue to do? >> i don't know that is what i am going to do forever, but i definitely will do that in 2014. >> tom is not the only outspoken liberal in the family. his brother jim teaches civil rights courses at stanford and founded common sense media, a nonprofit organization. the brothers have been compared to another set of closely minded siblings, the koch brothers, but they have spent hundreds of millions backing tea party candidates and conservative causes. >> i don't actually know about them. i think there definitely has to be differences in the sense that those guys are doing something consistent with their self interest, and you know -- >> when you say self interes
. >> the billionaire has donated $65 million to a renewable energy center at yale and stanford, and he has entered into the political arena, spending $10 million to support initiatives and candidates. you have been effective in many of the initiatives you have targeted, and you call some of those initiatives you have put money into some of the best investments you have ever made. is that something you are going to continue to do? >> i don't know that is what i am going to do...
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Aug 31, 2014
08/14
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CNNW
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and ended up being captain of the yale baseball team that became champions that year.h of babe ruth just six months before his death coming to be part of a ceremony with george bush, the captain of the yale champs. the president loved the game, even when he was in the white house, i think he recognized how crucial and important it was, and i think part of his extended love of the game is that he felt it was part of the american tradition. >> well, the president enjoyed having sports teams come to the white house just because he was involved in so many sports himself. and he was always inviting teams to come or individuals to come. and the highlight for me was one day when he invited joe dimaggio and ted williams to come to the white house. >> when i was chief of staff in 1991, which happened to be the year of the 50th anniversary for two great achievements by two of baseball's all-time greats, ted williams being the last batter to hit .400, he hit .406 in 1941, and joe dimaggio also had his 56-game hitting streak. >> i have a confession. i didn't think that i would get
and ended up being captain of the yale baseball team that became champions that year.h of babe ruth just six months before his death coming to be part of a ceremony with george bush, the captain of the yale champs. the president loved the game, even when he was in the white house, i think he recognized how crucial and important it was, and i think part of his extended love of the game is that he felt it was part of the american tradition. >> well, the president enjoyed having sports teams...
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Aug 6, 2014
08/14
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KQED
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nixon hated the harvard and yale crowd. i'm always amazed how he tried to compensate by being tough, talking barnyard language or making racial slurs because he thought that would shock people, and would you control the room with that kind of language. certainly kennedy told all sorts of off-colored jokes, but they're not on tape. some presidents, like ronald reagan, just didn't go there. reagan told g or pg jokes. nixon would go -- >> over and over. >> yes, over and over. but reagan is part of this book, too, because he calls in as governor and talks to nixon. so we're now able to hear what nixon's advice was -- i mean, what reagan's advice was to nixon. he was very angry about china. reagan thought we had to stand by taiwan at all cost. >> and never give up the panama canal. >> anybody reading this on the right will say, boy, that's the reagan i like. nixon is telling people, the liberals don't know if they lose me they're going to get a revolution of right-wingers, that i'm the guy holding the line, and that the liberals
nixon hated the harvard and yale crowd. i'm always amazed how he tried to compensate by being tough, talking barnyard language or making racial slurs because he thought that would shock people, and would you control the room with that kind of language. certainly kennedy told all sorts of off-colored jokes, but they're not on tape. some presidents, like ronald reagan, just didn't go there. reagan told g or pg jokes. nixon would go -- >> over and over. >> yes, over and over. but...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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CSPAN2
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he does consulting work for the associates and teaches one day a week at yale. didn't think his career is over. it's hard to sa say but it does exemplify the influence a relatively clear-sighted diplomats can have on a variety of events, and the book as it was said earlier was called the last american diplomat can be ordered from all sorts of sources in the paperback edition costs $24 if anyone wants to order it. i'm glad to take any questions. i've gone on for too long, but 50 years is a long career and abbreviating it into 50 minutes isn't easy. sticking to. if you have a question to ask we have about five minutes remaining. if you could come up to the microphone. >> and good evening. good presentation. i have a question if the ambassador negroponte is still offered once a week what advice would he give to the future students that are involved in starting the international relations? it's such a complex huge experience of 50 years. what would he say? he could say anything about what would be his best advice? >> i don't want to put words in his mouth and i trie
he does consulting work for the associates and teaches one day a week at yale. didn't think his career is over. it's hard to sa say but it does exemplify the influence a relatively clear-sighted diplomats can have on a variety of events, and the book as it was said earlier was called the last american diplomat can be ordered from all sorts of sources in the paperback edition costs $24 if anyone wants to order it. i'm glad to take any questions. i've gone on for too long, but 50 years is a long...
