Changed in interpretation. The Gettysburg College Civil War Institute provided the video for this event. Toso, beth i would like start by getting a feel for what led you to Civil War History and the career path you have taken. Beth that is a good question. Most people when you ask them that question who are in this field have these glowing nostalgic memories of being taken to the battlefield as children and that is not my story. My family visited some Historic Sites but not really, not that many. For us, or for me, it was when i got to high school and was considering a lot of careers in science and engineering, but realized what i really loved was history. I just happened to i was boarding class one day because i bored my book i was in class one day because i forgot my book. I picked book off the shelf. The teacher also taught a civil war class. The people i read about were fascinating. That is what fascinated me, these people who were dealing with the most cataclysmic moments of their
alameda county coroner office. lillian kim is leif at the hayward police department. lillian we expected the i.d. process to take a little longer process to take a little longer. reporter: dan it would have taken longer if the coroner rae layed on dna testing but it appears it didn t have to come to that. hayward police haven t said how the coroner office identified the skeletal maynes but likely they made the match through dental records. since dna test typically take weeks. volunteer search team discovered the bed is the interpleasanton. now that it has been identified as that of missing nursing stunt michelle lae the next step is to figure out how she died. part of what they will did is detail analysis of the corpse and body to see if there s a head trauma, skull fracture to explain how did the death occur. reporter: tonight development come on the same daily accused killer appeared in court. east at the been didn t enter a plea but was appointed an attorney. the 27-ye