35 Burst results for "Rutgers University"

Rutgers' unions ratify new contracts, formally ending strike

AP News Radio

00:48 sec | 3 weeks ago

Rutgers' unions ratify new contracts, formally ending strike

"Unions at Rutgers university ratify new contracts formally ending a teacher's strike. Three faculty unions that include thousands of professors part time lecturers and graduate student workers at Rutgers overwhelmingly approved four year contracts that include across the board raises and additional job security for part time lecturers along with significant raises and job security provisions for graduate students. This formally ends the first such job action in the school's 257 year history. The union staged a 5 day strike as students were finishing their spring semester and preparing for finals and commencement. It began April 10th after months of negotiation had failed to resolve disputes. I'm Julie Walker

Julie Walker April 10Th Four Year 257 Year Three Faculty Unions Thousands Of Professors 5 Day Strike Rutgers First Such Spring
"rutgers university" Discussed on WTOP

WTOP

01:42 min | Last month

"rutgers university" Discussed on WTOP

"George picks up the story at awarding that there are gunshots in this report. Body camera footage shows the officers knock and identify themselves. But then they question whether they're at the right home. If you have a confidence vector. Don't tell me you're wrong. Seconds later, the homeowner opens the door. Hey, heads up. Farmington police say all three officers opened fire, killing 52 year old Robert Dodson, the three officers have been placed on paid administrative leave, pending an ongoing investigation. The next development in the challenge over the availability of a widely used abortion pill is expected early next week at the Supreme Court. The signs involved in the abortion pill dispute have until Tuesday to file written arguments. Till then the Supreme Court is keeping in place the current availability after a lower court restrictions, including a total ban from a Texas federal judge. What they're doing is keeping the status quo by pushing pause on all of judge cashmere's decision while it has more time to review further briefing. Jessica Levinson of lawyer will all Tom CBS News in Washington. Rutgers university faculty will be back in the classroom in the coming days. The school and faculty unions have been on strike since Monday. The deal for the state university of New Jersey consists of new contracts to provide better pay and job security for both full and part time faculty members. Amy Tiger is the president of the adjunct faculty union at Rutgers. We are back in the classroom and back to our students and I'm going to assume that we'll work things out and we're going to be teaching through the end of the semester, which is what we want to be doing. A real starship could launch from earth, very soon

Rutgers, unions announce agreement, classes to resume

AP News Radio

00:44 sec | Last month

Rutgers, unions announce agreement, classes to resume

"Rutgers university and union representatives announced a deal to suspend the strike and allow students to go back to class, Rutgers says close your own framework for a new contract will allow our 67,000 students to resume their studies and pursue their academic degrees. The unions representing professors, part time lecturers and graduate student workers, began the walkout Monday. The first such job action in the 257 year history of New Jersey's flagship university. They told members that they had agreed to suspend the strike and return to work, but more issues need to be resolved before a vote could be held unattentive contract. I'm Julie Walker

Julie Walker Rutgers Monday 67,000 Students 257 Year New Jersey Rutgers University First Such
"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

The Officer Tatum Show

02:14 min | 6 months ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

"Why is there Brandon? This was a manufactured virus. In the lab in Wuhan, China gain of function research, done by the United States of America, tried and in a lab created a bioweapon. It was supposed to kill older people. It was supposed to kill people with comorbidities. And it was supposed to preserve young people. That's why more older people died in young people. It was supposed to do that. Population control. And a lot of women are infertile. Because of COVID and the vaccine. Okay. I'm not going to listen to me. I'm a conspiracy theorist. That don't listen to me. Okay, let's go to another person, a kid from California, Ken from California, welcome to the show. Hey, thank you, sir. I agree with everything you just said, a 100%. And also, as far as the part you were talking about earlier, when you said that we're mainly confused because of the media, I don't think they know how to tell the truth. I honestly don't. I used to listen to Larry elder and he's the one that taught me the truth. And one day he was talking about Michelle Obama was tweeting or something that she was just so depressed by listening to the news that immediately caught up and I said, Larry, tell her if the news was telling the truth, maybe she wouldn't be so depressed. I love that Ken, thank you so much. And thank you for listening to the show. Let me see Clayton from Denton, Texas. Welcome to the offset of the show. All right. How are you doing, officer? Doing well, clean, welcome to the show. Hi, so you were talking about oh, ten seconds, Clayton. Hold on, hold on Clayton and run out of time. I got ten seconds. I'll bring you back after the break. Hold the phone. I'll be back. You may not want to hear it, but is it true? What's going on, y'all this is Brennan Tatum. I just want to thank you so much for listening to my podcast. You can always get the podcast and Salem podcast network or wherever you listen to your podcast.

COVID Wuhan Brandon United States of America California Ken Larry elder Clayton China Michelle Obama Larry Denton Texas Brennan Tatum
"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

The Officer Tatum Show

05:37 min | 6 months ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

"Countries, and the Democrats came out and said he was being racist. He said, we're going to stop traveling to European countries. We're going to stop travel to China and the Democrats said he was racist. Nancy Pelosi, during the height of the pandemic, said it's not a big deal. Go on and go down to Chinatown and have fun and enjoy yourself. When Donald Trump was concerned about the Democrats felt like it was a no big deal and they blew it off. Doctor Fauci said, you should wear a mask, then he said, don't wear a mask. Come to find out, he said, don't wear a mask. He didn't want us to take all of the masks from the medical professionals. So I hear what Kenny is saying, but you got to disperse the blame if you're going to do blame. Because the coronavirus is coronavirus over right now, well, The White House ain't talking about it anymore. Joe Biden ain't wearing masks anymore. None of these states are social distancing anymore. They don't do it anymore. So it's the entire country to blame all the Republicans. I would argue that the Republicans did a better job at it because for those who believe in the vaccine, operation warp speed, Donald Trump won't want to introduce the vaccine to the country. Now we may not remember that because the whole news media want to act like it's Joe Biden's thing. So I just think it's unjustifiably blame per party and that's because of the media. I think we were lied to altogether by COVID-19. I feel like COVID-19 was just, I think another flu virus or I would say a flu virus. Yeah, yeah. Another flu type virus. And they did all that extra stuff to control us, and that hurt us more than it if they were just told us the truth and able to say, yeah, this is, you know, you're sick, we need to focus more on people who have comorbidities. We need to focus on people who are at risk. We don't need to shut the whole country down and do all that crazy stuff. They hurt us by doing that. They never told us the truth they never will. And so I think if you want to blame, I would agree with you kidding to blame the entire government. Let me tell you guys about relief active looking forward solution to aches and pains for

