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California is the second state to ban the practice at private colleges. Legacy preference has been under scrutiny since the Supreme Court's decision on affirmative action. AdvertisementStudents can no longer use their legacy connections to help them get accepted to prestigious California schools like Stanford. The announcement makes California the second state after Maryland to ban legacy preference in admissions at private universities. Related storiesHowever, some colleges have taken proactive steps over the past decade to ban legacy preference in their admissions practices.
Persons: Gavin Newsom, , Newsom, Ethan Poskanzer, Michael Roth, Gabrielle Star, isn't, Phil Ting Organizations: Service, Stanford, Gov, University of Southern, University of Colorado, Wesleyan University, CNN, Pomona College, University of California Locations: California, University of Southern California, Maryland, Boulder, Illinois, Virginia
So we just rented the office, and slept in the office, and showered at the YMCA,” Elon Musk recalled, drawing laughs from the crowd. “When they did fund us,” Kimbal Musk recalled, “they realized that we were illegal immigrants.”“Well…” Elon Musk interjected. Video of the remarks shows Elon Musk laughing as he jumped in with a different interpretation: “I’d say it was a gray area.”He didn’t elaborate, and it’s unclear what Elon Musk meant by that characterization. Elon Musk, wearing a black Stetson hat, livestreams while visiting the US-Mexico border in Eagle Pass, Texas, on September 28, 2023. Then-President Donald Trump greets Elon Musk before a policy and strategy forum with executives at the White House in February 2017.
Persons: ” Elon Musk, , Musk, , Donald Trump, Biden, It’s, , Kimbal, ’ Elon Musk, he’s, X, He’s, Walter Isaacson’s, they’ve, Elon Musk, Jeff Skoll, Fred Prouser, ” Kimbal Musk, Elon, haven’t, Ashlee Vance’s, Greg Kouri, can’t, Maye, Charles Kuck, Kuck, Jennifer Minear, That’s, ” Kuck, Alain Jocard, Kimbal Musk, Tesla, Zip2, he’d, Kevin McCarthy, Alex Brandon, it’s, Hunter Swanson, Grace, Swanson, “ They’re, ” Swanson, ” Minear, Minear, Philip Pacheco, Ron Ozio, hadn’t, Vance, CNN there’s, Affairs Julie Greicius, Rajshree Agarwal, Ed Snider, ” Agarwal, Peter Thiel, Paul Sakuma, Agarwal, , that’s, Elon Musk’s, who’s, hasn’t, Bayar, Zachary Mueller, ” Mueller, I’m, Don Lemon, Mueller, there’s, Stetson, Critics, John Moore, David Bier, ” Bier, Bier, Trump, he's, he'd, Brendan Smialowski, Joe Wilson, ” Wilson, Medina County Sheriff Randy Brown, Elon Musk's, We’re, Daniel Becerril, Reuters Elon Musk hasn’t Organizations: CNN, Twitter, University of Pennsylvania, Tesla Motors, SpaceX, Forbes, Stanford, Kimbal, Milken Institute Global Conference, Reuters, YMCA, Milken, YouTube, Los Angeles Times, US, Immigration Services, American Immigration Lawyers Association, Getty, Tesla, Kennedy Space Center, Center for International Education, Washington, Lee University, Elon, Center for, Learning, Penn, Minear, Materials, Engineering, ” Stanford, Communications, Affairs, American Immigration, Association, Ed Snider Center for Enterprise, University of Maryland, PayPal, eBay, Compaq, University of Washington, America’s, Democratic, Trump, CATO Institute, White, Medina County Sheriff, Fox, Fox News, Polaris Locations: Mexico, United States, Eagle Pass , Texas, Pretoria, South Africa, Canada, Canadian, Palo Alto , California, Beverly Hills , California, Angeles County, U.S, Atlanta, AFP, America, Zip2, California, Cape Canaveral , Florida, Virginia, Washington, Arizona, South Carolina, Medina County, Eagle, , Texas, Rio Grande
But to archaeologists, the Tollense Valley is considered Europe’s oldest battlefield. The biggest mysteries that researchers aim to uncover are why the battle occurred and who fought in it. A long time agoYears of excavations in the Tollense Valley have uncovered evidence that the site was the scene of Europe's oldest battlefield 3,250 years ago. S. SauerDozens of bronze and flint arrowheads recovered from the Tollense Valley are revealing details about the able-bodied warriors who fought in the Bronze Age battle. The research team analyzed and compared the arrowheads, some of which were still embedded in the remains of the fallen.
