Granddaughter talk about her. It is presented by the Truman Library institute. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to truman president ial library and museum. Im the director here. It is a pleasure to welcome you all out. Appreciate you being here to enjoy this program and celebrate an important legacy with us. We are in the legacy business. When we celebrate Harry Trumans legacy, what we find out is we end up celebrating a lot of other legacies as well. I think that speaks volumes will who Harry Truman was. I want to begin by thanking some folks tonight. I want to thank the Truman Library institute, of course, who sponsor so much of what we do. They are our nonprofit partner. We are indebted to them for all the great things we do. For bringing this statue of Alice Dunnigan to the library and for helping us have this program here tonight. We are gathered here tonight to celebrate the life of a pioneering reporter who was the first africanamerican female journalist with white Ho
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to truman president ial library and museum. Im the director here. It is a pleasure to welcome you all out. Appreciate you being here to enjoy this program and celebrate an important legacy with us. We are in the legacy business. When we celebrate Harry Trumans legacy, what we find out is we end up celebrating a lot of other legacies as well. I think that speaks volumes will who Harry Truman was. I want to begin by thanking some folks tonight. I want to thank the Truman Library institute, of course, who sponsor so much of what we do. They are our nonprofit partner. We are indebted to them for all the great things we do. For bringing this statue of Alice Dunnigan to the library and for helping us have this program here tonight. We are gathered here tonight to celebrate the life of a pioneering reporter who was the first africanamerican female journalist with white House Press Corps credentials. Thats very significant. It happened during the tru
It is presented by the Truman Library institute. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to truman president ial library and museum. Im the director here. It is a pleasure to welcome you all out. Appreciate you being here to enjoy this program and celebrate an important legacy with us. We are in the legacy business. When we celebrate Harry Trumans legacy, what we find out is we end up celebrating a lot of other legacies as well. I think that speaks volumes will who Harry Truman was. I want to begin by thanking some folks tonight. I want to thank the Truman Library institute, of course, who sponsor so much of what we do. They are our nonprofit partner. We are indebted to them for all the great things we do. For bringing this statue of Alice Dunnigan to the library and for helping us have this program here tonight. We are gathered here tonight to celebrate the life of a pioneering reporter who was the first africanamerican female journalist with white House Press Corps credentials. T
By a fellow with the american Enterprise Institute and an assistant professor and Studies Director at a college. Good morning to you both. Starting with you, last week, critical Race Theory getting a lot of attention in part because the heads of major Teachers Unions defending educators who teach it in the classroom. So begin the discussion with first explaining exactly what critical Race Theory is, but also how prevalent it is in american classrooms today. Good morning. So happy to be back. So just thinking about what critical Race Theory is, i have a simpler definition if you will, so it is a framework to analyze and challenge racism in structures, processes and discourses. Simply put, it help us to notice. It helps us to see the ways that systemic racism operate and the ways that it is embedded in structures and processes that occur in the United States. Thinking about how prevalent it is in schools, it is an academic and legal framework, so it is one that people often dont and Wont
Assistant professor and Studies Director at a college. Good morning to you both. Starting with you, last week, critical Race Theory getting a lot of attention in part because the heads of major Teachers Unions defending educators who teach it in the classroom. So begin the discussion with first explaining exactly what critical Race Theory is, but also how prevalent it is in american classrooms today. Good morning. So happy to be back. So just thinking about what critical Race Theory is, i have a simpler definition if you will, so it is a framework to analyze and challenge racism in structures, processes and discourses. Simply put, it help us to notice. It helps us to see the ways that systemic racism operate and the ways that it is embedded in structures and processes that occur in the United States. Thinking about how prevalent it is in schools, it is an academic and legal framework, so it is one that people often dont and Wont Encounter unless they are in graduate studies which is ho