Welcome back, everyone to session to the second session of the impending crisis symposium. It is a very great pleasure now for me to introduce dr. Adam ip smith, the edward osborn, professor of u. S. Political history and director of the Rothermere American Institute at the university of oxford with a specialism in the political history of the United States in the 19th century. Dr. Smiths perspective will be invaluable to our discussions today. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome dr. Adam smith. Thank you very much. Thank you very much, rob. And good morning, everyone. Its wonderful to see you all here. And its fantastic honor for me to have been invited to take part in this symposium. Its always great to have a reason to come back to richmond, which is a city that i like very much indeed. My talk this morning is going to build, i think, i hope very nicely on Richard Blackett talk, which you just heard, the fugitive slave act of 1850, which was obviously the centerpiece of what he was
Welcome back, everyone to session to the second session of the impending crisis symposium. It is a very great pleasure now for me to introduce dr. Adam ip smith, the edward osborn, professor of u. S. Political history and director of the Rothermere American Institute at the university of oxford with a specialism in the political history of the United States in the 19th century. Dr. Smiths perspective will be invaluable to our discussions today. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome dr. Adam smith. Thank you very much. Thank you very much, rob. And good morning, everyone. Its wonderful to see you all here. And its fantastic honor for me to have been invited to take part in this symposium. Its always great to have a reason to come back to richmond, which is a city that i like very much indeed. My talk this morning is going to build, i think, i hope very nicely on Richard Blackett talk, which you just heard, the fugitive slave act of 1850, which was obviously the centerpiece of what he was
But one out of my class that i have no, i never thought about. Welcome back, everyone to session to the second session of the impending crisis symposium. It is a very great pleasure now for me to introduce dr. Adam ip smith, the edward osborn, professor of u. S. Political history and director of the Rothermere American Institute at the university of oxford with a specialism in the political history of the United States in the 19th century. Dr. Smiths perspective will be invaluable to our discussions today. Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome dr. Adam smith. Thank you very much. Thank you very much, rob. And good morning, everyone. Its wonderful to see you all here. And its fantastic honor for me to have been invited to take part in this symposium. Its always great to have a reason to come back to richmond, which is a city that i like very much indeed. My talk this morning is going to build, i think, i hope very nicely on Richard Blackett talk, which you just heard, the fugitive slave
Nightmare is over. Just moments ago Danelo Cavalcante was seen here exiting the police van, and we are told he will go back behind bars for the rest of his life for firstdegree murder, but first he must be processed and officials wrapped the News Conference with stunning new details on how cavalcante was taken into custody. Here is some of what we learned. Just after midnight a Burglar Alarm went off at a residence that was inside the perimeter where they were searching. They went to that house, but they did not find anything there. Around 1 00 a. M. In that area a dea aircraft picked up a thermal heat signal. They saw some kind of heat s signature on the ground so they sent teams on the ground to surround that area. However, a thunderstorm moves in and the plane has to leave so what they tried to do is they tried to keep the Tactical Forces on the ground surrounding that area trying to keep whatever was inside just after 8 00 a. M. The teams close in on where that heat source was. Its
The department of paleobiology at the Smithsonians National museum of Natural History has received a speech in from harvard university. Previously, he as Vice President arch and at the Royal Ontario Museum in toronto and was a professor of zoology at the university of toronto. From 2004 to 2009, cancer served as associate director for research and collections at the National Museum of natural. He published extensively on dinosaurs and other extinct vertebrates. Hes done a lot of media appearances with america and europe, and with that, please join in welcoming our very own monsters. Okay. Good evening. Its my pleasure to talk to you today about one of the strangest episodes in the history of science in the united, the infamous bone wars. This happened during the 19th century, and it seemed for many years my paleontology had sort of a dark shadow over it because thought this was really a science for very strange people. But the thing was that over time we realized that in fact these bon