19
19
Apr 13, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 19
favorite 0
quote 0
jefferson university. let us be grateful for our freedoms. most notably, our first amendment right to the freedom of speech. the editorial board at the cavalier daily does not seem to understand this right. the newspapers are a cheap beneficiary of the first amendment. they recently wrote an op-ed titled "dangerous rhetoric is not entitled to a platform." this is a common trend with the woke left: any speech that they disagree with, they deem as dangerous, and thus not protected under the first amendment. however, for anyone on cavalier daily in attendance, i encourage you to grab a pocket constitution on your way out of tonight's event. [applause] despite attempts to deplatform tonight's guests, we persisted. when radical leftist defaced our message, we hung up twice as many as before. we persisted. [applause] before i give thanks to our sponsors, and welcome tonight's speaker with his proper introduction, i must read verbatim the university policy. i am nicholas cabrera, chairman of the young americans for freedom at uva any attendees who w
jefferson university. let us be grateful for our freedoms. most notably, our first amendment right to the freedom of speech. the editorial board at the cavalier daily does not seem to understand this right. the newspapers are a cheap beneficiary of the first amendment. they recently wrote an op-ed titled "dangerous rhetoric is not entitled to a platform." this is a common trend with the woke left: any speech that they disagree with, they deem as dangerous, and thus not protected under...
21
21
Apr 10, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
universal short title catalog and arthur darwin is british academy postdoctoral fellow at the university of saint andrews and the deputy director at the universal short title catalog and jane commenske is trumbull professor of american history at harvard university and the fourth-timer foundation director of the schlesinger library on the history of women in america at the radcliffe institute. you can read their full bios on our event listing on our website. across time in the world from the library at alexandria to the one in erasmus's baggage trained to even our own beloved nyppl andrew and arthur chart in their words personal work a day collections reflecting the personal taste of an individual while others are vast endeavors established as monuments to national civic pride and as they also write in endless cycle from destruction to greatness libraries have always recovered. that sentiment in this particular moment in history really resonates. i suspect with not only all the public libraries in this city, but all of them around the country, it's something we've been proud to demonstra
universal short title catalog and arthur darwin is british academy postdoctoral fellow at the university of saint andrews and the deputy director at the universal short title catalog and jane commenske is trumbull professor of american history at harvard university and the fourth-timer foundation director of the schlesinger library on the history of women in america at the radcliffe institute. you can read their full bios on our event listing on our website. across time in the world from the...
9
9.0
Apr 12, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 9
favorite 0
quote 0
jefferson's legacy, from the founding of this university forward, and i'm grateful. [applause] the freedom of speech is the god-given birthright of every american. and we can never let the woke left take it away. thankfully, i'm proud to report that the american people have been stepping up for freedom, just like courageous voices did here and did on other university campuses where i've had the privilege to speak. and parents are beginning to take back our schools. i don't know if you noticed. but a republican by the name of glenn youngkin was elected governor of the commonwealth of virginia just last year. [applause] and -- [applause] and i was in loudoun county a few days before that election. i'm telling you what, that election was about education freedom, it was about empowering parents, people of virginia can be proud. but it's not just happening in virginia. i was in san francisco not long ago. just a couple days after the most liberal city in america literally recalled three school board members who cared more about renaming public schools than reopening publi
jefferson's legacy, from the founding of this university forward, and i'm grateful. [applause] the freedom of speech is the god-given birthright of every american. and we can never let the woke left take it away. thankfully, i'm proud to report that the american people have been stepping up for freedom, just like courageous voices did here and did on other university campuses where i've had the privilege to speak. and parents are beginning to take back our schools. i don't know if you noticed....
15
15
Apr 14, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
of georgia or any of the universities. that among many reasons are why i'm so happy to be here. if i might, take us back a little bit in time. okay? if that's all right, mary francis. >> yes, yes. >> i love that you point out in the book that you were born on a sunday, flag day, and -- because you are full of grace. your father i thought was very, very interesting. he worked for a company, the southern wax paper company for a while. highly regarded. had a letter of commendation from his white boss. then later struck out on his own and opened up a restaurant on auburn avenue. 328 auburn avenue, part of a building that's still there, right? >> yes. >> the restaurant's name was the tuxedo coffee shop. am i right in understanding that your life growing up -- i don't mean your house, but where you were going to see your father -- your mother worked there, too, am i right? >> yes. >> she was cooking there. at the center of the old fourth ward and auburn avenue, you were only -- that whole life was only steps away from ebenezer b
of georgia or any of the universities. that among many reasons are why i'm so happy to be here. if i might, take us back a little bit in time. okay? if that's all right, mary francis. >> yes, yes. >> i love that you point out in the book that you were born on a sunday, flag day, and -- because you are full of grace. your father i thought was very, very interesting. he worked for a company, the southern wax paper company for a while. highly regarded. had a letter of commendation from...
