Minutes when you have a 30s remaining, you will hear a chime indicating your time is almost up. When your allotted time is reached, i will announce that your time is up and take the next person queue to speak. We will take Public Comment from persons in city hall first and then open the Remote Access lines for those calling in remotely to submit their testimony. Please call for. 156550001 and enter access code. 266 a1565619 8 pound pound. You should be able to listen to the hearing live. Please wait for the item youre interested in speaking to and for the Public Comment to be announced to comment, you must press star three to raise your hand. Once you have raised your hand, you will hear the prompt you have raised your hand to ask a question. Please wait to speak until the host calls on you. When you hear your you are unmuted. That is your indication to begin speaking for those joining via webex, please log in via the link found on todays agenda and enter passcode cpc 2023. Use the rai
[screaming] but i wont back down announcer its the late show with Stephen Colbert tonight. Its getting hot in hur plus, stephen welcomes diane lane and Patton Oswalt featuring live louis cato and the late show band. And now, live on tape from the ed sullivan theater in new york city, its Stephen Colbert [cheers and applause] stephen there you go there you go. Happy tuesday, happy tuesday. Tuesday. Stephen Stephen Stephen thank you, everybody out here, but they are. Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you, my friends. You are my friends. Romans, countrymen. Welcome one and all to the late show. Im your host, Stephen Colbert. [cheering] today down in washington was yet another clownish attempt by the g. O. P. To draw some sort of moral equivalency between joe biden and donald trump. This time, they heard testimony from special counsel robert hur, who was the guy in charge of the investigation into president bidens handling of classified documents. In hurs report, he declined to charge
Put them. I just think it is interesting because then it is kind of like the offramp including kind of like education or connection through regional more a Regional Network and relationship would be really important because i think it is like, we have a lot of programs to be able to help stabilize and help grow people at a certain level, but it is one thing like one thing we lack a lot of times when we do a lot of advocacy work is the ability to dream, right . So it is kind of like, what is that . What does that look like and how could that be likehow could it work for somebody you know, beyond the barriers that we see up front . So, yeah, this has been very helpful for me. Im sure for many of our millions of listeners tonight, and you know, just to say like, your presentation is excellent and like, the way that you explained a very complex and likeand challenging kind of like office and program i think has been really really outstanding, so thank you so much for tonight. Director tang
On the 1863 new york city draft riots. From july 13th16th, 1863, in the middle of the civil war, thousands of poor and working class why not new yorkers, incensed by equities in the new military draft, resentful about wartime hardship and enflamed by the lincoln administrations emancipation policies, looted and destroyed buildings, battled police, state militia and federal troops and brutally attack thed the citys africanamerican residents. In the century and a half since the new york city draft riots, numerous psychological lahrs, popular scholars, pular books and articles are their rated and examinedhe significant events that comprised the largest civil insurrection this u. S. History, d and most of these works have included illtrions of the olence that were published in its immediate aftermath in the weeklyewspapers. None of these many studies or popular accounts havesed these images as much more than endorsement for or reiteration of their text. Certainly, they have not served as e
And im going to be talking to you about my book today, the esthetic cold war, decolonization and, global literature. I want to thank the Commonwealth Institute of black studies for this event. Possible today. My project is about effect of the cold war, especially the effect of the competition between the United States and the soviet union on the literatures and the intellectual development of writing in the decolonizing world what was then called the third world is now called sometimes the developing world or the global south. So there have been lots of studies of cold war literature, most of them have focused on what happened in the United States and the soviet union, but as i started to do my research on this, i learned that the u. S. And soviet union in the competition between them had an incredible effect on Literary Development in other parts of the world, especially africa, asia and the caribbean, which were the focus of this book. Now of offering a sort of general overview and s