Persons: Sauer, Al Hadid, , Martijn Oei, carolinus, Grearson, Ashley Strickland, Katie Hunt Organizations: CNN —, United Arab Emirates, ., California Institute of Technology, Grearson Harvard, Stanford, CNN Space, Science Locations: Germany, Bavaria, Moravia, Dubai, United Arab, China —, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, Falkland, Antarctica
It was obvious to me that I wanted to do the inverse and build an all-female hacker house that created the same dynamic but with women." Cantillon, who has lived in several hacker houses over the years, saw a need for a space dedicated exclusively to women. That's why she co-founded HackHer House, the first all-female hacker house in the San Francisco Bay Area. Hacker houses aren't new to the Bay Area or cities like New York and London. In a city renowned for tech advancements, hacker houses are viewed as critical for driving the next wave of innovation.
Persons: Molly Cantillon, Cantillon, Jennifer Li, Andreessen Horowitz, Zoya Garg, Anna Monaco, Anne Brandes, Li Organizations: HackHer, Stanford University, . Venture, U.S Locations: San Francisco Bay, Silicon, North Beach, Bay, New York, London
CNN —Billing itself as the world’s “first holographic communications platform,” US startup Proto is beaming life-size, “3D” video into universities, hotels and medical centers. The boxes can reproduce pre-recorded video as well as a live feed, and any 4K camera, including an iPhone, can be used as the source. Nussbaum, whose background is in radio and podcasting, started Proto in 2018. In 2023, video of actor William Shatner was beamed from Los Angeles to the Advertising Week APAC event in Sydney, Australia. A similar technology launched by Dutch company Holoconnects has been deployed at hotels in Scandinavia, and used for advertising by BMW.
Persons: CNN —, , William Shatner, , David Nussbaum, Nussbaum, Holoconnects, Gary Burnett, Proto, Clay Jackson, Crystal Freeman, Organizations: CNN, Inc, Amazon, Verizon, Siemens, Accenture, Walmart, NFL, JFK, Beverly Wilshire, BMW, Google, HP, Cisco, MIT, Vanderbilt, Stanford, University of Loughborough, Loughborough University, West Cancer Center, University of Tennessee College of Medicine Locations: Los Angeles, Orlando , Florida, Sydney, Australia, New, Beverly Hills , California, Scandinavia, Webex, Central Florida, Memphis , Tennessee, New Jersey
CNN —Some types of sea robins, a peculiar bottom-dwelling ocean fish, use taste bud-covered legs to sense and dig up prey along the seafloor, according to new research. A species of sea robins called Prionotus carolinus studied by the researchers used their legs for walking, digging and sensing the seafloor. And the fish that lacked sensory capabilities and used their legs mainly for walking were striped sea robins, or Prionotus evolans. The digging sea robins had shovel-shaped legs that were covered in protrusions called papillae, which are similar to the taste buds on our tongues. Both researchers said they are keen to uncover the exact mechanisms behind the evolution of the sea robins’ sensory appendages.