10
10.0
Apr 14, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
they're very sacred state universities. it was a dynamic time in 1961 when mary frances is finally getting admitted and may of 1961. there were the freedom rides were rolling. the buses were rolling through the south which was striking the fear of who knows what in white people that they might actually have to sit on a bus with a black person. and it's just everywhere you turn you saw white resistance to what was so clearly and maybe not there at the time but the inevitable that someone of mary frances's incredible mind and skill and talent and where with all and just severe would be eight would would be a success at the university of georgia or any of these universities. so that among many reasons are why? i'm so happy to be here and i just want to if i might take us back a little bit in time. okay, that's right ray francis. and yes. yes. um, i love that you point out in the book that you were born on a sunday flag day and that and it could because you are a full of grace. your father i thought was it was very very interes
they're very sacred state universities. it was a dynamic time in 1961 when mary frances is finally getting admitted and may of 1961. there were the freedom rides were rolling. the buses were rolling through the south which was striking the fear of who knows what in white people that they might actually have to sit on a bus with a black person. and it's just everywhere you turn you saw white resistance to what was so clearly and maybe not there at the time but the inevitable that someone of mary...
18
18
Apr 24, 2022
04/22
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
others were fired. >> university of utah president ruth watkins says she's resigning. >> then university of utah president ruth watkins, whose shockingly said lauren's death could it have been prevented, announced she would be stepping down. the questions about how lauren 's case was handled, never went away. university says it has implemented the recommendations in the review to improve student safety and gone further. appointing a chief safety officer, overhauling the school safety apparatus, adding specialized employees like social workers, who can deal with relationship violence. in october 2020, the university settled a lawsuit brought brought by lauren's parents, agreeing to t pay the mccluskeys ten and a half million dollars. >> the university acknowledges and deeply regrets that it did not -- >> at the time, president watkins finally acknowledged the university did not handle lauren's case as it should have. >> as a result, we failed lauren and her family. >> lauren's parents say their goal was always to get the university of utah to start thinking differently about student safet
others were fired. >> university of utah president ruth watkins says she's resigning. >> then university of utah president ruth watkins, whose shockingly said lauren's death could it have been prevented, announced she would be stepping down. the questions about how lauren 's case was handled, never went away. university says it has implemented the recommendations in the review to improve student safety and gone further. appointing a chief safety officer, overhauling the school...
10
10.0
Apr 27, 2022
04/22
by
KRON
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
see evidence that the university built some of its wealth on slavery. what's in this new report and how harvard is vowing to fix its past wrongdoings? >> certainly one of the most prestigious universities in the world that they say that slavery played in trickle role in shaping the school. in fact, a new report out today from harvard university shows that the campus had ties to the enslavement of dozens of black and indigenous people. and now the university is a committee and a lot of money to address that reporter nicole berlie explains. >> the report highlights slavery in new england and at the university, its state harvard president school leaders and staff in slaved more than 70 people. some forced to work on campus. the report suggests slavery was a major source of the institutions, growth and wealth over 150 years beginning with the university's founding in 16. 36 and that the university also tried to suppress anti slavery and anti racist movements on campus. the report was research by a team of harvard faculty members and they offered a list of s
see evidence that the university built some of its wealth on slavery. what's in this new report and how harvard is vowing to fix its past wrongdoings? >> certainly one of the most prestigious universities in the world that they say that slavery played in trickle role in shaping the school. in fact, a new report out today from harvard university shows that the campus had ties to the enslavement of dozens of black and indigenous people. and now the university is a committee and a lot of...
