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Scott Hamilton
Olympic Hall of Fame
When I'm done touring arenas I would really like to just have an ensemble of incredible skaters and do a really unique skating show on Broadway. That's my dream, I'd love to do that, and just incorporate everything I've learned and experienced. I can handle music, I can handle dialogue, I can handle -- I don't know if I can sing, but I can handle movement, I can handle all those things. And New York loves figure skating. And that's the one thing that I've dreamt of that I've always wanted to do that I haven't really taken huge steps to doing yet, because I've been so busy with everything else. View Interview with Scott Hamilton View Biography of Scott Hamilton View Profile of Scott Hamilton View Photo Gallery of Scott Hamilton
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Scott Hamilton
Olympic Hall of Fame
I've grown up listening to Bruce Springsteen. And he pretty much defined my work ethic to a crowd. If you've ever been to a Bruce Springsteen concert, you leave exhausted and you can't wait to see him again. And that is a mentality and kind of a work ethic that I always wanted to have when I do one of our live shows at Stars on Ice. I always wanted to have that intensity and that "I'm bringing everybody on the ice with me," so that they'd want to come back and see it again. I didn't want to just entertain an audience, I wanted to build an audience, and Bruce Springsteen gave me that. View Interview with Scott Hamilton View Biography of Scott Hamilton View Profile of Scott Hamilton View Photo Gallery of Scott Hamilton
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John Hennessy
President of Stanford University
John Hennessy: When I started working on my Ph.D., two wonderful things happened. First of all, I found an interesting Ph.D. topic very early on in my graduate career, and it was just because something very unusual sprung up. Microprocessors were just coming out. It was the very beginning of the microprocessor age, and a research scientist from Brookhaven National Lab came over to the university, over to Stony Brook, and explained the interest he had in using microprocessors to solve a complex real-time control problem. And I began brainstorming with my Ph.D. advisor, and we thought about how to build a software system that would enable you to write this kind of software more easily, so I started on that research project. Happily and fortuitously, just as I was finishing up my Ph.D., this area exploded. Two of the major giants in the field started publishing papers in this field, and here I was, completing a Ph.D. in this field that all of a sudden had become tremendously important. So I hopped on the interview trail, convinced I wanted to be an academic. I ended up interviewing at 16 different universities. My wife was panicked that I was going to take her to some place where there are more cows than people, but my very last interview was at Stanford, and I knew that if they offered me a faculty position that I would go there, and that happened, and it was fortunate for both of us. View Interview with John Hennessy View Biography of John Hennessy View Profile of John Hennessy View Photo Gallery of John Hennessy
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John Hennessy
President of Stanford University
Integrated circuit technology was reaching the level where you could think about building a real computer, a 32-byte computer, on a single piece of silicon, a single chip. There were people who believed that you would just take what had been done earlier on many separate chips and transfer that over without rethinking the space, the design space, how you might make use of the fact that everything is on one chip. We stood back and asked the question, "Does this change the ground rules? Does this change the guidelines?" And for the first six months, I ran with a group of graduate students and a couple of other faculty members -- purely a brainstorming session -- to ask about how the ground rules might be changed. What did we know that could change things? I don't think we realized how big a change it would make in the field at the beginning. I think we just had some faith that this paradigm shift would create the opportunity for a big change, and we jumped on that faith and took the chance that it would happen. We really didn't know, probably for six or seven years, how big the change was really going to be. View Interview with John Hennessy View Biography of John Hennessy View Profile of John Hennessy View Photo Gallery of John Hennessy
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Sir Edmund Hillary
Conqueror of Mt. Everest
When I was very young I read about it, dreamed about it and when the opportunity came to do something about it I seemed to slip into it rather easily. Even the companionship that I made with similar friends in adventurous activities, I found very, very rewarding. Nothing is better fun that sitting down with a group of your peers who've done similar sort of things and just talking about your experiences. Maybe boasting a little bit here and there too, but sharing experiences that you all appreciate, you all know have been frightening and dangerous and have been successful. View Interview with Sir Edmund Hillary View Biography of Sir Edmund Hillary View Profile of Sir Edmund Hillary View Photo Gallery of Sir Edmund Hillary
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Sir Edmund Hillary
Conqueror of Mt. Everest
Sir Edmund Hillary: I did have -- definitely -- one heroic figure who impressed me very much indeed, and that was the great Antarctic explorer, Shackleton. Shackleton I always admired because he was a tough man and a very good leader. And whenever he was in difficult circumstances, which he frequently was, he seemed to have the great ability to inspire his men and lead his party safely out of those conditions. So certainly Shackleton, I would have said, more than anything, was a role model for me. And later on, when I was down in the Antarctic myself and doing various adventures, I really felt that I tried to behave perhaps a little bit more like Shackleton, than any of the other famous Antarctic explorers. View Interview with Sir Edmund Hillary View Biography of Sir Edmund Hillary View Profile of Sir Edmund Hillary View Photo Gallery of Sir Edmund Hillary
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