lanes above, it will take months to fix. fox news correspondent sieve cotton with y update. philadelphia leaders are asking everyone for patience. they are crediting divine both lines of i95 are closed in northeast philadelphia as crews work at the site the of collapse, a truck was carrying gasoline that caught fire. this happened before 6:30 this morning. causing northbound overpass to collapse, about 10 miles of i95 northbound and southbound lanes are closed, officials warn that other streets near the bridge could be closed too. i95 is one of the country s oldest most traveld routes, firefighters arrived to find portions of northbound lanes reduced to rubble, pennsylvania governor saying that crews are trying to identify anyone who was caught in the fire and collapse, public transit leaders are ask employers to be patient with their workforce, saying it will take long target to work tomorrow, philadelphia governor shapiro said it will take a while. northbound side of i9
Since 2011, the Alcalde has asked alumni to submit nominations for the Texas 10 teaching awards, forming a cohort of the most excellent professors at The University of Texas. Get to know the 10 newest winners below. Photographs by Matt Wright-Steel Kathy Fuller Seely William P. Hobby Centennial Professor of Communication, Department of Radio-Television-Film, Moody […]
benefits to work far, they will say my mom doesn t think it s good idea. that is a bad idea. unless that is a kid who is not worried about having to support themselves one of these days. there was a book, how to raise an adult. it was written by the former dean of freshman under graduate adviser at stanford university, the reason that author wrote the book, she was talking with her counterparts across the nation, in admissions and they noticed problem you are mentioning, students were coming in, they were not ready for life to live without a parent doing everything. but a lot had to do with parents not willing to let go, they were buying condos in same college town their kids were going, if i did that, my kids would be
Leonard Cassuto, a professor of English at Fordham University, teaches and writes about American literature and culture. Cassuto studies the place of higher education in the United States. He writes a monthly column for the Chronicle of Higher Education called “The Graduate Adviser.” His latest book is The New PhD: How to Build a Better Graduate Education (with Robert Weisbuch; Johns Hopkins, 2021). It follows The Graduate School Mess: What Caused It and How We Can Fix It (Harvard, 2015). Cassuto is the author or editor of nine books, among which are The Cambridge History of the American Novel (2011), of which he was General Editor; and The Cambridge Companion to Baseball (2011), winner of the Best Anthology Award from the North American Society of Sports Historians. He is the author of Hard-Boiled Sentimentality: The Secret History of American Crime Stories (2009), which was nominated for the Edgar and Macavity Awards and named one of the year s Ten Best Books in the crime a
and one of its authors is with me live from dallas and founding director of the center for presidential history at smu, southern methodist university. jeffrey ingle, pleasure to have you on. i have to ask, first, your reaction when you heard leader mcconnell is studying up on impeachment by reading your book? everyone s historians dream. we talk about things that will actually influence policy and policymakers. the idea the majority leader was looking back noecht only to understand history, critical, but the non-partisan history we tried to write to understand what happened in the past to go forward in the future better. my graduate adviser is probably pretty proud. pretty proud. in terms what you wrote about, how impeachment is a double-edge sword. right? we could see that after the president said he wants the bidens, wants adam schiff, intel chairman. speaker pelosi all to testify. what will happen if the republicans actually call them?