bigcitysmalltown with Bob Rivard
This week on bigcitysmalltown, Bob Rivard sits down with two guests at the podcast studio at Our Lady of the Lake University — a first for the show. Don Graham is the retired chairman and publisher of The Washington Post Company, whose family also owned Newsweek Magazine, where Bob worked as a war correspondent and later chief of correspondents in the 1990s. Dr. Abel Antonio Chávez is the 10th president of Our Lady of the Lake University, a position he has held since July 2022. A first-generation, first-in-family college graduate and son of immigrants, he went from Front Range Community College to a BS in mechanical engineering, an MBA, and a PhD in civil and environmental engineering, and built a career partnering with local governments and universities across the globe on community-based energy and emissions accounting. Graham came to campus as a commencement speaker. The visit grew out of his decades-long commitment to college access — work rooted in Washington, DC, where the city's lack of a state university system means students pay out-of-state tuition everywhere they apply. They discuss: * How Our Lady of the Lake has served San Antonio's most economically challenged students for 130 years — and what it takes to sustain that mission today * Dr. Chávez's path from a Denver neighborhood to a top engineering school he couldn't afford, a pivot to community college, and eventually the presidency of a university in a neighborhood that looks just like the one he grew up in * How Don Graham's time as a beat cop in Washington, DC after Vietnam shaped his understanding of what college access actually means * The federal scholarship program Graham helped push through a unanimous Republican Congress in 1998 to help DC students afford college * What Graham witnessed as an early Facebook board member — and what it taught him about giving young people real responsibility * The sale of The Washington Post to Jeff Bezos in 2013, why it happened, and what Graham thinks of the paper today * San Antonio's deep economic and cultural ties to Mexico — and how tariffs are affecting the local auto manufacturing economy * What it means to be an optimist about American democracy after decades at the center of Washington life RECOMMENDED NEXT LISTEN: ▶ 149. How AlamoPROMISE Continues Expanding College Access for San Antonians [https://www.bigcitysmalltown.com/149-how-alamopromise-continues-expanding-college-access-for-san-antonians/] — Stephanie Vasquez, Chief Program Officer for Alamo Promise, on what it takes to make college accessible to every Bexar County high school graduate — and what the program has learned from serving more than 30,000 Promise scholars. GET THE NEWSLETTER 📰 If you enjoyed this conversation, sign up for Bob Rivard's Midweek — sharp takes on San Antonio's politics, culture, and civic life, delivered to your inbox every week. Independent, nonpartisan, and free to read. Subscribe here. [https://bigcitysmalltown.kit.com/fb1825d442] -- -- CONNECT 📸 Connect on Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/bigcity.smalltown/] 🔗 Join us on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/robertjrivard/] 🎥 Subscribe on YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@bcstsatx] SPONSORS 🙌 Support the show & see our sponsors [https://www.bigcitysmalltown.com/sponsors/] THANK YOU ⭐ Leave a review on Apple Podcasts ⭐ Rate us on Spotify
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