14
14
Apr 28, 2022
04/22
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 14
favorite 0
quote 0
one can go university by university and see the way in which the 19th century and 18t centy legacy orace scice continues to play out on our campuses, and we literally live with the bodies of enslaved people and the bodies of indigenous peopleho were consumed in the process of building our institution. not just in the cemetery, but also in the museums and the libraries. to come to the recommendations, i think the recommendations in a number of things, including building on the georgetown example, establishing relationships to defendant communities, native, and african -- and of african dissent. memorializing continuing to do research on harvard's ties to slavery and the legacy of slavery at harvard. reaching out to historically black colleges and universities to establish educational partnerships. really creating a legacy of slavery fund and a dung hundred million dollars to fund all of these promises and promising some long-term institutional account ability of these questions. amy: we want to thank you for being with us, craig steven wilder, m.i.t. professor of american history, author
one can go university by university and see the way in which the 19th century and 18t centy legacy orace scice continues to play out on our campuses, and we literally live with the bodies of enslaved people and the bodies of indigenous peopleho were consumed in the process of building our institution. not just in the cemetery, but also in the museums and the libraries. to come to the recommendations, i think the recommendations in a number of things, including building on the georgetown...
9
9.0
tv
eye 9
favorite 0
quote 0
the university like a teacher and you must. so you feel play lecture us will pony. how to attract the best britain. this comment strike is the 11th time university lecture, as in nigeria have gone on strike since 2009 not that was a crucial year when asked suit, academic staff union. and god meant signed a deal, promising better pay and working conditions. but as the states, the government has failed to keep those promises. so they go on strike again. and this has left a whole generation of students, not knowing if they'll get the education they expect. they i supposed to have finished last year because of the co v dan asked the stray. and this is about our time to ways and so very, very sad is really painful. darya we are slacken militia not. he knows. but is it better for the site to be set on was, are for and then beneath like again was reason what this could take a long time. there is still a big gap between the assa union and the government. we reached out to the nigeria minister of education for every action, but despite
the university like a teacher and you must. so you feel play lecture us will pony. how to attract the best britain. this comment strike is the 11th time university lecture, as in nigeria have gone on strike since 2009 not that was a crucial year when asked suit, academic staff union. and god meant signed a deal, promising better pay and working conditions. but as the states, the government has failed to keep those promises. so they go on strike again. and this has left a whole generation of...
1
1.0
Apr 25, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 1
favorite 0
quote 0
auburn university penn state university. cornell is a memorial school and for 30 years these institutions did not the 30 years or longer, you know, most of these institutions did not enroll black students, iowa state university for example the first school to accept that marill land grant didn't enroll its first black student until the federal government said that you either have to accept them to the predominantly white institution or create an hpcu in 1890 and that ended up being george washington carver. so if think about the the amount of time that they were able to build credit and currency for the systems that we understand today these institutions and yet you know, you still have flagships that are enrolling 5% black students in a state where you have worth 30 or 40 percent of the high school. graduates are black. i'm going to state like alabama public high school graduates are black or a place like north carolina where unc chapel hill and roll something like 8% black students in north carolina state and rolls five pe
auburn university penn state university. cornell is a memorial school and for 30 years these institutions did not the 30 years or longer, you know, most of these institutions did not enroll black students, iowa state university for example the first school to accept that marill land grant didn't enroll its first black student until the federal government said that you either have to accept them to the predominantly white institution or create an hpcu in 1890 and that ended up being george...
66
66
Apr 20, 2022
04/22
by
KPIX
tv
eye 66
favorite 0
quote 0
i didn't realize the universe was so sexy. >> no, no-- yeah, welcome to the universe. so i read in my planetarium director voice all the captions. and the bonus on that web site, welcometotheuniverse.net, while you're looking at it with this book is what i'm saying. the moon-- i don't know if you knew this. it always shows the same face to us. but the moon does a little jig. >> stephen: a little wiggle-wobble. >> we waited for it to jig thel way, took that image. waited for it to jiggle that way, took that image. made that your stereo image, and now it's like, oh, my gosh, you just want to hug the moon because it's so real, and it becomes a place, rather than a picture of an orb, it becomes a place. and, and, the constellations in here. people look up at the night sky, there's a constellation. you think it means something? it doesn't mean a damn thing! these are random stars in space, and we show you that in this book! because you put on-- you put in the 3 d, and your favorite constellation that you think is affecting your life... ( applause ) what kind of ego do you n
i didn't realize the universe was so sexy. >> no, no-- yeah, welcome to the universe. so i read in my planetarium director voice all the captions. and the bonus on that web site, welcometotheuniverse.net, while you're looking at it with this book is what i'm saying. the moon-- i don't know if you knew this. it always shows the same face to us. but the moon does a little jig. >> stephen: a little wiggle-wobble. >> we waited for it to jig thel way, took that image. waited for it...
