Europe and why debts keep rising so much in spain and in italy and what can be done. Tom we have an important interview in the next hour on the virus. We will go to mount sinai for that. I am next to the outside i manhattan hospital in new york. I will tell you, it is an extra ordinary monday. I know you see in in london, we see it in new york, with quiet streets and politicians really needing to adapt. My major message in this hour is the complete readjustment and struggle that global wall street is having trying to gauge this contraction. I love what bruce kasman said at jp morgan. He looks back and harkens back to the contractions that we saw before world war ii. Francine i think we had an update on friday from goldman sachs, j. P. Morgan on the Second Quarter gbp just gdp in the u. S. , and the numbers are nothing like we have ever seen before. So i know we have a full round of update just on the lockdown, different in new york than it is in london. Boris johnson saying that people
Frenzy in the west wing. Everybody is shooting at everybody. Ive served six administrations. Ive never seen chaos. If they want to call it chaos, fine. We call it suck. The president facing growing criticisms of sudden announcement on tariffs of steel and aluminum coming into the u. S. On an actual car the actual impact will be a fraction of 1 . Youre going to see a lot of good things happen. Good morning,000. Were grateful to you for your company as always. Im christi paul. Im martin savidge. Welcome to wakeup call at 2 00 a. M. Thank you. Weve got a top story, something were watching very disclosely this deadly bomb cyclone impacting northeast. Violent winds knocked down trees, destroying homes. Take a look at the latest. You can hear just how strong those winds are. At least five people are now reported dead as a result of this storm and the worst isnt over yet. The torrential rains causing widespread flooding. Another major concern violent winds tearing down power lines. More than
supreme court people protection jurisprudence. her scholarship has appeared in some of the foremost law journals within the legal academy. in february of this year oxford university press published professor brown-nagin s first book, courage to dissent: atlanta and the long history of the civil rights movement your asocial legal history about lawyers, courts and community based activism during the civil rights era. this highly anticipated work has already garnered widespread acclaim. most notably for members of our community, the book features some of the lawyers who are integral players in the legal odyssey that ultimately led to the desegregation of the university of georgia. this will be the subject of her talk today. if you have questions at the end of her talk, please use a microphone stand at the front to ask the question. and at this time please join me in welcoming professor tomiko brown-nagin. [applause] good afternoon. thank you so much for that kind introductio
searchable database to find links. a brand new look and feel. a great way to watch and enjoy authors and books. what are you reading this summer? .. because of his role in the legal history of the movement, civil rights movement, many, many books that are written about the legal history of the movement revolve around thurgood marshall and his conception of equality. well, my book is different. it begins with the question of what would the legal history of the civil rights movement look like if the work of thurgood marshall and the work of the supreme court justices weren t so central to the story? what would we see? who would we see? and my book answers that question with this observation. if we move those familiar persons and institutions away from the center of analysis, we can see unsung lawyers and activists at the local level. people who contributed a lot to the social and legal world that we live in today. people who sometimes disagreed with thurgood marshall and hi
more than once a year, but it was different, and i loved it. and now i m reading one novel at a time. but on my i ipad. thank you. thank you so much, gail. we still have a few minutes left and love to take any questions if any of you have them. please, step up to the microphone. .. we do get request because and people see us on c-span or whatever, they want us books published in other parts of the the country independently and on a self-published platform generally linger on the shelf and don t find much of a market. but if it is by local author, you can come in and i get it. we are happy to be that place where they can.people to come by their book. i would like to ask about library acquisitions and how that is trending because for a lot of folks, 26 or even $12.99 is not something they can do on a regular basis but the library is where they can find a lot of books. but i m wondering about per capita? with the exposure, my suspicion based on montgomery county library is t