Donald Trump Joe Biden Fauci Nancy Pelosi flu Kenny China White House
"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

The Officer Tatum Show

05:42 min | 6 months ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

"Is still in the soil in that state. People that were lynched people were beating people enslaved in that state. The idea that not once not twice 5 times you had someone like Warnock be able to be a senator, 6 years ago, he's going to be there for 6 years. It's a very, very big deal. And you've got to thank the grassroots. You got to thank color change. You got to thank black voters now. You got to thank the working families party. You got grassroots groups out there and fought hard. And by the way, you've got to thank Stacey Abrams. Stacey Abrams that made that entire thing even possible. This was beyond our ability to imagine before Stacey Abrams. But your cost

Stacey Abrams Warnock
"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

The Officer Tatum Show

05:37 min | 6 months ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The Officer Tatum Show

"How long was she last? This is what she said. We know we need to get rid of the mother. What? You didn't get rid of white. You just said, you need to get rid of white people. It's crazy to me. Like, if you live in a glass house, you can't throw rocks. You're talking about destruction. Have you seen the content in Africa? Before the white man was, have you seen how Native Americans got the land they got? Scalp another natives? Black folks, today. Lady. Have you seen the south side of Chicago? You tell me, tell me about destruction. You remember the genocide? What would the Hutu and Tutsi out there? I may be saying it wrong. I think it was those two tribes. Killed are almost a million people in a hundred days. But the white man is bad. I just can't understand how these people can keep a job and they say some of the most evil things that I've ever heard in my life. Hold the phone, I'll be back after the break. This is the officer Tatum show. Ladies and gentlemen, the ladies welcome back. Last second we played a video from Rutgers professor Brittany Cooper who literally called white people the villain and they need to take these mother out. How she still have a job I don't know. But you know what? On my YouTube, we normally do stuff like this. I can't do it on the radio because I don't have all my facts ready. But on a YouTube, we normally, because there's so many people that watch YouTube, my YouTube channel has over 2 million people. We put the information from Rutgers, the dean office will put all that stuff out there. So you can call and let them know what you think about this woman. Because what happens is they do it to us, and they try to get us fired because we keep it real. This woman is literally the most racist woman that I've heard in a long time. She literally said we need to take white people out.

Brittany Cooper YouTube Rutgers Africa Tatum Chicago
Have Black Pastors Become Bad Actors?

The Officer Tatum Show

01:11 min | 6 months ago

Have Black Pastors Become Bad Actors?

"Let me get back into the conversation I was having because I'm frustrated. This is necessary nobody's talking about it. We need to change it. We need to call these people out. How do you fix your brand and how you get to the community, the church, and for our churches to be putting our people in the bad position is just beyond me. It's our professors and our churches. And I don't because somebody out there, I can hear them right now. Saying, what about the white churches do it too? Well, black people ain't going to white churches. By large numbers. They don't. In case you have never been to a black community. Most black people go to black churches. And also these professors, I hate to say it, but black people are biased. It's so is everybody else. But black people are biased not in a unique way, but you're biased. If a black professor tells you something about black people, you're going to believe that person over white people. Not 100% of the time, but it is a thing. So when you have black pastors saying things about the black community with authority claiming they are hearing from the lord, black people typically will listen to them. You have professors, they were listening to them.

100% Black
Pastor Jamal Bryant Wants to Grow WEED at the Church

The Officer Tatum Show

01:16 min | 6 months ago

Pastor Jamal Bryant Wants to Grow WEED at the Church

"If it had, if it wasn't for good white people who've adopted the American Dream, we would be screwed as a country. Because if you look at the progressive vote, it is destructive to America. We're going to be, we're going to be an internment camps. Messing with folk that only think about emotions when they vote. How come you blend the church with the LGBTQ? How can you blame the church with abortions? That's what Rafael Warnock offers and people eat it up. I got a video. I'm a send it as soon as Nick get my message he'll send it over. You got past the Jamal Bryant in Atlanta. Talking about he needs to go and get land so the church can sell weed. This is what you get. He's the same one criticizing her she walker. And that man had cheated on his wife. Oh no, how many times? At least once had a baby out of whitlock, on his wife, while he was the pastor of the church. This is the best we can do. And they lift that man up like he a king. Eggman is a dirtbag.

Rafael Warnock Jamal Bryant America Nick Atlanta Walker Whitlock Eggman
Rage Against the Extreme

The Officer Tatum Show

01:26 min | 6 months ago

Rage Against the Extreme

"Get the message across, gain the love and respect from the people, get in office and be a conservative. And then people are going to love and admire you once they see what your policies are. But you can't get restricted on policy before you ever get put in a position of power. And I think that the brand of Donald Trump has been damaged so much that it's going to hurt us more than it's going to help us for him to continue to run. a lot of candidates that were Trump trumpers, they lost. Why would they lose? The people are speaking. Everything ain't cheating, and Arizona, I can't speak for that 'cause Arizona, they did all kind of stuff. And they need to get to the bottom what happened in Arizona. But all these other states, they ain't cheating. I don't see no evidence of them cheating. Are they out? Are they outsmarting us? Maybe that's maybe that's the case, but flat out cheating. Like the 2020 election, no, I don't think they cheated. You know, in some states, Democrats were funding Republicans in the primary who were ultra maga Republicans. To get them to the general and they lost, how did they know they were going to lose? If it's all rig, they don't care to spend money on a maga Republican. It's because they knew that they painted the picture that a maga Republicans is extreme. It doesn't matter what the truth is. It matter how they been able to craft and paint the picture.

Arizona Donald Trump
What Is the Way Forward for Republicans?

The Officer Tatum Show

01:51 min | 6 months ago

What Is the Way Forward for Republicans?