21
21
Apr 14, 2022
04/22
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
i didn't put him in the university. but on the other hand, under the constitution, i have to carry ou the orrs of the-- carry that order out. i don't want to do it in any way that causes difficulty to you or to anyone else, but i've got to do it. now, i'd like to get your help in doing that. ross barnett: you know what i'm up against, mr. president. i took an oath to abide by the laws of this state and our constitution here and the constitution of the united states. i'm on the spot here, you know. charles k. ross: we're going to try to work th this segregationist governor who we know is probably not someone that you can really trust, plead with him, talk with him, hope that he igoing to give a certain amount of protection for meredith, and he's going to follow the order. john f. kennedy: the attorney general's right here. he'll come right on the other phone. wait just a minute. ross barnett: all right, all right. robert f. kenny: hello? ross barnettyes, sir, geral, how are you? robert f. kennedy: fine, governor. how are
i didn't put him in the university. but on the other hand, under the constitution, i have to carry ou the orrs of the-- carry that order out. i don't want to do it in any way that causes difficulty to you or to anyone else, but i've got to do it. now, i'd like to get your help in doing that. ross barnett: you know what i'm up against, mr. president. i took an oath to abide by the laws of this state and our constitution here and the constitution of the united states. i'm on the spot here, you...
10
10.0
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
i've been talking to university, they have programs only for ukrainians. and i think if we can get 10 percent, 20 percent of those scholarships, so those, you know that to an african student to be able to apply for and university here need to have 10 k udall in their account. who is a young person who can have that, that even a european young person. so you can not put all the barriers and expect people to, to find some exceptions to be made for, for students like this, this saturday would be a at we, we also saw that african governments and we have to be honest with a bit slow to react it all of this and what are some of the lessons to be learned on that front? i think more and more african solidarity because if we act together as african, we've shown it in the pandemic about. we handle the pandemic because we have a pan african solidarity. i think african government maybe try to do by laterally and get their citizen back. but if we had a better coordination, we could have, even though we did get a lot, we had 16000 in ukraine, would go over 10000 out, an
i've been talking to university, they have programs only for ukrainians. and i think if we can get 10 percent, 20 percent of those scholarships, so those, you know that to an african student to be able to apply for and university here need to have 10 k udall in their account. who is a young person who can have that, that even a european young person. so you can not put all the barriers and expect people to, to find some exceptions to be made for, for students like this, this saturday would be a...
15
15
Apr 27, 2022
04/22
by
KQED
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
patrick carter at the university of michigan. thank you for your time. judy: after years of free spending, the peak era of video streaming may be ending. streaming services are adjusting their plans, including raising pricing and the addition of more advertising. content could be affected too. exact numbers are hard to pin down. but netflix alone reportedly spends more than 17 billion dollars a year on content for its 220 million subscribers. combined, streaming companies may spend more than 100 billion dollars each year. geoff bennett breaks down what it could all mean. reporter: as streaming evolves, the industry is experiencing some growing pains. click -- netflix is hemorrhaging customers for the first time in a decade, the company says. it plans to lose even more throughout 2022. netflix blames rampant password sharing but there's also more competition and the company's decision to increase prices at a -- prices. and cnn plus, the streaming service launched just three weeks ago announced they are shutting down at the end of the month. for more on th
patrick carter at the university of michigan. thank you for your time. judy: after years of free spending, the peak era of video streaming may be ending. streaming services are adjusting their plans, including raising pricing and the addition of more advertising. content could be affected too. exact numbers are hard to pin down. but netflix alone reportedly spends more than 17 billion dollars a year on content for its 220 million subscribers. combined, streaming companies may spend more than...
