Life by baseball rules. I. C. E. Agent every young person, special in South Carolina, that young people should live by our state motto. Our state motto, we have two, but the one i like best is the one that is on the seal. While a brief i hope. And so every commencement address i give, every graduation i give it can be from elementary school, it can be from high school, college, even law school. I was a speaker for tony, i think i saw tony here, as a speaker for his law school graduation, and i give them the same message. While i breathe, i hope. You should never give up on your dreams and your aspirations. So i said young people as my mother said to me stay in school study hard. And that she said and theres a part in this book that deals with that, when i thought i was going to get kicked out of high school for violating a rule she said to me she said son let me tell you something. You only have three months to graduate. Silent treatment is nothing. I believe i could live in hell for t
In january the new congress will have the largest gop majority since the 2000 elections. Craig detweiler talks about his book igods in which he looks at the impact of technology and social media in our culture today. This interview is part of booktvs College Series from Pepperdine University. Host you are watching booktv on cspan2. We are on location at Pepperdine University in malibu california as part of our university series. We like to visit universities and colleges and talk to professors who are authors. Joining us now is Craig Detweiler. His book igods how technology shapes our spiritual and social lives. Here is the book cover by professor detweiler before we get into that what do you teach a pepperdine . Guest i am a filmmaker first and so i teach screenwriting and i teach production and help students navigate the entertainment industry. Host you are also director of the center for entertainment. That is part of your professorship here . Guest yes its a bit of a think tank loo
But it didnt go up like that because of until the 1960s we were putting some into the air and it was called sulfate. You can hear the smokestacks and the acid rain and the ecological problems that we were sorting out and that is what we were doing. What happened before then is they were to some extent indeed largely canceling each other out. So, the warning that we are actually seeing is because they cleaned up the smokestacks and its now accelerated quite rapidly up to the much steeper so i thought about Climate Change, thats what im actually speaking about. With regards to the extremes, there are a lot of problems without truly understanding and predicting actually understanding and predicting happens to the extremes. With. Bottom accesses the number of categories for a category one two, three, four five you are aware of zero was tropical storms. And those relative to all hurricanes. If you just focus on the little area inside here back in the 60s and 70s when we clean up the smokest
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Chautauqua. A movement grew out of that place and that time and really spread across the country coming to boulder in 1898. Interestingly, the texas board of Higher Education came to colorado looking for a place to establish a Summer Mountain retreat for teacher training and they embraced the chautauqua movement, which was really sweeping the country at the time. They found a very willing participant in the city of boulder and boulder residents who already had espoused the university of colorado here and loved the idea of bringing more intellectual stimulation and entertainment to the community. So interesting Public Private partnership of the city, this group from texas and a railroad that would transport at the time texans between texas and boulder, colorado. It also was very much from the very beginning intended to serve the local community. That was part of the quid pro quo quo. Programming for the locals and the economic benefit for the community of having visitors. At the time su