"We better start making some decisions fast. We got two years to try to get this right. We have to understand that we got to be more strategic, we should have learned through the midterms that coming out being ultra ultra ultra, magga and all this stuff. People can't digest it properly. And maybe we need to work on the way we say things, not be fraudulent, but work on the way we say things and say things that are maybe more important to people than that's important to be in the shock factor. Going viral. Because you can say certain things to people to make them feel comfortable that you are a candidate that they can vote for, even if they don't agree with everything you say. And once you get in office, you can do whatever you want to do. And when I say do whatever you want to do, you can be a little more conservative in office. oh, I like the way he's governing. I like the way he's in the Senate. Oh, this is what a conservative can do. I'm glad I took a chance. Let me give you an example. Let me give you an example. Kyrsten sinema in a state of Arizona. She will not lose her seat to a Republican ever. Now, Mark Kelly might kyrsten sinema won't. And I'm not going to lie. I don't agree with kyrsten sinema. She's a Democrat. However, the way she votes, I can respect it. For the most part, I can respect it. I don't lose sleep at night over Kirsten sinema. She fights back when I think it's reasonable to fight back and she goes on a Democrat side and sometimes I don't agree with her. But I respect her enough that if they ran a Martha mcsally against her, she's a better candidate in Martha mcsally.

Kyrsten Sinema Mark Kelly Kirsten Sinema Senate Arizona Martha Mcsally
Why Do Republicans Keep Losing?

The Officer Tatum Show

01:07 min | 6 months ago

Why Do Republicans Keep Losing?

"Nobody knows her should walk her son. But except for me identifying as Herschel Walker's son. Nobody know who he is. And he will become irrelevant. Here soon. But it was our fault that Herschel did not win. It was hers fault that Herschel did not win. And Republicans need to take a step back and evaluate what are we doing why are we losing? Because I feel like Warnock is a trashy candidate when he's up for reelection in 6 years from now. He's going to be a vulnerable candidate. I think he'll be an easy target to take out. He is not a quality candidate. He is not a Christian man. He is not a representative of the black community if you ask me. Why do they vote for him? Because he's a Democrat. And because it has been a disdain for Republicans that's imprinted in the minds of black people in Georgia.

Herschel Herschel Walker Warnock Georgia
Herschel Walker Loses Georgia Senate Race

The Officer Tatum Show

01:36 min | 6 months ago

Herschel Walker Loses Georgia Senate Race

"Big news coming out. That Herschel Walker did not win. The election. And so we'll talk about that right now and I know that there's a lot of people that may want to make an excuse, but I believe that there's no excuses that need to be made. We literally did not win the race. We did not win. And if you see that Brian Kemp won and we lost, this race, then that tells you something. It tells you that we did not compete and we did not do the things that were necessary to win this race. It wasn't cheating. It wasn't ballot harvesting and none of that of the stuff because those things, we could have done to if you help ourselves in this particular election, but we didn't do what it takes to win. And I'm glad to see that Herschel Walker made up in his mind that he was going to say he's not going to make any excuses and that we just did not run a good race. Let me give you some numbers. I think I had them here. So if you didn't watch the election, I think with 99% of the vote in, I don't know if they have a 100% of the vote, but this is as of the 7th, which is today 9 45 a.m. this morning. Harsher walker ended up getting 48% of the vote and Raphael Warnock got 51% of the vote. So he got beat by a pretty decent margin.

Herschel Walker Brian Kemp Raphael Warnock Walker
"rutgers university" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

77WABC Radio

01:46 min | 11 months ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on 77WABC Radio

"For the same thing it's a new thing. Check out this. I break up on the roll below the level 'cause I'm living low next to the base. Turn up the radio. They're claiming I'm a criminal. But now I wonder how some people never know. The enemy could be the Frank guardian. I'm now a hooligan. I rock the party and clear all the madness. I'm not a racist preacher teacher. Something never had this. Number one never want to run about the gun. I wasn't licensed to have one the minute they see me feel me. I'm the epitome of public enemy use abused without clues. I refuse to blow a fuse. They even had it on the news. Don't believe me. Don't don't. There was so much height. I don't slim shady sharpton. Anointed I miss his return that he was a racist. People who had been friends with I miss for years and would appear on his show, boycotted him. Because they were afraid that then senator Barack Obama, who was preparing the run for the presidency, said anybody who appeared on Amazon in the morning was a racist. All because of what happened at Rutgers university. In fact, I'm a shit. Actually gone to meet with slim shady sharpton got interviewed on his so called radio program that placebo radio program and shot in just pimp slapped the hell out of him. But he did return to WABC. Bitter. Angry. Couldn't understand why he was being called erases. In fact, when they reintroduced his new team, they had a black woman and a black guy that he didn't even know who was joining him. Which really took

Frank guardian sharpton senator Barack Obama Rutgers university Amazon WABC
"rutgers university" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

04:31 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"An elder. You commit oftentimes with real incredible skills, particularly around digital, social media, collaboration, and number of areas where young people come into the workplace and offering and providing immediate value. And I think that's changed the dynamic, incredibly. Yeah, you know, I'm so glad that you said that. Whenever I hear people complaining about millennials and what I always say to them, okay, hang on a second. We raised them. So if you're going to be upset with anybody, let's all just be upset with ourselves because we're the ones who created these humans. Who want more out of a work environment and are more socially conscious and all of these I consider to be great things about these generations. Well, I think we've got everything to be proud of. I don't think we have to apologize for anything. And that regard, I've got two daughters that are in their early 30s. I teach graduate school as you mentioned for Rutgers university where I work with. Young people all the time, whether it's millennials or now Gen Z's. And I think it's an extraordinary generation. I think they get a bad rap. And it becomes a convenient kind of way to talk about them in terms of being entitled and all these other kinds of things. And I think the reality is that I love how they see the world. Every once in a while, I kind of describe it from a perspective of when I grew up, we were taught, you know, good things come to those who wait. My daughters will tell you the good things come to those who act. And they are more purposeful and they are more. I mean, it's just an entirely different. Again, entirely different world they grew up in. And I think in many respects, we have been as parents, smart, to listen to them, to learn from them..