1
1.0
Apr 22, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 1
favorite 0
quote 0
and then to oxford university, masters in english law, j. d. from harvard and then a clerkship with supreme court justice thurgood marshall. the clinton white house andnd finally the authorship and georgetown university. sheryll cashin, you were only the second african-american to clerk for justice marshall, is that correct? >> guest: no. i was the second black woman to clerk for justice marshall. he had had a number of black male clerks but i was his second black female clerk after his t goddaughter. >> host: what did that experience mean to you?en >> guest: until i get married and had children it was the best year of my life, bar none. thurgood marshall was an icon obviously but he was also just a wonderful human being. he was the best storyteller. he would share the most -- you would be on the edge of your seat listening to him tell stories from barely getting out of sleepy southern towns with his life, evading and attempted lynching to meeting with prince, hanging out with prince philip when they were drafting the kenyan constitution, wh
and then to oxford university, masters in english law, j. d. from harvard and then a clerkship with supreme court justice thurgood marshall. the clinton white house andnd finally the authorship and georgetown university. sheryll cashin, you were only the second african-american to clerk for justice marshall, is that correct? >> guest: no. i was the second black woman to clerk for justice marshall. he had had a number of black male clerks but i was his second black female clerk after his t...
20
20
Apr 12, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
of course universe it actually mattersll is the university of illinois champagne. talk to about that how the cofounders meet their? what were they working on? talk about how that university plays into o it. >> it is one of the things i am more than happy as somebody who grew up in illinois is more than happy to discover this for them to correct the record in this way. so, stanford is a big part of the paypal story to be fair a lot of the business heavies come hoffman is a stanford graduate, peter does 2 degrees at stanford, on and on he can go down the roster and sort of look at that. the a lot of the engineering half of the company does come for the university of illinois. it is always kind of come at lute tell me when will my first conversations he said he was very skeptical as with a all of this project, he said if you're going to do this just please don't write university of illinois out of history as everyone else has. to give context, in 1990 5a company called netscape goes public. netscape's founder was himself at the university of illinois, the person who f
of course universe it actually mattersll is the university of illinois champagne. talk to about that how the cofounders meet their? what were they working on? talk about how that university plays into o it. >> it is one of the things i am more than happy as somebody who grew up in illinois is more than happy to discover this for them to correct the record in this way. so, stanford is a big part of the paypal story to be fair a lot of the business heavies come hoffman is a stanford...
10
10.0
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
to wake up in a better universe? i'll go back to a moment in time. lou, across a sort of side to decide what was going back in time, man, leave us. it would mean that everything in the universe and everything would have to be returned to the state. it was one sanmar, all the particles that leads to a problem of entropy. people imagine it would require more energy to bring the universe back into that state than the universe provides. so i'd have to get energy from outside the universe in order to bring the universe to this state and the bells, and that says to blink, there's no time travel backwards time. nothing, i'm sorry. good credit side with what love the stood malott. ah. and yet we can travel in time after all, remembering means, returning to present in the past. ah, the little girl at christmas. the inexpressible feeling of anticipation, the scratchy feeling of an uncomfortable trace to remember, is to visualize, to invoke smells, taste, and feelings. only the intense moments remain in us, those of pain. oh pa
to wake up in a better universe? i'll go back to a moment in time. lou, across a sort of side to decide what was going back in time, man, leave us. it would mean that everything in the universe and everything would have to be returned to the state. it was one sanmar, all the particles that leads to a problem of entropy. people imagine it would require more energy to bring the universe back into that state than the universe provides. so i'd have to get energy from outside the universe in order...
6
6.0
Apr 18, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 6
favorite 0
quote 0
jackson -- jefferson university. as we gather here today, let us be grave of our freedoms. most notably, in relation to tonight, our first minute right to the freedom of speech. the editorial board of the cavalier daily does not seem to understand this right. newspapers are chief beneficiary of the first amendment, they recently wrote an op ad titled dangerous rhetoric is not entitled to a platform. this is a common trend with the woke left and any speech that they disagree with they deem as dangerous. thus, not protected under the first amendment. however, from anyone on cavalier daily and attendance, i encourage you to grab a pocket constitution on a way out of tonight's event. despite attempts to deplatform tonight's guest, when radical leftists de facto sd faced our pro america message and vandalize our posters, we hung up twice as many as before. we persisted. before i give thanks to our sponsors and welcome tonight speaker with a proper introduction, i must bring -- read verbatim the university policy. any attendees who wish to disrupt our invited speaker or hinder th
jackson -- jefferson university. as we gather here today, let us be grave of our freedoms. most notably, in relation to tonight, our first minute right to the freedom of speech. the editorial board of the cavalier daily does not seem to understand this right. newspapers are chief beneficiary of the first amendment, they recently wrote an op ad titled dangerous rhetoric is not entitled to a platform. this is a common trend with the woke left and any speech that they disagree with they deem as...
