Good evening welcome to the u. S. New York Historical society i am thrilled to welcome you here to the auditorium. This Evenings Program is presented in conjunction with our exhibition of 1945 vietnam war that i hope you have had a chance to see but if not it is on view through april 22 so i hope you will return during using them hours to see that. Our story is a lecture on leadership and to create this series five years ago as a permanent way to honor too great americans including David Petraeus who want a history maker award in 2013 i would like to thank mr. Herzog from the new York Historical and general petraeus for his leadership and for the generous participation over the past four years when this illustrious lecture series. [applause] i would like to thank and recognize our trustees and the chair for all she has done on behalf of this Great Institution and also the chair susan. Also migrate colleague for the programs he will hear tonight at the close but this Evenings Program pr
U. S. New York Historical society i am thrilled to welcome you here to the auditorium. This Evenings Program is presented in conjunction with our exhibition of 1945 vietnam war that i hope you have had a chance to see but if not it is on view through april 22 so i hope you will return during using them hours to see that. Our story is a lecture on leadership and to create this series five years ago as a permanent way to honor too great americans including David Petraeus who want a history maker award in 2013 i would like to thank mr. Herzog from the new York Historical and general petraeus for his leadership and for the generous participation over the past four years when this illustrious lecture series. [applause] i would like to thank and recognize our trustees and the chair for all she has done on behalf of this Great Institution and also the chair susan. Also migrate colleague for the programs he will hear tonight at the close but this Evenings Program program will last about an hou
Paris peace accords and the president s historic visit to china. This is just under two hours. Good morning. Im here to welcome you on behalf of the Richard Nixon foundation which cosponsors these legacy forums with the national archives. Its a wonderful partnership. David is responsible for 12 billion documents, some of which is placed at the library, which is his facility. And we, in turn, have the people who created those documents. If youre old enough to remember warren beaty and the movie shampoo, weve got the heads and he has the shampoo. Since my experience on nixons staff was on the domestic side we tend to favor topics that i knew. That didnt include Foreign Affairs but weve stumbled on to a brilliant and helpful counterpart of me that is my pleasure to introduce. Thats kt mcfarland. You know kt as fox news analyst. Everybody has to start somewhere and kathy troyas started as a clerk typist on the graveyard shift of National Security council when she was a sophomore at the Geo
[cheering and applause] sen. Sanders together, we will end the fact that we are the only major country without health care for all, that we pay far more per capita for health care than any other country. We are going to end that a passing a medicareforall health care system. [cheering and applause] sen. Sanders the Insurance Companies may not like it. The drug Companies May not like it. But be American People do like it the American People do like it, and thats what weve got to do. [cheering and applause] sen. Sanders this campaign understands a very, very important historical lesson. No realson is that change has ever occurred in our country from the top on down. It has always been from the bottom on up. [cheering and applause] back. Anders think think back 120 years ago, when workers in this country were forced to work seven days a week , 14 hours a day. They had no rights on the job. Think about the children, 10, 11 years of age, losing fingers in factories. [booing] sen. Sanders an
Endowments of colleges and universities with wealth over a billion dollars. Is there a logic for colleges and universities having their endowment taxed in one way or another. In other words, what business is of it government to decide how schools devote their resources. The schools want to reduce the endowment, they can do it. Theyre not really forced to there are some arguments they are. I believe those are what is the government doing in mucking around in this . Our answer is that the government certainly has at least a very plausible basis for mucking around in this because the subsidizes for the tax system are such that they are really much encouraging this. First of all, donations to these organizations are tax deductible, second of all, the revenue generated is not taxed. At all. Its not taxed theres no taxation at all. So it further subbization of this relative to the private sector. We think that its perfective sense only raise the question. We dont think think its a good answe