Afterwards he will take your questions please submit your questions using they will then step in to take them at the very end of the talk. We cant guarantee he will get to every question but we will try to keep them to as many as possible. Upcoming programs we will have here. Anthony townsend on the future of driverless cars. In our annual engaged you science series which is featured on reports. With samantha irby. We are adding new events every day as well as new events being released in podcast form. Many of the thoughts are available in video or our media library. Poke around our media tab not only ways to be plugged into the present. The taxpayers of washington state. The first and foremost is a member supported organization. You also know that rumors of vulnerabilities of nonprofits right now. We hope you will continue consider a gift at this time. One final Economic Data point before we start. The fact that other businesses are feeling the squeeze as well. If youre interesting an
Who. There is dignity, maybe this is my main talent, i see the best in everyone , stereotypes, it seems to me that every person is a planet, every person is a planet, Start Talking to someone, and very interesting people, well, we attract those , with whom we feel good, really, well, the person with whom you have in general , there are no connections on some issues, he wont be next to you, right . It means you have a person with you who will give you something that, for example, i dont have in me, or who will enrich you with his own Life Experience , his attitude towards life, his attitude towards people, everything, it turns out that there are very worthy people around me. As a child i was a hooligan, a terrible hooligan , i liked to test this world s strength, it was interesting to learn new sports, and this, of course, the gym is a martial arts, at some point in time yoga comes and another awareness, another understanding, you understand all this depth, an idea is born, and. Why not
Dont remember exactly, shes beautiful from a good family, i forgot to ask mamketa, and daughter, im now asking the maximum from you frankness, you and volodya, well , there was nothing, what, well, this is it, mom, do you really have such an opinion about me . I think i already told you that no , no, no, well, that is, you dont, no, im a person of a different generation, we, of course, had different laws, but there are just some things that dont change , and you need to take advantage of this, what to use, well. It would be nice for you and volodya to, so to speak, improve relations, mom, do you even understand what you are saying, we broke up with volodya, he left me, well quietly, youre talking like youre talking to your mother, youre thinking, youre thinking, i m understanding everything perfectly, more than you, dont give me a hard time here, so thats the plan, volodya is your adult, healthy man, but a man . What do you need . Yes, yes, this is it, and as soon as he gets it, he wil
President ial debates on cspan. Listen live on the cspan radio app or watch any time on demand at cspan. Org. Next, law professors discuss the constitution and free speech at colleges, including examples where the First Amendment was exercised. This is an hour and a half. Good afternoon and welcome to the George Washington University Law school. Im susan karamanian, the associate dean for international and comparative legal studies. Im delighted to introduce this distinguished panel on a topic that has been front and center in the news over the past year, and that is the issue of freedom of speech on campus. The idea for this panel came last year, when developments were breaking at Yale University and the university of missouri. Coincidentally, the book of my colleague, and one of our panelists, professor Catherine Ross, was just coming out. Professor rosss book is lessons in sensorship, how schools and court subvert students First Amendment rights, and it came out in 2015, under Harva
This evening we are joined by reed gutchberg. Well be presenting on her book useful objects museums science and literature in 19th century america. This evening we are joined by Reed Gochberg, and were talking about her book after a short introduction to the works she will be joining conversation with Sarah Giorgione. This examines the history of American Museums in the 19th century to the eyes of visitors and collectors. Museums of this period held a wide range of objects from botanical and specimens to antiquarian artifacts and technological models. They were intended to promote useful knowledge. The collections create better discussions about how objects are selected, preserving classified and who gets to decide their value. These reflections shape broader discussions about museum in American Culture and continue to resonate today. I Reed Gochberg is the assistant director of studies in a lecture on history and literature in harvard university. She has seminars and museums and mater