20
20
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
so i'd have to get energy from outside the universe and in order to bring the universe to this day to be valid. and that's it. there's no time travel backwards time. nothing come sorry. good credit side with what's love the stood malott. ah. and yet we can travel in time. after all, remembering means returning to a present in the past. ah, the little girl at christmas. the inexpressible feeling of anticipation. the scratchy feeling of an uncomfortable dress to remember is to visualize, to invoke smells, taste, and feelings. only the intense moments remain in us. those of pain or particular julie. our ego is the narrative of these intense moments. our life is the storehouse of time. ah, it puts you, mr. design in madison. i project myself into my past and that creates identity. i'm myself because i go back in time into my past into my episodic memory. might it be that would what i find there is myself, which allows me to define myself as a doppelganger. you let me say about my daughter, the tragic thing about alzheimer's and dementia is not so much the memory loss kunkle. it's that the
so i'd have to get energy from outside the universe and in order to bring the universe to this day to be valid. and that's it. there's no time travel backwards time. nothing come sorry. good credit side with what's love the stood malott. ah. and yet we can travel in time. after all, remembering means returning to a present in the past. ah, the little girl at christmas. the inexpressible feeling of anticipation. the scratchy feeling of an uncomfortable dress to remember is to visualize, to...
12
12
Apr 14, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
you have a great university here. but delaware state -- [laughter] delaware state launch three in my career. i had to wait 17 days to be eligible to be sworn in. that wouldn't have happened. i want by a lousy 3021 votes. that would not have happened without delaware state. delaware has the eighth largest population in america. as i say in claymont, delaware, i got a member of my cabinet who is also -- michael reagan. [applause] you never hear michael bragging about the place. as long as you don't have your hearing aid on. [laughter] he is a proud aggie. welcome back to the camp's, michael. talking about incredible students here today, i know i'm michael is so proud of this school. anc is an extraordinary institution. deliverance on that sacred promise, we made america. every race, every background, every zip code, should have a fair and equal chance to go as far as their gift from god can take them. you are giving people an opportunity to take advantage. that is why i reestablish the president's board on hbcus. not on
you have a great university here. but delaware state -- [laughter] delaware state launch three in my career. i had to wait 17 days to be eligible to be sworn in. that wouldn't have happened. i want by a lousy 3021 votes. that would not have happened without delaware state. delaware has the eighth largest population in america. as i say in claymont, delaware, i got a member of my cabinet who is also -- michael reagan. [applause] you never hear michael bragging about the place. as long as you...
5
5.0
Apr 24, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 5
favorite 0
quote 0
we're in a campus building at the university of chicago, but we are not part of the university of chicago. we also have a second store 57th street books, which is where president obama did the book signing for his first book dreams from my father the launch event that had maybe a dozen people or so show up and that is a neighborhood bookstore with a great children's department and quite a few best sellers and genre fiction cookbooks things like that a more traditional neighborhood bookstore. well, i think we buried the lead a little bit here. this is a non-profit bookstore. correct? that's right. that's correct. right. we are the first and only not for profit books during the country whose mission is book selling and we're incredibly proud of it. but we also it feels important to us to stay out loud what the work that we're doing is so, you know in the 21st century. no reader needs a bookstore to buy a book and no bookstore can make a living selling new books, exclusively and our argument and even though i should say the argument of the structure of the store is that we do need bookstore
we're in a campus building at the university of chicago, but we are not part of the university of chicago. we also have a second store 57th street books, which is where president obama did the book signing for his first book dreams from my father the launch event that had maybe a dozen people or so show up and that is a neighborhood bookstore with a great children's department and quite a few best sellers and genre fiction cookbooks things like that a more traditional neighborhood bookstore....
13
13
Apr 23, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
, got another ba at stanford university and a law degree at stanford university in 1946, and she was offered a job as a legal secretary and came home and she got in her little car and drove all over. not one person would hire her although i think you could argue she was one of the first superior court judges in fresno county. i think the second and one of the first appellate court judges that was female and did a good job, so there was institutionalized bias that had to be overcome so i'm not looking at the past, but the same token that we talked about earlier, there was a stability to the society. i can tell you if i lost my wallet in california, i had about four people call me within seven or eight times and say where are you? a couple people hand delivered it. if i were to do that today, believe me i have to run to the phone before i get charged. collectively as a society we are progressive, but individually i don't know whether it is a lack of religion or moral instruction. i'm worried that we are digressing politically. the technological process is the greek poet said mortal reg
, got another ba at stanford university and a law degree at stanford university in 1946, and she was offered a job as a legal secretary and came home and she got in her little car and drove all over. not one person would hire her although i think you could argue she was one of the first superior court judges in fresno county. i think the second and one of the first appellate court judges that was female and did a good job, so there was institutionalized bias that had to be overcome so i'm not...
