The study they are doing of 30 practices. I think it will be interests to a lot of doctors to learn a little bit more about what other doctors are doing to make that work. She is embracing change. Some people fear change. Some people welcome change. She is encouraging her membership. She talked about silos to change what can you do to make that change in how this has to change to become more efficient and help improve the quality. A thing she has a very interesting ideas. To help the policy reporter for the washington post. Thank you for joining us. Thank you. One of the points we make in didnt make any difference to have popular elections . We decided it did make a difference. Senators began to act like house members. This is not something any senator wants to hear. It means that were scavenging for votes. Bad to go out to the people. They had to go out to the people. All you need is 14 votes. You can easily pay off and they did in some cases. They paid off 14 senators. Paying off the
Chief congressional correspondent, came to the hill in 1949 when he retired in the mid 1980s we went to work on a quick one volume history in the senate. He spent 17 years trying to write that. Needless to stay he came by our office on numerous occasions. We ended up getting to the habit of going and having a lunch from time to time and so we had wonderful conversations. Near the end, he passed away in 2008 and it was clear he was probably not going to finish it. So he was basically say all right, this is it. Oxford University Press agreed to publish the book. Sent it out to the viewers. I got it and read it and said this is going to be a 700 page book. Didnt know when to stop writing. It happens a lot to dedicated authors. My review said this is a great book lurking in the 700 pages but somebody needs to carve it out. He died shortly there after and oxford came to me said how would you like to be the guy that carve it out. How much did you actually have to write yourself . About 20 of
Montana Senator Mike Mansfield, a soft-spoken, laconic, former Butter copper miner and later college history professor, still holds the record as the longest serving Senate majority leader in American history.