Actor Rob Morrow, best known for playing an indentured doctor in the '90s television series Northern Exposure, stars in Numb3rs, a drama about an FBI agent who recruits his mathematical-genius brother to help solve challenging crimes. Morrow also is on the board of directors of Project ALS, which funds research to find effective treatments and a cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig's disease, a fatal neuromuscular ailment.

I like this approach of finding out how a person learns, whether it's auditory or visual or tactile. If you can find a way to make that information register in a deep enough way that it lasts, or you ignite a passion in the student, you're a great teacher.
My drama teacher, Mrs. Barbara, couldn't believe how self-destructive I was in terms of cutting school and failing. But she also knew that I had something going on in terms of acting, and she made that clear to me. That gave me the confidence to do what I should have been doing.
There were a couple times when, because of my reputation as a troublemaker, I was accused of calling a black teacher a pejorative. And I didn't do it. And I couldn't believe that I was being accused of it, because it was not something that would come out of my mouth.
Both. I ended up getting shipped off to a prep. It was an amazing experience, because it started to expose me to larger aspects of the world. It was a healthy environment, even though I didn't change my ways there.
I was a little bit of everything to everyone, which I think was experimenting with acting, in a way. In retrospect, I role-played around people: being a jock around jocks, a stoner to the stoners, and a cerebral to the cerebrals.
It became drama when I was fifteen. Up until then, I would have made fun of it.
It would be that everyone has the opportunity to go to school in a safe, healthy environment where knowledgeable, passionate people try to help them learn the things that are important to be a citizen on this planet.
I wish that there was a way to teach spirituality as an abstracted, unencumbered idea. Teach the common denominators that make us all one.
I try to teach my daughter patience. I'm trying to convey to her about channeling emotions, which is a hard thing to do. It has taken me my whole life. (Laughs.) But she'd be better off if she did, so I work on that with her.
A double cappuccino and a rotating selection from Katana, which is a restaurant in LA that I'm a little obsessed with right now.
My wife, Debbon.