13
13
Apr 26, 2022
04/22
by
KQED
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
from the institute for firearm injury prevention at the university of michigan. thank you for your time. >> thank you. ♪ judy: after years of free spending, the peak era of streaming may be ending. streaming services are raising pricing and the addition of more advertising. content could be affected, too. exact numbers are hard to pin down but netflix alone reportedly spends more than $17 billion a year on content for its 220 million subscribers combined. streaming companies may spend more than $100 billion each year. jeff benntt breaks down what it all could mean. >> as streaming evolves, the industry's experience and some growing pains. netflix is hemorrhaging customers for the first time in a decade. it expects to lose even more this year. netflix planes rampant password sharing but there is also more compition and the company's decision to increase prices. and cnn plus, the streaming service launched three weeks ago, announced they are shutting down at the end of the month. for more on the shakeup in the streaming world, we turn to kim masters, the hollywoo
from the institute for firearm injury prevention at the university of michigan. thank you for your time. >> thank you. ♪ judy: after years of free spending, the peak era of streaming may be ending. streaming services are raising pricing and the addition of more advertising. content could be affected, too. exact numbers are hard to pin down but netflix alone reportedly spends more than $17 billion a year on content for its 220 million subscribers combined. streaming companies may spend...
30
30
Apr 9, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 30
favorite 0
quote 0
if you get a degree from the college and university, that university should be responsible for you not getting a job and that deal. they should be responsible for paying back the money they borrowed. we need to stop making excuses for people. somebody paid for this. those of us who are working pay for this. host: cheryl, are you still there? do you think colleges are to sensitive now? caller: absolutely. i think the government should do more to control the cost of education. it is outrageous. host: let's go to mara in salt lake city, utah. caller: i went to college in the 60's on the part scholarship in the interest rate was 3%. i came from a poor family and that was not easy to pay back either. this is difficult for me to sound logical. there are still too many poor students who need this help. i think due to the fact the president widen was born with the silver spoon in his mouth, -- host: how long do you think this pause should be in effect? when should people start repaying their debt? or do you think it should be forgiven completely? caller: honestly, i don't know. there are bette
if you get a degree from the college and university, that university should be responsible for you not getting a job and that deal. they should be responsible for paying back the money they borrowed. we need to stop making excuses for people. somebody paid for this. those of us who are working pay for this. host: cheryl, are you still there? do you think colleges are to sensitive now? caller: absolutely. i think the government should do more to control the cost of education. it is outrageous....
7
7.0
Apr 13, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 7
favorite 0
quote 0
very sacred state universities. it was a dynamic time in 1961 with when mary frances is finally gettinged a milted in may of 1961. the freedom rides were rolling through the south, which was striking the fear of who knows what in white people that they might have to sit on a bus with with a black person. and it's just everywhere you turn you saw white resistance to what was so clearly and maybe not there at the time, but the inevitable. that of mary frances' mind and skill and talent and wherewithall would be a success at the university of georgia or any of these universities. so that among many reasons are why i'm so happy to be here. if i might take us back a little bit in time, i love that you point out in the book that you were born on a sunday, flag day and because you are indeed full of grace. your father i thought it was very interesting. he worked for a company in the southern wax paper company for a while. very highly regarded. even had a letter of accommodation from his white boss. but then later struck ou
very sacred state universities. it was a dynamic time in 1961 with when mary frances is finally gettinged a milted in may of 1961. the freedom rides were rolling through the south, which was striking the fear of who knows what in white people that they might have to sit on a bus with with a black person. and it's just everywhere you turn you saw white resistance to what was so clearly and maybe not there at the time, but the inevitable. that of mary frances' mind and skill and talent and...
