Truckee Meadows Community College’s Mixed Blessings Symposium: The Mixed Blessings Symposium held Nov. 8‐10
at TMCC and Nevada Museum of Art featured presentations and creative
projects inspired by peoples of mixed identities, inspired by Lucy R.
Lippard’s book “Mixed Blessings, New Art in a Multicultural America.”
“Mixed Blessings” is one of the first books to
discuss the cross-cultural process taking place in the work of
contemporary Latino, Native, African‐ and Asian‐American
artists.
Friday, November 30, 2012
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Dean’s Future Scholars
Truckee Meadows
Community College’s Dean’s Future Scholars: Dean’s Future Scholars (DFS)
is an academic outreach program with the goal of increasing the numbers
of low-income, first generation
students graduating from high-school, gaining access to higher
education, and entering a career in the field of education. Currently 13
DFS are attending TMCC representing diverse cultural backgrounds.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Bonehead Deal!
This is the
bonehead deal of the century and UNLV made it. When they sold the name of the business
school to Ted Lee for 14 million dollars they forever set a benchmark that
prohibited UNLV from ever selling the name of a college for more than 14
million dollars. Not only is the amount grossly inadequate there’s no term
limit on it. A hundred years from now the UNLV business school will still be
named after Ted Lee. To show how little thinking was given you should know that
my name which is now on the University of Arizona Law School will only last 30
years, after which the University of Arizona may sell the name again. We actually gave thought to
the naming consequences. That is why my family’s gift exceeds 50 million dollars but
has lasting effects of only 30 years. I wonder if Bill Bolt has ever given
thought to the implications of his actions beyond the next 30 days.
Biomedical Pipeline Program
Truckee Meadows
Community College’s Biomedical Pipeline Program: INBRE, the IDeA Network
of Biomedical Research Excellence, is a multifaceted 10-year grant
funded by the National Institutes
of Health. Areas of focus include building programs to serve
undergraduates and encourage high school students to pursue degrees in
the sciences, and build a biomedical student pipeline program to prepare
students at primarily undergraduate institutions for
transitions to four-year research institutions for entry into graduate
school. More than 78% of students in the INBRE program are female, and
more than 88% are first-generation students.
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
Holiday Concert
Diversity Holiday
Concert: Truckee Meadows Community College’s Concert Choir will present
its annual winter program featuring music from a variety of countries,
including France, Czech Republic,
Japan, Spain/Latin America, India, an African Alleluia, and several
well-known traditional carols. This free concert will be held on
Wednesday, December 12th at 7:30 p.m. in the Nell J. Redfield Foundation Performing Arts Center.
Monday, November 26, 2012
Success First Program
Success First
Program: In the 2011-2012 academic year, 425 students participated in
the Truckee Meadows Community College Success First program. Fifty
three percent of these students were
from an underrepresented population, and 98% came from families where
neither parent had earned a bachelor’s degree.
Friday, November 23, 2012
American Indian Descent
Slightly more than 3% of
the student body at Great Basin College is of American Indian descent.
That is in the 95th percentile of more than 260 community colleges in
the nation.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Great Basin Indian Archives
Great Basin College is
home of the Great Basin Indian Archives, one of the most important oral
history collections in the region. The archive was established in 2003
and provides students and
researchers with easy access to primary and digital information
chronicling the history and heritage of the Great Basin Indian people.
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
GBC & Minority Students
In the last decade,
Great Basin College has tripled the number of certificates and degrees
awarded annually to minority students and now awards nearly 20% of the
certificate, associate and
bachelor degrees to American Indian, Hispanic or Latino, Asian, African
American, and students of mixed race.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Indian Education
Great Basin College
hosted the United States Department of Education and the White House
Initiative on American Indian and Alaska Native Education Back-to-School
Bus Tour in September. The
Great Basin Roundtable Discussion on Indian Education featured
stakeholders from tribal, state, district, school and community levels
from Nevada and other western states. Assistant Secretary of Education,
Deb Delisle commented on the effective and important
work being accomplished between Great Basin College, regional school
districts and communities.
Monday, November 19, 2012
Great Basin College
Minority enrollments at
Great Basin College exceed the demographic of its service area. Since
2000, minority enrollments have increased by eight percentage points,
now nearly 23% of the student
population.
Thursday, November 15, 2012
CSN Students
More Latino and female
students graduate with a 2-year degree in science technology related
fields at the College of Southern Nevada than anywhere in the United
States.
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
College of Southern Nevada
At the College of
Southern Nevada, 13% of Nevada’s Latinos have a 2-year degree or higher
compared to 29% of all adults. As the largest college in Nevada, the
College of Southern Nevada can
help change this.
Monday, November 12, 2012
CSN
The College of Southern
Nevada is proud to be the most diverse higher education institution in
Nevada with no ethnic majority among its student body.