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Aug 25, 2014
08/14
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>> guest: i went to yale. there was a black panther rally that came through all this kind of stuff but that's just the way that it was at that time during our history. and radicalism was very much accepted among young people at that point. but i considered myself really more of a logical person than i am a conservative or liberal or anything. i'm not all that fond of labels. but i say most of the problems are easily solved if we could just throw away the labels. i indicated in the book i would love a situation where party designation was not on the ballot and you actually know who that person was. >> host: in a lot of cities the mayor's races that is the case and it's not surprising to me. guess who is getting stuff done these days? the mayors. they don't have the baggage that comes with the political party at this point. so, you go to yale and when did you decide i'm going to be a doctor? >> guest: i decided that when i was 8-years-old. i used to love the stories in church. they seemed like the most noble peo
>> guest: i went to yale. there was a black panther rally that came through all this kind of stuff but that's just the way that it was at that time during our history. and radicalism was very much accepted among young people at that point. but i considered myself really more of a logical person than i am a conservative or liberal or anything. i'm not all that fond of labels. but i say most of the problems are easily solved if we could just throw away the labels. i indicated in the book i...
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Aug 26, 2014
08/14
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a professor at yale was on a path to becoming a medical doctor who grew up in a portable were middle-class community, and neither parents were college graduates but he and his siblings all have 12 degrees. as he was about to become a doctor he looked at the kids he grew up with. not only did they have multiple degrees but they were in jail or in a different direction. there were just as smart. why did we succeed in and day feat -- failed? he concluded they were under developed. the parents were doing the best they could bet because of all the other pressures in a limited their abilities to meet the needs of their kids they didn't have that developmental foundation to be successful where even though he came from a poor family he did it and succeeded and thrived. to the extent it is possible for cities to kraft a policy that is much more intentional to help adults meet that developmental needs of children, it is important but anybody see in the wire on hbo? great show. maybe the best show ever. truly. lots of people say that but the reason i love that show there is lots of compelling charact
a professor at yale was on a path to becoming a medical doctor who grew up in a portable were middle-class community, and neither parents were college graduates but he and his siblings all have 12 degrees. as he was about to become a doctor he looked at the kids he grew up with. not only did they have multiple degrees but they were in jail or in a different direction. there were just as smart. why did we succeed in and day feat -- failed? he concluded they were under developed. the parents were...
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Aug 20, 2014
08/14
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FBC
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david: robert schiller, yale university professor of economics.of, finance and the good society. thank you for seeing you begin. thanks for coming in. >> my pleasure. liz: barnes and noble turning up the heat in the tablet wars with new nook married to samsung hardware. yes, could it be a amazon kindle killer or at least wounder? could it wound the kindle? i talk to barnes & noble ceo mike huseby in a fox business exclusive on the day of the launch. david: brutal beheading of american journalist by isis terrorists whether the u.s. has will to stop radical islamists in the middle east. we'll speak with a former u.s. ambassador. a lot of ties in the u.s. community. he will express their fear, and tell us what he can do about it. how about over there? what does it mean to have an unlimited mileage warranty on a certified pre-owned mercedes-benz? what does it mean to drive as far as you want... for up to three years... and be covered? it means your odometer... is there to record... the memories. during the mercedes-benz certified pre-owned sales event
david: robert schiller, yale university professor of economics.of, finance and the good society. thank you for seeing you begin. thanks for coming in. >> my pleasure. liz: barnes and noble turning up the heat in the tablet wars with new nook married to samsung hardware. yes, could it be a amazon kindle killer or at least wounder? could it wound the kindle? i talk to barnes & noble ceo mike huseby in a fox business exclusive on the day of the launch. david: brutal beheading of american...
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Aug 14, 2014
08/14
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harvard, yale, collections in boston, elections in new york, collection sure in washington.. i love that part of the. c-span: how many times did you two pairs in the middle of writing this? >> guest: we would go at least once a year, so four times. and we would say about two weeks or so. the research was almost all fear, brian, because the letters are here, that i resorted. the letters are written to people back home. the diaries were brought home. so the diaries are accessible in this country. and as is of utmost importance, a newspaper which was published in paris in english -- drama and he was -- try to the library of congress is all those newspapers and they are invaluable. and it's still a bookshop in paris right on the river italy. c-span: isn't he an italian? >> guest: he's italian -- he was an italian from england who started the newspaper. it wasn't an american paper. it was in english language initially for england but every american read it and does filled with news of americans in paris. c-span: how much of that did you read? >> guest: enormous amount. i would gu
harvard, yale, collections in boston, elections in new york, collection sure in washington.. i love that part of the. c-span: how many times did you two pairs in the middle of writing this? >> guest: we would go at least once a year, so four times. and we would say about two weeks or so. the research was almost all fear, brian, because the letters are here, that i resorted. the letters are written to people back home. the diaries were brought home. so the diaries are accessible in this...