Persons: David Kingsley, Kingsley, Rudy J, Daphne Donohue Munzer, ” Kingsley, “ I’d, Mike Jones, Amy Herbert, , ” Herbert, Herbert, Corey Allard, ’ ” Allard, Nick Bellono, ” Bellono, carolinus, ” Allard, Tbx3, Jason Ramsay, Ramsay, Anik, ” Ramsay Organizations: CNN, Marine Biological, Stanford University’s School of Medicine, Stanford, Harvard University, Rhode Island College, Harvard, University of Chicago Locations: Woods Hole , Massachusetts, Harvard, New England
Landrum asked the elementary schoolers a series of questions, using photographs and visual prompts, to understand how the children feel about the political system. Republican-leaning and red-state kids liked Trump but were neutral or even positive about Harris. That imbalance grew when interviews were repeated in September and the kids were asked about Trump and Harris. 02:12 - Source: CNNEven a majority of kids who support Trump agreed Harris would be a “sort of” good president. Misinformation can come from anywhere, as one kid showed when he described the presidential debate between Trump and Harris.
Persons: Donald Trump, CNN’s “ Anderson Cooper, , Asheley, Shanto Iyengar, Landrum, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Harris, Biden, Trump, , , Hitler, Iyengar, ” Trump, ” Iyengar, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, , Taylor Swift, Olivia Rodrigo, we’re, Taylor, Swift, ” Harris Organizations: CNN, Trump, Arizona State University, Stanford University, Democratic, White, Democrat, Republican, Biden, Republicans, Kids, Baptist, YouTube Locations: Arizona, New Jersey, Texas, New York
States of flow can lead to productive work sessions or explain your compulsion to endlessly scroll through social media. The act of pulling the lever turns an uncertain outcome into a certain one. Binary tasks, where the only outcomes are success or failure, aren't very conducive to flow, Melnikoff says. have a yes-or-no outcome, you're better off focusing on a more ambiguous number of consecutive successes or failures, Melnikoff says. "People value the sense that they're being productive and one with the activity that they're engaging in.
Persons: David Melnikoff, Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi —, Melnikoff, doesn't Organizations: Stanford Graduate School of Business, CNBC Locations: States, they're
Madison, Wisconsin CNN —The mayor of a central Wisconsin city who ran for office on his opposition to absentee ballot drop boxes said Wednesday he did nothing wrong when he put on work gloves, donned a hard hat and used a dolly to cart away a drop box outside City Hall. Drop boxes were widely used in 2020, fueled by a dramatic increase in absentee voting due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Wausau, with about 40,000 people, was among the cities that did not use an absentee drop box in the August state primary. The Wausau drop box was under video surveillance but had not yet been bolted down. Wausau resident Pamela Bannister, speaking at a city council meeting Tuesday night, called for Diny to apologize and return the drop box.
Persons: Doug Diny, ” Diny, “ I’m, Donald Trump, Trump, Diny, Kaitlyn Bernarde, ” Bernarde, wouldn’t, he’s, , , Anne Jacobson, Pamela Bannister, ” Bannister Organizations: Wisconsin CNN, Wausau, City, Republican Party, Republican, Stanford, MIT, Republicans, The, The Wisconsin Supreme, Wisconsin Elections, City Hall, U.S, Election Locations: Madison, Wisconsin, Hall, Milwaukee County, Waukesha County, Dodge County, Milwaukee, The Wisconsin, Wausau, Marathon County, ” The Wisconsin, City
Political organizations supporting Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are touting both campaigns' messages of “freedom” as they woo Latinas, a key voting bloc. Against Hillary Clinton in 2016, Trump won just 28% of Hispanic women voters compared to Clinton’s 67%, according to Pew. Also, at least 13 states saw increases in Latina voter registrations when Biden left the race and endorsed Harris, according to TargetSmart CEO Tom Bonier. Republican Mercedes Schlapp, one of the “Latinas for Freedom” organizers, said the issue of abortion is one for states to decide. The group is defining freedom for Latinas as freedom from economic policies they say are "socialist."