Friday, November 9, 2012
Clinton / Obama
I always thought that President Clinton was the
most intelligent, best read and best educated of any of the 43
presidents through his administration. I’m told that as brilliant as
Clinton is that those around him always had to deal with
his ego which in some instances got in the way of his intellect. Those
same people tell me that Obama may actually be smarter than Clinton but
that the great advantage in dealing with Obama, is that his ego never
gets in the way. I feel very comfortable
with Barack Obama as President. He’s smart enough, sound enough,
thoughtful enough and energetic enough to help solve this country’s
social and economic problems.
Thursday, November 8, 2012
Qualifications
Take a look at the qualifications, including
education and experience, of the commentators on MSNBC and then compare
those qualifications to those of the commentators on Fox and other
lunatic conservatives like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.
Rachel Maddow is a Stanford graduate, a Rhodes Scholar and has a PhD
from Oxford University. Lawrence O’Donnell is also a Harvard graduate.
Chris Matthews is a graduate of a top 20 university and worked for
leaders of the House and Senate for many years.
Glenn Beck never graduated from high school. Rush Limbaugh flunked out
of a mediocre university and the rest of the crowd certainly does not
have a Rhodes Scholar. How can anyone listen to the total lack of
intelligent thinking exhibited by some commentators?
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Solve This Country’s Problems
I’ve never been in a discussion with anyone who had a view
different from mine where that differing view did not have merit. The conservative Republicans had better learn
that in spite of their belief, they alone do not have the answers to this
country’s problems. There is at least
one opposing side that has substance.
Senator Mitch McConnell and Congressman John Boehner actually believe
that they, and they alone, can solve this country’s problems. That belief makes them incompetent.
"Dawn & Jim"
Today,
we debut a new segment during News 3 at Noon. “Dawn & Jim” - I sit
down with Dawn Gibbons, the former first lady of Nevada, for a lively
conversation. Today’s topic? It’s
the big talker …. the presidential election. Please watch and share
your thoughts.
Tuesday, November 6, 2012
Election Day
Today is finally Election Day. In every election
since I became old enough to vote, I voted. I cannot imagine anyone
being so irresponsible that they failed to use a fundamental right that
no other country in this world has, or has ever
had. Any study of history shows that all of the fundamental rights
fought for by the general public, all terminated in the concept of the
right to vote. I’m sure that in any dictatorship that if the public had
been given the right to vote, 98% would have
voted and 100% of those 98% would have voted to eliminate the
dictatorship. Of all the rights of Americans that have been taken for
granted, and in many instances have made those rights have little or no
value, the right to vote stands out as number 1. If
you think for just one moment about your reactions if you were denied
the right to vote, that single thought should drive you to the polls
today.
Monday, November 5, 2012
The Election
I cannot understand how the public, that is the
great majority of Americans, can vote against their own interests in a
Presidential election like the one tomorrow. If Romney wins, it will be
the most successful con job ever pulled on the
American public. Romney represents himself and his very rich friends
who really believe that it is they, and they alone, who built this
economy that although presently weak, will again become the strongest in
the world. Romney publicly writes off 47% of
Americans as being freeloaders. I would bet one of my favorite classic
cars against $1 that at dinner parties at the Romney house, all the
rich folks sit around patting each other on the back on how they have
created an economy that dares to ask them to pay
more than 1% of their net income as a tax. They may be financial
wizards but that qualification doesn’t make them human beings with any
real worth. To protect yourself against these vultures, you have to
vote and you have to vote for Obama and his team
Friday, November 2, 2012
Tax Burden
TAX BURDEN ON NEVADA. Nevada gets the short end of
return to it on taxes Nevada citizens have paid into the federal
government. For every dollar of taxes paid to the federal government,
the State of Nevada receives 70 cents. Bad deal.
For every dollar in taxes paid by the citizens of Montana to the
federal government, Montana receives about $1.75. Something is terribly
wrong with this allocation. Nevada has infinitely more power in the
federal government than does Montana. The Republicans
seem to believe that all taxes are bad and therefore they tend to
overlook the inequities in tax burdens. Nevada gets short changed in the
distribution of federal taxes. You only need look at the difference
between the funds returned to Montana and the funds
returned to Nevada. I trust the entire Nevada Democrat members of
Congress will protect Nevada’s need better than the Republicans.
Thursday, November 1, 2012
Mark Amodei vs. Samuel Koepnick
Mark Amodei vs. Samuel Koepnick. I know
nothing about Samuel Koepnick. He may be the most qualified person in
the world but his history doesn’t prove that to be true. As for Mark
Amodei, in my limited contacts with him,
I found him to be a thoughtful, reasonable, truly interested individual
who will certainly protect Nevada’s interest in Congress. If I could
vote in this election, I’d vote for Amodei.
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