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Aug 5, 2014
08/14
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ALJAZAM
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certainly, it's what jay winter, our colleague at yale has turned this memory bomb, and there's a context there that's important for the american audiences, the second world war framed the memory. and with the advent of the second world war, people were able to reflect on the first, the war to end all wars, and it hadn't. it was more easily understood as a good war, and there's a clear enemy. buff when you have the framework and reflect on the first war, it's hard to see what it was about. who was the clear enemy and what precisely were the objectives? but the first world war is very prominent in british memory and the commemorations that are unfolding, it's the fabric that's going on here. >> professor nyberg, what is the ambiguity about what it was, and what they fought for, kept the united states out for as long as they did? >> . united states had a lot of reasons to through to stay out of the war. the country was unprepared. and too many americans. we were making money off of the war, and the united states was growing wealthy. but in 1915 to 1917, the threat to american shores grew gr
certainly, it's what jay winter, our colleague at yale has turned this memory bomb, and there's a context there that's important for the american audiences, the second world war framed the memory. and with the advent of the second world war, people were able to reflect on the first, the war to end all wars, and it hadn't. it was more easily understood as a good war, and there's a clear enemy. buff when you have the framework and reflect on the first war, it's hard to see what it was about. who...
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Aug 19, 2014
08/14
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KGO
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yale was the only student to finish in the top ten in all three events of the competition. >>> president concluded the news conference yesterday with a tribute to ann compton who is about to retire. >> i want to say, publicly, ann, we will miss you and we are very proud of the extraordinary career and work you have done and we hope you are not a stranger. >> than you very much. [ applause ] >> she thanked the president, she will retire next month ending a 41 year run with abc joining in 1973 and the first woman to cover the white house full time for network news. she has reported on every president since gerald ford. >> we are following breaking news in the north bay where firefighters are trying to not down several small fires that could be linked to the search for a missing small pilot. >> it's a date, governor brown and neel kashkari will meet for their first and only debate. >> check out this pictures of the golden gate bridge and look what else. >> live traffic and weather. >>> live from the kgo-tv broadcast center this is abc7 news. >> good tuesday morning at 5:00. thanks pore -- f
yale was the only student to finish in the top ten in all three events of the competition. >>> president concluded the news conference yesterday with a tribute to ann compton who is about to retire. >> i want to say, publicly, ann, we will miss you and we are very proud of the extraordinary career and work you have done and we hope you are not a stranger. >> than you very much. [ applause ] >> she thanked the president, she will retire next month ending a 41 year run...
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Aug 30, 2014
08/14
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BLOOMBERG
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. ♪ >> billionaire tom steyer has donated $65 million to establish renewable energy centers at yale andnford, and he has entered into the political arena, spending more than $10 million to support various initiatives and candidates opposed to keystone. you've been effective in many of the initiatives that you've targeted, and you've called some of those initiatives you've put money into some of the best investments you've ever made. [laughter] >> they were. >> is that something you're going to continue to do? >> i don't know if that's what i'll do forever, but i think that i definitely continue to do that in 2014. >> in fact, tom is not the only outspoken liberal in the steyer family. his brother jim teaches civil rights courses at stanford and founded commonsense media, a nonprofit organization. the steyer brothers have been compared to another set of politically-minded siblings, the koch brothers, who have spent millions backing tea party candidates and conservative products. >> i don't actually know the koch brothers. >> i didn't think you would. >> i definitely think there has to be
. ♪ >> billionaire tom steyer has donated $65 million to establish renewable energy centers at yale andnford, and he has entered into the political arena, spending more than $10 million to support various initiatives and candidates opposed to keystone. you've been effective in many of the initiatives that you've targeted, and you've called some of those initiatives you've put money into some of the best investments you've ever made. [laughter] >> they were. >> is that...
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Aug 10, 2014
08/14
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KDTV
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nunca imaginÓ que su perseverancia lo llevarÍa 6 aÑos despuÉs a ser aceptado en 12 universidades mite, yaleque aprendiÓ inglÉs y fue puesto en clases para niÑos avanzados. >> nosotros dijimos nos afectarÁ? es un cambio tan pronto pero los maestros nos dijeron que los resultados de Él eran mÁximos. >> este fue solo el primer paso hacia el Éxito a ocho meses de estar estudiante el joven recibiÓ su primer premio por excelencia acadÉmica y en los aÑos venideros esto se convirtiÓ en costumbre lo que realmente definiÓ que fuera a la universidad mit una de las mejores en tecnologÍa en el paÍs fueron los resultados sobresalientes en el examen usado para la admisiÓn universitaria. >> lo tomÉ una sola vez y en matemÁtica obtuve una calificaciÓn de 800 que es el mÁximo. en lectura obtuve un 730 de 800 en escritura obtuve un 700 de 800. >> aparte de haber sido admitido obtuvo la beca para cubrir sus estudios ademÁs en la universidad le pagara el resto algo que era impensable para esta familia cubaa cuyo hijo no tenÍa computadora en cuba la herramienta principal para cumplir su sueÑo de ser ingeniero co
nunca imaginÓ que su perseverancia lo llevarÍa 6 aÑos despuÉs a ser aceptado en 12 universidades mite, yaleque aprendiÓ inglÉs y fue puesto en clases para niÑos avanzados. >> nosotros dijimos nos afectarÁ? es un cambio tan pronto pero los maestros nos dijeron que los resultados de Él eran mÁximos. >> este fue solo el primer paso hacia el Éxito a ocho meses de estar estudiante el joven recibiÓ su primer premio por excelencia acadÉmica y en los aÑos venideros esto se...