Persons: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Latinas, Harris, they’ve, Hillary Clinton, Trump, Joe Biden’s, Pew, Stephanie Valencia, Equis, Biden, Tom Bonier, Mercedes Schlapp, Walz, It’s, , Ingrid Pino Duran, , Nydia Velázquez, Kamala, Zoom, Wade, Duran, , ” Harris, Schlapp Organizations: Pew Research Center, Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, Trump, GOP, Conservative, Pew, Equis Research, Democratic, News, Latinas, Freedom, NBC, Associated Press, PODER PAC, Rep, Republicans, Latino Entrepreneurship, Stanford, Conservative Political, Conference, Trump White House Locations: Latina, Texas, Florida, it’s
One of the world's largest e-commerce companies is emerging as a top pick on Wall Street as investors look for tech opportunities beyond the Magnificent Seven. "There was no venture capital for Latin America. Last year, venture-backed companies in Latin America raised $3.3 billion across nearly 1,000 deals, according to PitchBook. E-commerce and online payments are steadily growing, and Latin America has a young, mobile-savvy population of more than 600 million people. "When you look at the penetration of e-commerce in Latin America, it's still quite low compared to the U.S., Europe or Asia," Galperin told CNBC.
Persons: Marcos Gaplerin, Brad Gerstner, Gerstner, CNBC's Scott Wapner, Goldman Sachs, It's, Buenos Aires Galperin, Galperin, MercadoLibre, We've, it's Organizations: Nasdaq, Wall Street, Stanford Graduate School of Business, CNBC, Stanford, eBay Locations: Delaware, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Chile, South America, Mercado Pago, Buenos Aires, Palo Alto , California, California, America, Silicon Valley, New York, Sand, West, Latin America, U.S, Europe, Asia
After months of tumult on American college campuses, relative stability in one realm returned on Tuesday, when U.S. News & World Report published its oft-disparaged but nevertheless closely watched rankings. Among national universities, Princeton was ranked No. U.S. News again judged Williams College the best among national liberal arts colleges. Few franchises in American higher education are as contentious as the U.S. News rankings. To U.S. News, which retired its print newsmagazine in 2010, the rankings are a bastion of its largely bygone influence.
Organizations: U.S . News, Princeton, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard, Stanford, . News, Williams College, Spelman College, U.S
Echoing well-trodden disinformation that has infected the U.S. presidential election, pop icon Janet Jackson said she has heard Vice President Kamala Harris is not Black. Jackson is quoted as saying during the interview in her adopted hometown of London. The author wrote that she responded with a correction, telling Jackson that Harris does have Indian heritage but is also Black. Father Donald J. Harris, an economist and Stanford University professor emeritus, was born in Jamaica and is Black. "I think either way it goes is going to be mayhem," Jackson is quoted as saying.
Persons: Janet Jackson, Kamala Harris, Jackson, Harris, , ” Jackson, , Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, Shyamala Gopalan, Father Donald J, Joe Jackson, Brother Michael Jackson, LaToya, Justin Timberlake Organizations: The Guardian, Resorts, National Association of Black Journalists, Stanford University, Guardian, Super Locations: London, Houston, India, Jamaica
And the Wolverines did just enough of both to knock off USC 27-24 in the Trojans’ first-ever Big Ten game. “Whatever it takes to win.”Here are some takeaways from Michigan’s win. Michigan should feel goodIt wasn’t pretty, but Michigan did just enough to win a game few people thought it would win. This is the kind of result that can make a big difference in who plays for the Big Ten championship. Somehow, thanks to Mullings, Michigan found a way.