Rutgers university
"rutgers university" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

Accelerate Your Business Growth

04:31 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on Accelerate Your Business Growth

"An elder. You commit oftentimes with real incredible skills, particularly around digital, social media, collaboration, and number of areas where young people come into the workplace and offering and providing immediate value. And I think that's changed the dynamic, incredibly. Yeah, you know, I'm so glad that you said that. Whenever I hear people complaining about millennials and what I always say to them, okay, hang on a second. We raised them. So if you're going to be upset with anybody, let's all just be upset with ourselves because we're the ones who created these humans. Who want more out of a work environment and are more socially conscious and all of these I consider to be great things about these generations. Well, I think we've got everything to be proud of. I don't think we have to apologize for anything. And that regard, I've got two daughters that are in their early 30s. I teach graduate school as you mentioned for Rutgers university where I work with. Young people all the time, whether it's millennials or now Gen Z's. And I think it's an extraordinary generation. I think they get a bad rap. And it becomes a convenient kind of way to talk about them in terms of being entitled and all these other kinds of things. And I think the reality is that I love how they see the world. Every once in a while, I kind of describe it from a perspective of when I grew up, we were taught, you know, good things come to those who wait. My daughters will tell you the good things come to those who act. And they are more purposeful and they are more. I mean, it's just an entirely different. Again, entirely different world they grew up in. And I think in many respects, we have been as parents, smart, to listen to them, to learn from them..

Rutgers university
"rutgers university" Discussed on Native America Calling

Native America Calling

02:47 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on Native America Calling

"So my parents were alive in the 60s and 70s as children and teenagers and there's something really special about what books like this can do for a generation when they've never seen themselves in on TV or in media. And so for that, I'm grateful because my dad, he was an artist and he also studied anthropology and went to Rutgers university to get his master's in anthropology like Jolie porn. And so I think there was, you know, I think there was my parents, they really did enjoy reading this book. And for me, you know, because the books were always around, you know, I had a thumb through them, read them, and as a kid and didn't really understand that it was written by a non native LA became a teenager a radical punk rock teenager became anti everything. And so, you know, when I got older, I wasn't a fan, you know, to be honest, I grew up as I would say as a fan, but then when I got older, I think there was just some underlying anger and resentment of how could this non native be writing about us? And then as you get older, you know, you look back and how much things have influenced you and it inspired you and I think at this moment in time, it's like, you know, I sometimes just don't know how I feel. About, you know, when it comes to non natives writing about natives or making movies about natives. So on and so forth. And so I would say, you know, I'm thankful I'm thankful that these books existed because I wouldn't exist without them, you know? Okay. Yeah. Well, we're going to have to take a break here and just a short moment, but I want to talk a little bit more about that. Tony hillerman, that legacy and he's definitely a polarizing figure. Amongst native people, as you say, and we'll talk more about that. Anybody with a question or comment, give us a call, one 809 9 6 two 8 four 8. We're talking about the new AMC series dark wind and we have talent here from the show. And we're learning all about this really exciting production that premieres this Sunday. So give us a call. We'll be back right after.

Jolie porn Rutgers university LA Tony hillerman
"rutgers university" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

02:11 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"On the housing crisis in our region It finds that over a three year period nearly half of all the residential properties sold in Newark went to corporate buyers This has forced more residents to rent rather than buy homes to help address the issue the city last year invested $20 million into affordable housing for families that make a certain median income Joining us to talk about how this is affecting residents is distinguished Professor of law at Rutgers university David trout Professor thank you for joining us Thank you for having me Michael So why are corporations buying a big chunks of residential property in Newark in Give us an idea at what rate Well they're following a trend that began coming out of the foreclosure crisis across the country The targeted predominantly black lower middle class and middle class communities On the one hand it reflects so much of the housing precarity and wealth precarity that led to the foreclosure crisis in a working class city like Newark but also on the other hand to the strength of the economy And the prospects for growth in the city of Newark that attracted investors to this potential upside When you say corporate or corporation buyers give me a sense of who that is It's a very difficult thing to discern because they do not make them their identities plane 75% of these corporate buyers remain anonymous These are large scale institutional buyers who through securities laws rules don't have to disclose who their investors are or who they are And in this particular case they are a regional They come from New Jersey and New York and they rely on a passive rental stream that's terrific for their investors but is often detached from the needs of the community You've hinted at this already So what are the consequences of this action We already know nationally that there's a real lack of supply And it's made it very difficult for homebuyers to get into the market Now rates are going up It's even more.

Newark David trout Rutgers university Michael New Jersey New York
"rutgers university" Discussed on TIME's Top Stories

TIME's Top Stories

01:57 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on TIME's Top Stories

"What we get wrong about life before modern baby formula. Is an assistant Professor of American studies at Rutgers university. She is the author of violent appetites, hunger in the early northeast. As families around the United States grapple with the infant formula shortage, some social media commentators have been asking, why don't people just breastfeed? Isn't that what everyone did before infant formula? As a historian who studies the feeding of infants and children, I can tell you that breastfeeding has never been possible for everyone, and people have always needed substitutes for breast milk. Not until the 20th century did alternative baby foods become reliable and nourishing in the form of modern infant formula. Before that point, many families had to endure the agony of losing a baby two starvation, malnutrition, or related disease, modern infant formula is a lifesaving marvel, not a luxury. Throughout American history, people have been unable to or chosen not to breastfeed, for a variety of reasons, may be the birthing parents, didn't have enough supply, or the baby could not latch properly. Maybe the mother had died in childbirth, or needed to go back to work. Maybe the baby had been adopted or needed to be cared for by someone else. Sometimes other people would breastfeed the baby. Friends or relatives might pitch in. Rich families had wet nurses who were either servants or enslaved. Wet nursed children often died, but not as frequently as the babies of wet nurses, deprived of their mother's milk. An even riskier alternative was bottle feeding or spoon feeding. Infants ate soft or liquid foods made from animal milk, broth, or grains. In the 17th and 18th centuries, these foods were homemade by the late 19th century industrially produced options.

Rutgers university United States
"rutgers university" Discussed on The $100 MBA Show

The $100 MBA Show

01:54 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The $100 MBA Show

"I started with my cofounder back in 2014. And today's episode is Q&A Wednesday on Q&A Wednesdays. We answer a question from one of you. One of our listeners. If you've got a question you want to ask, just go ahead and email me over at Omar at one zero zero MBA .NET. Today's question is from Brenda and Brenda asks, hey Omar, love the podcast quick question. I just started my online business a few weeks ago. And I'm wondering, do I need to hire a virtual assistant? I heard you want to say it's one of the first hires I should make. The only thing is is that I'm not really sure what I would give this person to do. Would love any advice you could offer, thanks, Brenda. Well, first of all, congratulations, Brenda, inserting your business. I'm sure it's an exciting time. And yes, that is true. I have recommended and still recommend hiring a virtual assistant as your first hire and I'll explain why in today's episode. But when you make that first hire, is actually quite pivotal. Brenda expressed something that a lot of people feel in the beginning when they're trying to make their first hire. They're not really sure how or what to give them. They're worried they're going to hire somebody and have them twiddling their thumbs, not having enough work to do. And as a new business, you want to be as efficient and as lean as possible. So I'm going to show you how to balance that, how to make sure you know it's time to make that higher and how to make use of that higher from day one so that you are actually getting a return on your investment. Also, a few tips on how to find a virtual assistant that can help you how to assess and know that you found a good one. So let's get into it. Let's get down to business. Support for today's show comes from Rutgers university. For me, vouching for Rutgers university is a no brainer. Because I went to Rutgers. Listen, the growth of technology has generated increasing amounts of data, leading to a demand for individuals skilled in analytics. The stem designated.

