patriotic approach to u.s. history. dr. kathleen o toole is the assistant provost for the k through 12 education at hillsdale and she joins me now. dr. o toole, it is so great to have you on the show today. you know, the 1619 project put out by new york times journalists is just kind of taking over. i mean, some schools are jumping on board, hook, line and sinker in providing this to their students and making it part of their curriculum. what separates what you re doing and what you re providing teachers and parents versus the 1619 project? well, the 1776 curriculum hillsdale 1776 curriculum is a reflection of what s been going on at hillsdale college for 175 years. we have been involved in k through 12 education for 30 years. and we know the best way to teach students to understand our history is to give them the evidence. give them the primary source
Patrick (Patie) Considine - Cratloe
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Hillsdale College Releases 1776 Curriculum
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O Toole
SEATTLE (Legal Newsline) -The City of Seattle was correct when it fired a police officer who punched a handcuffed woman in the face and fractured her skull, a Washington appeals court ruled, rejecting the police union’s argument a 15-day suspension was enough.
Officer Adley Shepherd was responding to a domestic disturbance when a handcuffed woman wearing Doc Marten boots kicked him in the face as he tried to place her in the back of a squad car. Shepherd reacted by punching her in the face and causing a small fracture under her right eye.
Seattle’s police chief Kathleen O’Toole decided to fire Shepherd for violating the city’s use-of-force policy. Seattle has been operating under a settlement agreement with the federal Justice Department since 2012 and had recently revised that policy following complaints police used excessive force dealing with civil-rights protests over the summer.