Persons: Antonio Morales, Austin Meek, Chris Vannini, Nick Baumgardner, Alex Orji, Mullings, Miller Moss, I’d, ” Orji, , Colston Loveland, Orji, — Meek, John Humphrey, Kamari Ramsey, Moss, — Morales, hird, ike S, egan, ike, alf, eason —, eason, ange —, ise Organizations: Wolverines, USC, Trojans, Michigan, Michigan’s, Big, — Meek USC, Mullings Locations: Mich, Michigan, , Michigan, Mullings , Michigan
The market for nonalcoholic drinks has been growing as more people — notably younger adults — look to cut their alcohol use. Bowdring says there’s emerging evidence that nonalcoholic beverages may prime kids to switch to the real thing. Surveys of elementary, middle and high school students in Japan, where the legal drinking age is 20, found that 20% to 30% said they were drinking nonalcoholic beverages. So minors in those states can buy nonalcoholic drinks but not those with low levels of alcohol. For minors, there’s no benefit in consuming nonalcoholic drinks, and there is some evidence of potential harm, she said — which is why she thinks states need to step in to curb sales.
Persons: , Molly Bowdring, Kristen Bell, Kelly Clarkson’s, , Bowdring, who’d, Leon Booth, ” Booth, ” Lisa Hawkins, Busch, officiais, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, there’s Organizations: CNN, Stanford Prevention Research, George Institute for Global Health, Budweiser, “ Anheuser, Beer, Constellation Brands, District of Columbia, Get CNN, CNN Health Locations: Corona, Japan, Taiwan, Australia, New South Wales, Georgia, Idaho, Florida, Kansas
“Given that sleep is highly visible as a risk factor, non-stigmatizing, and highly treatable … we suggest study of sleep as a risk factor and critical intervention target for youth suicide,” said senior study author Dr. Rebecca Bernert, a suicidologist and founder of the Stanford Suicide Prevention Research Laboratory in California, via email. Suicide is a leading cause of death among children ages 10 to 14, a group that also has high rates of sleep disturbance, according to the study. And sleep disturbances “have emerged as an evidence-based risk factor for suicidal behaviors” among adults, regardless of whether a person has depressive symptoms, the authors said. At that time, guardians answered questionnaires about their child’s sleep health, which included factors such as problems with falling or staying asleep, waking up, excessive sleepiness, sleep-disorder breathing, excessive sweating during sleep, and behaviors that occur when someone partially awakes from deep sleep. Supporting your child’s healthAt all ages, your kids need good nighttime habits that support healthy sleep, Willard said.
Persons: ideation, , Rebecca Bernert, Christopher Willard, wasn’t, ” Willard, Rebecca Berry, University’s, Berry wasn’t, Bernert, ” Bernert, Berry, Sleep, Willard, ” Berry, Organizations: Lifeline, CNN, JAMA, Stanford, Prevention Research, Harvard Medical School, University’s Grossman School of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine Locations: California, United States, Massachusetts, Boston, New
Phoebe Gates discussed conspiracy theories about Bill Gates in a new Netflix documentary series. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementConspiracy theories about billionaire Bill Gates have run rampant online for years, sometimes spilling from the sphere of the internet into his daily life. Many of the most pervasive of these conspiracy theories have linked him to COVID-19.
Persons: Phoebe Gates, Bill Gates, Phoebe, Organizations: Netflix, Stanford, Service, Business Locations: COVID
Some people think asking questions — to friends, peers or bosses — can make you look weak or insecure. But the simple act can actually help you garner influence and even get the people around to you change their minds, says communication expert Matt Abrahams — if you know the right questions to ask. "Asking a question puts you in a position of power," Abrahams, a Stanford University lecturer, tells CNBC Make It. Asking good questions "demonstrates you care, it demonstrates empathy, it demonstrates you're willing to learn and, in some cases, admit you don't know everything," he adds. Here's how to ask the right questions, at work, home and in your social life, to get ahead and strengthen relationships, he says.
Persons: , Matt Abrahams —, Abrahams, Here's Organizations: Stanford University, CNBC
Last November, the sudden ouster of CEO Sam Altman and the resulting revolt by most of its employees cast doubts on the future of the world's most prominent AI company. While by no means a comprehensive list, below are some of the key power players who are helping to determine OpenAI's future. He took over for his former boss, Jason Kwon, who has since become the company's chief strategy officer. She's also been referred to as OpenAI's "minister of truth" for her efforts to ensure the company's AI products aren't deceptive or biased. ResearchJakub Pachocki, Chief ScientistRelated storiesPachocki joined OpenAI's research in 2017 after completing a PhD in computer science at Carnegie Mellon University.