Brenda Omar Rutgers university Rutgers
"rutgers university" Discussed on The Lowe Down with Kevin Lowe

The Lowe Down with Kevin Lowe

07:10 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on The Lowe Down with Kevin Lowe

"Really appreciate you talking about that. Oh, definitely. Definitely. I mean, I don't know. I think it was Henry David Thoreau once said, it's not what you look at that matters. It's what you see. And that quote is a little bit ironic for two people who are visually impaired to be talking about, you know, it's not what you look at. It's what you see because we don't see very well or at all. And you know, it's true though. It's not about the circumstances. The circumstances are the circumstances and so much of that is out of our control. But what I think the beautiful thing about my condition and it sounds like your condition as well, is there is a certain level of surrender. And that's just the word I personally am drawn to and whether it's acceptance surrender or something else that resonates better. That we don't control what happens to us. Most of the time. And we can't change right now the fact that we're going through these things. But what we can control entirely is how we respond. We can choose our attitude. We can choose our effort. We can choose our perspective. And those are such powerful qualities to develop. The ability to have free will and choose your response in less than ideal circumstances might be one of the most desirable traits that I could ever want for myself for one of my children or for anybody else that I care about. Because like I said, you know, life's hard and life has this way of throwing really hard things at you at the most inconvenient times. And there's no getting around that. And so I think it's this muscle that we developed over time, the ability to respond well to life. And it sounds like you've had plenty of opportunities to do that and to practice that. And I know I sure have. So I would actually kind of flip it and I would feel really sorry for anybody out there who didn't have some kind of adversity in their life. And I don't know if that actually exists out there if anybody has lived a life without any adversity. Seems very unlikely. But I think it's a good thing. Yeah, totally. And I don't know, I think sometimes maybe those are the people who are the jerks, you know? But no, it is, though, it is. And it is adversity going through anything in life any type of hard times and so to me it just gives you that reality check, you know, and that you need to give you that greater appreciation for the life that we're living in the gift that each of us have been given to be on this earth. And to treat it as so. Yeah, so I love it. I love it. Now, no, I'm curious, so you went to school, so when did you graduate all of those many different colleges, you went to become a PT? Yeah, sure. So I graduated from Rutgers university in 2016 with my bachelors and exercise science. And then I graduated from drexel university with my doctor degree in 2019 and yeah, so then I've been out of school now for a little over two and a half years out in what they call the real world. Then it's been good so far. I'm really enjoying it. Well, that's awesome. That's awesome. I love it. Now, so now talk to me a little bit about your life today because you definitely threw me for a loop, but when we've already made some changes since the last time when I first talked to you, it got to meet you and stuff. You kind of talked a little bit about the beginning, but what kind of has gone through your head to make these changes in life? Yeah, so I think there were a few factors that were kind of building over time. And so the clinic that I was working at was relatively high volume. And so I was seeing multiple patients an hour and just feeling increasingly tired and burnt out and sometimes apathetic and I don't like feeling those things. But I realized that I'm not at my best when I can't give undivided attention to the person in front of me. And so that had been building for a while and the pandemic happened and that slower pace of life there for a little while. Just gave me some time to reflect and really reassess and reevaluate where I was and where I wanted to be. And I watched my brother in law actually have their first child, my brother and sister in law. She's 5 months old now. And so I got to watch him work from home and be really flexible with his time and spend a lot of time with his wife and his daughter. And be present as a father. And I realize as someone who does want to have children someday that I want those same things, I want to be present. I want to be able to be flexible with my work so that I can be there for my children and not miss that time. And I just realized that the path I was going down didn't check any of those boxes, it was a rigid schedule job, one that I didn't feel like I was growing or fully being my best self. And it wasn't something I could see myself doing for a long term. And when I say that, it's not that I don't see myself being a physical therapist ever again in the future. It's that I needed time to reevaluate and find a better balance of how I want to spend my time because I would love to treat patients under the right circumstances. I would love to coach clients online like I'm doing now. I would love to have time for writing. I love the fact that it's 1 o'clock on a Tuesday. And I can sit down with you and have this conversation because that's important to me. And it's that flexibility and diversity of where I'm putting my effort and energy that I really value right now. It's just been, you know, I felt like I was climbing up this ladder for the longest time, thinking it was going to bring me to some really great place. And last year, I kind of got to the top and it was a diving board. It felt like a diving board. And now I walked to the edge and checked it out. And I realized, you know, I had to jump. I had to leave my job. And I stood there for a really long time, like months. And it took enough people telling me that I should go for it for me to finally feel like I was ready to jump and you know, I feel like I'm still falling toward the water, like doing a couple of summer salts like, you know, I've been doing some tricks on the way down, but we'll see what happens when I hit the water. I don't know when that happens or what happens, but yeah, I'm feeling good about it, but that was kind of the motivation. Yeah. Well, that's awesome. That's awesome. All I can say is I'm envisioning you hitting the water and I don't think there's even going to be a splash. You know? Yeah. That's perfect. Well, that's sweet, man. And, you know what, though, I think that's actually you know, I think that's actually really cool and I think it's something that a lot of us can take away from just that little aspect of your story is, you know, sometimes we get so caught up, especially if anybody's listening if you're in college or maybe you've already graduated, you're in a career. And you find yourself in this situation like you did, Joe, where sometimes you feel like they're like you've gone to school and you put in all this effort and spent all this money in schooling and that's been your whole focus and then you get to that end point and.

