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Embassy aligned with the nazis. From the International Spy museum, this is about an hour. Peter i am the executive director of the spy museum. Im happy to have you here for what will be an interesting program. This happened during most of our lifetimes. It will resonate with you quite a bit. A our speaker this morning is natalie. We have worked with her at the museum before. She is a writer, director, producer of educational tors in washington. She develops them herself and does chiltons programs. She is codeveloper of what is our tour, the spy museum city tour of d. C. Which we do in partnership with gray line. She has been featured in a number of local outlets, washington washingtonian magazine, the post, the times. She has been on the History Channel and a number of others. She has been director of the Silver Spring inclusive theater. She has spent a lot of of time on this particular case, which i was discussing with her this morning. Natalie we are very glad to have you here. Natal
They are doing so because its surveillance needs require that degree of storage and security. The chief Information Officers ordered Government Agencies to move to the cloud, and as a result even civilian agencies are turning to cloud services. Monday night on the communicators on cspan two. Joint American History tv for live coverage of ceremonies marking the one 30th the 150th anniversary of the surrender at appomattox. Generally met senator you general u. S. Grant and surrendered, effectively ending the civil war. We will be live from appomattox courthouse on both a pool ninth and 12th as historians including edit airs reflect on the last battles and reflect on the legacy of appomattox. Will also bring you key moments from 150 years ago and we will open at our phone lines to take phone calls from authors. The surrender at appomattox. Live april 9 and 12th on cspan3. Up next on American History tv, Natalie Zanin tells the story of an americanborn wife of an english diplomat who becam
Of the spy museum. I delighted to have you here for what will be an interesting program. This happened in most of our lifetimes and, it will, i think resonate with you quite a bit. Ours weaker this morning is natalie zanin. We have worked with her before. She is a writer and producer of educational toys and washington. She developed some herbs cells develop some herself and does childrens museums. She is codeveloper of what is our tour, thise spy museum of the sea, is that interest you, it can certainly be booked. She has been featured in a number of local outlets the post, the times. She has been on the history channel, and a number of others. She has been director of the Silver Spring inclusive theater. She has spent a lot of of time on this particular case, which i was discussing with her this morning. Natalie, we are very glad to have you here. Please help me welcome natalie zanin. [applause] natalie that was a wonderful introduction. Thank you, peter. Good morning. Im going to be
Checked on this one. How much did the lost cause. Influence textbooks in writing southern hip history . There is one answer that it does influence the textbook southerners wrote. They made an effort to write textbooks that would preserve the southern, white southern interpretation of the war. Two things to keep in mind. The majority of southerners white or black, were not getting much history in Public Schools in the south to begin with. They just didnt go to school long enough. High schools, and most of the south, high schools dont emerge until the end of the century except for major towns and cities. It is not as though these textbooks were going to be widely used anyways. Beyond that there is the problem that Southern State governments never compelled anyone to use specific textbooks. They would have recommended list. They didnt impose them. They didnt have the bureaucracy to do that type of work. Throughout the 19th and 20th century there are instances of the udc being Uphold High