Persons: , Sam Altman, OpenAI, Sarah Friar, Friar, Goldman Sachs, She's, Jason Kwon, Kwon, Anna Makanju, Global Affairs Chris Lehane, Che Cheng, OpenAI's, Cheng, Mira Murati, Murati, Kevin Weil, Weil, Instagram, Peter Welinder, Peter Deng, Research Jakub Pachocki, Pachocki, Ilya Sutkever, Ilya, Mark Chen, Chen, Bob McGrew, Sam Altman's, Lilian Weng, Weng, Aleksandr Madry, Barret Zoph, John Schulman, Zoph, Alec Radford, Radford, Zico Kolter, Kolter, Paul Nakasone, Bret Taylor, Taylor, He's, Larry Summers, Fidji Simo, Melinda Gates, Nicole Seligman, Adam D'Angelo, Quora, Altman, D'Angelo, Andrea Appella, Haidee Schwartz, Schwartz, Akin Gump, She'll, Heather Whitney, Whitney, Morrison Foerster, Makanju, Sam, Biden, Chris Lehane, Lehane, Clinton Organizations: Service, OpenAI, Business, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Khosla Ventures, Global, Global Affairs, Amazon, supercomputing, Tesla, Meta, Twitter, ChatGPT Enterprise, Research, Carnegie Mellon University, MIT, Facebook, Security, Machine Learning Department, Carnegie Mellon Carnegie Mellon, Stanford, CMU, Safety, Security Committee, US Army, NSA, US Cyber Command, Defense Department, U.S, Melinda Gates Foundation, Global Competition, Netflix, Century Fox, Competition, Federal Trade Commission, New York Times, Harvard Law School, University of Chicago Law School, NYU, Canada, Global Policy, Public Affairs, House, Newsweek Locations: Europe, Washington, OpenAI, Silicon, Middle East, Asia, London, Chan, Airbnb
Read previewThe bosses of big US companies are over hybrid work. Adding to the anti-remote vibes: a new snapshot of CEO sentiment that shows Jassy isn't alone in saying "so long, hybrid." About one in three CEOs said retirements and a lack of skilled replacements would have a big effect on their company. Only 54% of CEOs reported that their companies were "well-prepared" for a cyber attack. "The people that have generative AI and AI skills are going to have a big advantage in the marketplace over those that don't," he said.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Jassy isn't, Paul Knopp, Amazon's, Knopp, there's, I'm, Nicholas Bloom, Bloom, Z, GenAI, what's Organizations: Service, Amazon, KPMG US, Business, IRL, Stanford, BI, GenAI Locations: upskilling
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, during a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 18, 2024. He may not have known it at the time, but in 2005 Sam Altman took a risk that changed the trajectory of his career. It "seemed like a really fun thing to try," Altman, 39, told students during an interview at his alma mater, the St. Louis-area John Burroughs School. On the other hand, a one-way door risk is harder to undo. The risky thing is to not go try the things that might really work out.
Persons: Sam Altman, That's, Altman, OpenAI Altman, Jeff Bezos, Lex, Bezos Organizations: Economic, John Burroughs School Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Stanford, Louis
Read previewSorry, Amazon employees. CEO Andy Jassy announced on Monday that starting next year, Amazon employees must be in the office five days a week. Amazon's announcement comes after 15 months of hybrid work — employees had to be in three times a week. Some employers like Amazon are looking to take back powerIn the pandemic era, the labor market favored office workers. Oftentimes, introverted employees work better outside the office, and some people find that the pressure of in-person work can stifle productivity and deep thinking, Duffy said.