Henry David Thoreau drexel university Rutgers university Joe
"rutgers university" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

KLIF 570 AM

02:21 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

"That it's true. I know I saw this and I'm like, really Rutgers University, one of the great The Great Edifices Public University in New Jersey. It's a great, but it's a well known name. Write. A New Jersey student says he has been barred from taking classes because he has not. Been vaccinated and you go. Well, Probably a lot of people getting that. Yeah, except this guy, Logan Holler. Isn't going to class. He's doing his work on his computer at home. He's working remotely. But the problem is, is that some of his classmates are attending classes. It's not like a fully remote class. So they say that he has to get vaccinated because of that, even though he's not going in, right. He was locked out of his Rutgers, Um, is that he was locked out of his email. And related college accounts. You want to pay his tuition at the end of last month and was told that he needs to be vaccinated. Even though he doesn't attend in person. He said. I'll probably have to transfer to a different university and probably he'll be working from home so he needs to find another college to not attend. And if he he doesn't have a problem with people getting vaccinated, he said. It's fine with him, but You know, he doesn't think people should be pushed to get vaccinated. Well, not if you're not going there, and he doesn't care if he even has access to campus. He says. I don't need to be there. They could ban me. I just want to be left alone. I can't step Dad is dumbfounded. Yes, So are we He 7 55. Let's get an update on traffic on the five. Here's Bill Jackson. It's backing up now in Denton for 35. Dortmund at 3 80. There's an accident. Looks like slow going from the 35 e 35. W merge in Irving on Luke 12 Walking Walker. HBO ended Singleton that wreck finally cleared out of the way and It's all slow going from spur. Four await traffic, still recovering from a grand prairie into Dallas, Sunai 30 East funded Luke 12, Walton Walker and accidents been cleared in Fort Worth to pay 20 south of it. Remy an accident blocks the left lane and on I 35 W North, approaching Garden Acres Driver wrecked, has reported its slow from Burlison with CALIF traffic on the fives. I'm Bill Jackson. Meteorologist Brad Martin. As a Western high pressure zone moves in, We're going to have a northerly flow aloft, which will probably mean very.

Logan Holler Bill Jackson Fort Worth Dallas Rutgers University Rutgers New Jersey Denton Walton Walker HBO The Great Edifices Public Univ Burlison Brad Martin I 35 W North 35 e 35 five Dortmund 3 80 end Walking Walker
Professor Ebright: Wuhan Lab Documents Show Dr. Fauci Lied About Gain-of-Function Research

Mark Levin

01:29 min | 1 year ago

Professor Ebright: Wuhan Lab Documents Show Dr. Fauci Lied About Gain-of-Function Research

"Now they keep promoting Fauci all over the corrupt media. And they keep using Fauci to attack regular American citizens. No, They know how often Fauci has been. Sort of the real life Professor Irwin Corey. They know how he's often contradicted himself. How is often politicized. Science doesn't mean he has have been right now and then, But that's not the point. You need to be right all the time. Particularly you're going to make definitive statements like foul she does. If you're going to play ruler of the world, whether it's the economy, whether it is lifestyle or whatever else it is. Richard Ebright is a molecular biologist at Rutgers University. And these newly found documents, he said. Obtained the Freedom Information Act request made it clear that Fauci has been quote unquote untruthful about gain of function research. The documents make it clear that assertions by the NIH director Francis Collins. The N A. I D Director Anthony Fauci. At the NIH did not support gain of function, research or potential pandemic pathogen enhancement. At this Wuhan virus lab are untruthful. He tweeted. Isn't that worth a congressional hearing by the Democrats? Isn't that worth the media really being skeptical?

Fauci Irwin Corey Richard Ebright Rutgers University NIH Francis Collins Anthony Fauci Wuhan
Influential Educators: College President Mary Bunting

Encyclopedia Womannica

01:56 min | 1 year ago

Influential Educators: College President Mary Bunting

"Than a year. After henry's death. Mary was offered a new opportunity to become dean of douglass college. The women's college of rutgers university where she was a professor in nineteen fifty eight. Mary was invited to a national. Science foundation. committee created to improve the nation's performance in the field of science in a series of tests designed to figure out what blocked strong students from continuing into careers in science. Mary saw a big problem of all of the sixteen to nineteen year olds who scored in the top ten percent on aptitude tests and then did not go onto college. Ninety eight percent were women. The time women had serious. Barriers to access college education endowments for women's colleges were much lower than those of their male counterparts. Perhaps most importantly curriculum requirements didn't accommodate the different societal expectations for women. For example many universities made it nearly impossible for students to attend part time as a result women who had to care for children during the day at home could not attend mary. It her mission to redesign the education system to accommodate and encourage women to study. She got her first chance at serious reform. When in nineteen sixty she became president of radcliffe college the undergraduate women's college at harvard university there. She saw the stark differences between the ways. Men and women were treated on the same campus. Women were given bunk beds in assigned rooms rather than harvard's how system and they were excluded from harvard's libraries and dining halls. Mary set about changing the campus. She organized the dorms into a house. System built radcliffe. Its own library and created search committees to go into low income neighborhoods and offer scholarships to potential

Douglass College Women's College Of Rutgers Uni Mary Science Foundation Henry Radcliffe College The Undergra Harvard
Supreme Court Ends Biden’s Eviction Moratorium

The Takeaway

01:48 min | 1 year ago

Supreme Court Ends Biden’s Eviction Moratorium

"So now the by administration has been extending a federal eviction moratorium to protect tents struggling to pay their rent during the pandemic but now the moratorium is over really truly over. That's because the supreme court ruled last week. That the cbc has overstepped its at and that the moratorium to continue congress. We'd need to authorize it but that's unlikely to happen as house. press secretary. jen psaki told reporters on friday. What we're trying to do here is prevent people from being evicted from their homes. If there were enough votes to pass an eviction moratorium in congress it would have happened. It hasn't happened and while the white house says it's working with states on solutions. hundreds of thousands potentially millions of tenants across the country are now at risk of losing their homes including tenants in the state of new york. We're more than eight hundred. Thirty thousand households are behind on their rent. We're joined today by sia weaver campaign coordinator of housing justice for all in new york. Sia welcome to the takeaway. Extre having me also with us. Peter hepburn assistant professor of sociology at rutgers university newark and part of the eviction lab at princeton university. Peter welcome back to the shell on sia from your perch. What's the significance of this supreme court ruling. Well that's really just devastating as you said eight hundred thirty thousand households are more really are behind on rent in new york and seventy seven percent of them are people of color. The thing that's most painful about all of this as our state also has two point seven billion dollars in rental assistance. Money meant to solve this problem and we've been unable to spend it so this is a a real wave of addiction. That should be preventable. But for some reason has not been prevented.

