Maxwell Glen Carter of Redmond, Washington, age 95, peacefully passed away April 7th, 2023, of natural causes, surrounded by family and loved ones at his home of 22 years.
admissions not to look at what these children had handed to him or her. if we really put public pressure, i think some will get better. some are getting better as we speak, but as this scandal shows, there are still plenty of ways in which they gain the system. just to go back to this actual case in and of itself, this guy william singer exploited, i think, some of the flaws in the system here. crew, getting your kids into usc for rowing crew, water polo. they never played them, let s just be clear. i know they never played them, but it s the fact that they exist and there are people already emphasizing those issues as ways to get in school. that s a great point, because inner city schools don t have water polo, don t have crew, don t have fencing. but i ll tell you what they do have. they have black kids who go to play basketball at these institutions, talk about another scandal, and people reap millions and millions of dollars of benefit from them. coaches on the sideline r
wealthy has happened for decade and it s accelerated over the years as the shine of big colleges has meant more to parents. what s breathtaking is the payoff to coaches and perhaps the ownership of proctors overseeing some of these exams. but clearly the guy at the center of this, sing, he new the soft nuunderbelly of the admissions process. he knew crew, water polo, some of these sports that aren t under the spotlight and they re not playing rowing crew in inner city harlem, they re just not. that s a hugely important point. take this kras and criminality off the table. when we talk about whether the playing field is even for disadvantaged and advantaged kids when it comes to college admissions. if you go to a certain kind of school, mao maybe play water polo, you maybe row, all of which are sports? in the school. if you re coming from the inner
jenna: you ve done this dipper for a few years now dinner for a few years now. yes. jenna: i m curious if you ve noticed a change in some of the soldiers, maybe the way they think about the war, some of the injuries they ve sustained, has anything stood out to you as you ve watched this war progress? um, i think maybe the injuries have gotten a little worse just because i think that, um, the people in afghanistan, um, have gotten a little bit more sophisticated about, you know, fighting us. but when i see the wounded warriors, i mean, they are so strong and so resilient. when i go in to visit them at the hospitals and, um, they all have such positive attitudes, and they just make americans proud, really, that they re not feeling sorry for themselves. they re getting out there, and they re doing marathons, and they re bike riding, and they re rowing crew, so, you know,