Persons: , Andy Jassy, Goldman Sachs, Caitlin Duffy, Duffy, Julia Hobsbawm, Hobsbawm, Amazon's Jassy, Jassy, Nicholas Bloom, who's, Bloom, what's, Deborah McGee, McGee, Gen Z, they're Organizations: Service, Business, Slack, Employees, JPMorgan, Gartner, Stanford, Research, Data Technologies, PZI Locations: America
For the past year, student-athletes have been faced with an unsettling question: How much are their lives about to change? Seemingly overnight, the 109-year-old conference of a dozen schools, with decades of rivalries, became a conference of only two. “Why add even more stress?”Shannon Cunningham, a former member of the Arizona State University softball team, said the conference change shattered her dream of playing in the Pac-12. One coach in particular, University of Missouri football coach Eli Drinkwitz, made headlines last summer when he criticized realignment for not considering the impact on student-athletes. “Did we count the cost for the student-athletes involved in this decision?” asked Drinkwitz.
Persons: ” Morgan Scott, ” Shannon Cunningham, , , Cunningham, Nya Harrison, Harrison, football’s, Eli Drinkwitz, Drinkwitz, Karen Weaver, Weaver, Katie Meyer, ” Harrison, , we’re Organizations: NCAA’s Football, University of Oregon softball, Arizona State University softball, San Diego, , Big, SEC, The College Football, ESPN, Associated Press, ACC, Stanford University, soccer, basketball’s, NBC News, Stanford, Cal, Notre Dame, Louisville —, West Coast, Wake, Virginia Tech, NCAA, University of Missouri, University of Pennsylvania Locations: San Diego State, East Coast, West, Stanford, Indiana, Ohio
I wanted to work in technology, and I wanted to work in business, so I went to get an MBA, as many people do. Coming out of Cornell's business school in 1999, I had a choice between traditional routes like consulting or brand management. Since then, I've spent 25 years working in leadership roles at tech companies, including Yahoo, Google, and Facebook. Sometimes, a demotion might be the right moveAt various stages in my career, I've had those kinds of crossroad moments. So, I'm teaching people how to scale companies while I'm scaling my own company, and I'm teaching people how to be great leaders while I'm building a company that helps people be great leaders.
Persons: , Jennifer Dulski, It's, I've, That's, you've Organizations: Service, Rising Team, Stanford Graduate School of Business, Yahoo, Google, Facebook, Business, Rising, Stanford
Handwritten notes from Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's papers on a major abortion case in 1989. The correspondence and notes foreshadow where O’Connor landed in the 1992 Planned Parenthood v. Casey case, when Justice Anthony Kennedy, hostile to Roe v. Wade in 1989, was ready to join O’Connor in upholding Roe. Accelerating the tensions all around was the time pressure of the Missouri case. O’Connor wrote that Kennedy said, “Roe is just flawed analytically” and that he wanted to “return this debate to democratic process” in the states. Library of CongressDraft opinion language from Justice John Paul Stevens he sent to Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Persons: Sandra O’Connor, eviscerate Roe, Wade, O’Connor, Roe, Antonin Scalia, William Rehnquist, Rehnquist, — Webster, Reproductive Health Services —, ” Rehnquist, Sandra Day, George H.W, Reagan, bristled, , Scalia, John Paul Stevens, Gerald Ford, Casey, Anthony Kennedy, Dobbs, Samuel Alito, Webster, Kennedy, “ Nino, ” Scalia, ” O’Connor, “ Roe, O’Connor’s, Roe “, Byron White, , Byron, Sandra, Nino, Tony …, White, Sandra Day O'Connor, Congress O’Connor, bemoaning, overruling Roe, ” Stevens, reexamine Roe, reconsidering Roe, Stevens, Stevens ’, inched, John . ”, , William Brennan, David Souter, Bush Organizations: CNN, Reproductive Health Services, Congress, Library, O’Connor, Stanford Law School, Roe, Chicago, Stevens, Kennedy Locations: Missouri, Roe, Bush, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Phoenix, Minnesota
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