Peter Hepburn Peter Congress Last Week New York Friday Hundreds Of Thousands SIA Seventy Seven Percent Jen Psaki CBC Seven Billion Dollars White House More Than Eight Hundred Today Eight Hundred Thirty Thousand Rutgers University Thirty Thousand Households Sia Weaver Millions Of Tenants
"rutgers university" Discussed on A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom

A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom

04:03 min | 1 year ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on A Healthy Bite - ThatOrganicMom

"We're teaching regulation. We're teaching kids first of all it's okay to be angry or it's okay to be sad but it's not okay to just react in a moment. We need to stop and think through how we're going to respond to different situations so that. That's part of the implicit. Now the explicit. Dr maurice elias out of rutgers university has studied this work for for decades and he has said that we need at least seventy five minutes of explicit. Seal instruction per week in schools except breaks down about fifteen minutes a day when we have that kind of explicit instruction about this is what it means to self-regulate or this is what kindness. Looks like this is what Responsibility means then kids have a framework they have an understanding had a schema for looking at their words in their actions as well as interpreting the words and actions of others and then they can respond instead of just react so this work is happening in schools at an increased rate especially now with all the legislation that's occurred within the past year or so. There's been i think at least a hundred thirty billion dollars allocated towards the work of mental health and support for for kids in schools. Does that mean that. Does that mean that..

Dr maurice elias rutgers university
"rutgers university" Discussed on More to Life with Faith and Lois

More to Life with Faith and Lois

03:12 min | 2 years ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on More to Life with Faith and Lois

"So i could cook on top but i had no oven and so there was a period of time. I couldn't he had a new appliance. Because you know they weren't making them at the time everything shut down so i had to wait several months. I had to bene- adjust. How do i. How am i going to do this. And how how. Can i make some the foods i want to make and make them in a different way so My eating habits did change. And because i did like the ice cream i cut down on a lot of other things. Balanced gotta have ballots. And you know that's all cowers that's true that's absolutely and you know i think for us. I love to cook and we eat. We would eat out kind of frequently with different friends and family and because that ended. Because you couldn't go hang out and it was harder to do things like that. we just. We improvised and you're right. I i love to cook. So i just did more of that than i remember. Hearing from certain neighbors and friends. I'm so tired of cookie and was like really try this and so then i realized i was becoming kind of a cheerleader. For what if you try this idea or how much. I was trying new ideas every single time. I'd go to cook something instead of looking at my recipe books. I would literally google. What can i do with chicken today. Can i do salmon differently. Can i do this beef. And so i found these new things to do so felt like a new meal that i haven't tried and by the way because my memory is so great i couldn't remember where i found it so recreate it so it was like it really was like a new bill. And you're right. I tried a bunch of things that i've added the good news is all the fermentation things i added. My repertoire are still there so on saturdays and sundays. Even now i still do my keefer or my sour dough or my khumbu and then i do broth so i get a chance to pace it because once i learned how to do it. It didn't take all day like it used to. And in the instant by the way if you don't have one get one pass that is not a commercial for that. It's just my life very easy. And i love this one quote from joy cox. She's rutgers university. She says you are enough. Your body is enough and face. I love that because you know our bodies did get us through this global pandemic and i'm very grateful for that. I know it was the are amazing. Just amazing in the whole substance of what the body represents and we survived it. We got through it we and if you you know some people i know got sick but they recovered and the body is still recovering missus. Amazing reality that our bodies can faced in endure and overcome so much so we just need to honor them and celebrate in ways that are healthy to continue our life in fellas and as we continue emerging through this pandemic. Think about how you dealt with your mental health and your physical activity. Maybe your food intake and how you cared for yourself and are are you emerging believing that you are enough. Well we hope so and just no..

google rutgers university
US Employers Added Fewer Jobs in April Than Forecasted

Forum

00:52 sec | 2 years ago

US Employers Added Fewer Jobs in April Than Forecasted

"Added fewer jobs in April than they did in March, a sign that some businesses are having a hard time finding workers. Kenneth Burns from member station. Wh Why? Why reports Some reasons are tied to the pandemic, Experts say. It's hard to tell whether a so called discouragement effect from finding a job due to enhanced unemployment benefits is a factor. Michael Hayes and assistant public policy professor at Rutgers University, Camden says one factor is that some adults who would normally look for a job can't because they're helping their child during online learning. Another factor, especially for a seasonal summer jobs involves the health risk. Those air jobs were. Maybe you're feeling more closely. Face to face with with individuals and Putin and putting your health at risk Hayes as people changing from service jobs to other industries, or starting their own business is another factor. For

Kenneth Burns Michael Hayes Rutgers University Camden Putin Hayes
Why Small Talk is More Important Than You Think

Here's Something Good

02:08 min | 2 years ago

Why Small Talk is More Important Than You Think

"Remember when you start your day in the office with casual chitchat. How was your weekend. Can you believe this weather planning any trips this summer. It may have seemed trivial but it turns out. There's nothing small about small talk in fact it can be an aid to innovation it can build trust and rapport and just plain happier at work. But what happens to small talk when we're all working from home to learn more about the benefits of small talk and how we can still get them in the now. We went to expert. Dr jessica methods. Dr method is an associate professor of human resource management at rutgers university and a member of the academy of management organizational behavioral division. Here's what dr method had to say. Thanks so much for joining us. Thank you for having me. So you recently published a study on small talk in the workplace now that so. Many of us are in virtual workplaces. How have conversations among co workers changed. This is such an incredibly important conversation. And when we conducted this study it was pre pandemic. we could not have anticipated how disruptive this remote work boom could have been so really in the past decade. We have seen that so many companies have adopted a more open office space designed so. They've really been focused on strategically designing their workspaces to promote spontaneous casual collisions where employees can just bump into each other in the hallway or at the microwave to have small talk and the idea. There is that these informal chats can be released serendipitous. They can help build rapport and trust and collaboration and they create opportunities for creativity and innovation because these employees are talking with people that they wouldn't necessarily have interacted with otherwise but the transition to remote work has really narrowed the focus of our networks. And the people we have exposure to and who we can talk to sewer networks have been narrowed really to our closest connections are family members are very close friends and our supervisor's and those out. On the periphery who we weren't as close with are kind of in this period of suspended animation