98
98
Apr 28, 2022
04/22
by
KQED
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 1
harvard university is indeed the country's oldest institution of higher education, but the first university that offered graduate and undergraduate studies is the university of pennsylvania, which as an alumna, i must clarify. and that is the newshour for tonight. join us online and again tomorrow evening. for all of us at the pbs newshour, thank you for joining us. we will see you soon. >> major funding for the "pbs newshour" has been provided by. >> for 25 years, consumer cellular's goal has been to provide wireless service that helps people communicate and connect. we offer a variety of no contract plans and our u.s.-based customer service team can help find one that fits you. to learn more, visit consumercellular.tv. >> the ford foundation, working with visionaries on the front lines of social change worldwide. and with the ongoing support of these individuals and institutions. this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. >> this is the pbs "newshour" from weta studios in washington a
harvard university is indeed the country's oldest institution of higher education, but the first university that offered graduate and undergraduate studies is the university of pennsylvania, which as an alumna, i must clarify. and that is the newshour for tonight. join us online and again tomorrow evening. for all of us at the pbs newshour, thank you for joining us. we will see you soon. >> major funding for the "pbs newshour" has been provided by. >> for 25 years,...
7
7.0
Apr 23, 2022
04/22
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 7
favorite 0
quote 0
here is a lecture at the american university of afghanistan. he says, such violence is likely to continue. one of the claims at the time it been made was that they had brought these 2 up on a sunday. unfortunately, others used to say that it was in peace that had arrived. it was just the absence of war and that could only stay for so long. the idea is that the vacuum available, the feeling state right now are all contributors to the situation that are being exploited by groups such as ice cape. remember that 911 happened when there was a failing state with enough langston when there was a vacuum of security with the new plan as donna. and we're approaching that if the international community keeps on choking the upon and the other one country, we will keep having more and more reasons for people to join insurgencies. and unless the thought upon do their bit, the international community sits down, compliments, non polar bond dissidence efforts to engage in dialogue with the taliban. we have to make something sustainable out of this because we ar
here is a lecture at the american university of afghanistan. he says, such violence is likely to continue. one of the claims at the time it been made was that they had brought these 2 up on a sunday. unfortunately, others used to say that it was in peace that had arrived. it was just the absence of war and that could only stay for so long. the idea is that the vacuum available, the feeling state right now are all contributors to the situation that are being exploited by groups such as ice cape....
11
11
Apr 2, 2022
04/22
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 11
favorite 0
quote 0
universally. i'm going to spend time talking mostly about labor of love. but and that is this pervasive and unflinching political activism supported by mountains and mountains of evidence. i first read jones's labor of love as a first year graduate student in africa in an african-american readings course at the university of north carolina in 1993. by this time the book was already a classic on its face. it filled lacuna in the history of black women in the united states, but it was much more than that the political context into which labor of love was published had strikingly striking similarities to what we see today. reaganomics had created an economically and racially post-polarized society the african-american so called welfare queen was a common trope of reagan and the republican party in their efforts to eradicate social welfare programs. this crass political rhetoric had antecedence going back to daniel patrick moynihan in the 1960s and was receiving renewed attention from scholars like charles murray. the ideas of black social pathology and lazy m
universally. i'm going to spend time talking mostly about labor of love. but and that is this pervasive and unflinching political activism supported by mountains and mountains of evidence. i first read jones's labor of love as a first year graduate student in africa in an african-american readings course at the university of north carolina in 1993. by this time the book was already a classic on its face. it filled lacuna in the history of black women in the united states, but it was much more...
2
2.0
Apr 27, 2022
04/22
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 2
favorite 0
quote 0
and we believe that it is not just universal but unique in its kind. there is no such organization in the international community, and we strongly support the principles on which it is based and we intend to do so in the future. good, harris seemingly not missing any words about how the united nations seize russia, so called the special military operation in ukraine repeating, i, i understand these grievances, but from our perspective, the grievances must be solved according to the different instruments that the un charter has at its disposal, and the one thing that we firmly believe is that the violation of the territorial integrity of the country is completely out of order in relation to the charter. earlier in the day. but harris kicked off his trip with a meeting at the russian foreign ministry and a working lunch with survey love robin boucher, the 2 officials discussed for nearly 2 hours their situation in ukraine. they emerged from what was described as a frank conversation. it is clear that there are due to different positions on what is happen
and we believe that it is not just universal but unique in its kind. there is no such organization in the international community, and we strongly support the principles on which it is based and we intend to do so in the future. good, harris seemingly not missing any words about how the united nations seize russia, so called the special military operation in ukraine repeating, i, i understand these grievances, but from our perspective, the grievances must be solved according to the different...