Dr Jessica Dr Method Academy Of Management Organiza Rutgers University
Amazon Beats Back Union, but Workplace Technology Questions Remain

Marketplace Tech with Molly Wood

01:55 min | 2 years ago

Amazon Beats Back Union, but Workplace Technology Questions Remain

"As you've probably heard by now. The effort to unionize an amazon warehouse in bessemer alabama was unsuccessful. Though the union says it will challenge the vote it would have affected just a fraction of amazon's workforce but it captured the attention of the country at a time when e commerce has become a lifeline and the welfare of essential. Workers has come under threat. Janice fine is a professor of labor studies and employment relations at rutgers university. She says the union push at amazon and its defeat highlight the growing role of technology in the workplace. Especially amazon's they use surveillance technology including scanners that workers use to track the rate at which they sort and pack items. Mandatory daily workers surveys a powered camera systems to detect social distancing violations. They use navigation. Software item scanners wristbands thermal cameras. Security cameras recorded footage to survival. The workforce so you have this combination of surveillance for productivity targets and that same surveillance lends itself to being able to monitor workers social activities without a union in place. Then ken workers push back against this kind of stuff. How what kind of tools do they have. Workers are pushing back all over the country. And that's the thing that i think is really important to bear in. Mind that workers in new jersey workers in inland empire in In california workers in chicago these are organizations that have for years. You've been working with amazon. Workers in warehouses and fulfillment centers and just by kind of getting the story out there. They've drawn the country's attention to the problems with amazon's business model. You know by organizing and getting this far getting to an election and so they see this as kind of a long haul fight.

Amazon Janice Fine Bessemer Rutgers University Alabama KEN New Jersey Chicago California
Miami-Area University in Florida to require COVID-19 vaccine

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

00:31 sec | 2 years ago

Miami-Area University in Florida to require COVID-19 vaccine

"Other college making covert vaccines requirement for the fall term or private campus. In the town of davey. Florida near fort. Lauderdale will require all students staff and faculty to be fully vaccinated against toronto virus and time to start the fall semester. Previously rutgers university new jersey made student vaccinations a requirement. A nova spokesperson calls the policy. These safest path forward. The university has more than six thousand undergraduate students and more than fourteen thousand graduate level

Davey Lauderdale Fort Rutgers University Florida Toronto New Jersey
Rutgers Says Students Must Be Vaccinated to Return to Campus

John Batchelor

00:18 sec | 2 years ago

Rutgers Says Students Must Be Vaccinated to Return to Campus

"Students who returned to the Rutgers University campuses this fall must be vaccinated. This student agrees with the move. It was just released now in the making it mandatory for the fall could be a problem for some students, but I overall think it would be a good idea. The vaccination rule applies to Rutgers main campuses in New Brunswick New work and Camden. A

Rutgers University Rutgers New Brunswick Camden
New Jersey's Rutgers to Require COVID-19 Vaccine for Students

Steve Trevelise

00:54 sec | 2 years ago

New Jersey's Rutgers to Require COVID-19 Vaccine for Students

"You now have to get a vaccine for Cove it in order to attend Rutgers University. It's a state run school. Uh, I've always you know, I've always said the vaccine should be choice. And first college students that what if it was the chances they're going to get covert? You know, Slim to none. And now you're forcing a vaccine on these kids. Why? You're gonna be required to provide proof of vaccination from any vaccine authorized for choose the United States. Students enrolled in an online degree program from Dan Alexander's block here or participating in fully online or off campus. Continuing education programs will be exempt from going to the school. You have to worry about the vaccine. Students may also request a medical or religious exemption. That's what I mean. They're not telling you, G. We encourage you to get the vaccine they're saying get the vaccine.

Rutgers University Dan Alexander United States
Rutgers University Requiring Students Enrolled In 2021 Fall Semester To Receive COVID-19 Vaccine

WBZ Afternoon News

00:37 sec | 2 years ago

Rutgers University Requiring Students Enrolled In 2021 Fall Semester To Receive COVID-19 Vaccine

"Vaccinations for students starting this fall. Students at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey will be required to get vaccinated for Corona virus if they want to attend in person classes this fall. Rutgers said. There's they believes it's the first university in the nation to issue this requirement, which applies to all 71,000 resident and commuter students. Those under 18 are being told to get the Fizer vaccine that is the only vaccine currently authorized for use in people under 18, faculty and staff are exempt from this directive. They are subject to workplace, not student attendance regulations. Ryan Clark. ABC News, Talk of Vaccine

Rutgers Ryan Clark Abc News
"rutgers university" Discussed on WGN Radio

WGN Radio

01:46 min | 2 years ago

"rutgers university" Discussed on WGN Radio

"You will, uh, 20. I don't expect to be around in 20 years. I think my lunch the lung cancer will get me by then. You know, even though I don't smoke, it'll be from his bestest and another and diesel smoke. Well, I did. It would be you, sadly, but But, you know, none of us are already told me. I got a spot. Yeah, I think. What can you do for this Is what you could wear a respirator. I said okay. Yeah, sure. Yeah, well, your eyes are you Where are your oxygen levels? Still, okay? Oh, I'm You know, I I They told me we'll go see a pulmonologist. You okay? Yeah, that was like 10 years ago in another 10 years, maybe you'll consider it. Yeah, Maybe when I start having problems with that. I mean, I do have a little bit of trouble with breathing. But like I said, that's because of, you know, from dealing with us, bestest on goal. The rest of that, you know, just like when I had this spot on my back, and they're like, Well, you know, I think it's a cyst that got infected and turned out to be melanoma. So now I've gotta now I've got a cross on my back. Yes, you sure do. But thank God Thank God you had that looked at because that could go very fast. Oh, yeah, well, I had it for a while and you know, and it's they say it's a re occurring type, but it's okay because my doctor ended up going to jail anyway. So that's all right. Great. Yeah. Yeah, It's pretty bad when a skin doctor who works up at Rutgers University Medical Center has cameras in the bathrooms if he doesn't see enough skin Oh, my God. Hang on a minute. We're we'll leave Graham right there, because I know he's calling, looking for slime from the checkout line. And we we've got it. Well, some of it anyway. And your calls are welcome as well. 8888765593 on WGN radio..

Graham WGN Rutgers University Medical Cen