Series of the year and delighted with social professor at the graduate school of education. Dr. Is an expert on the relationship between education, racial and Ethnic Diversity and the cultural process and first book called balancing analyzing children of immigrants attending low performing high schools in new york city, and comparatively with london i wont go into details of the second book topic of our exciting her exciting talk today. In addition to her books, natasha has many, many, many, many papers that are published in journals and popular presses including american journal of education. British education ethnic and racial studies. L. A. Times and Washington Post as an aside for those of you of my students ive long assigned one of her pieces for our classes which is a beautiful review of the cultural explanation of educational equalities. She also has numerous number of grants awards from the sociological association, National Signs foundation, and Russell Stage Foundation. Compl
Lunchtime lecture series at u. S. Capital historical society. I want to end the series with something instructive, of course but also, not light and frothy by any means but something a , little less serious. By that i made, there is going to be a lot of visuals and i figure visual intelligence is something we can all lay a little bit of a claim to. For those of you who need the more traditional scaffolding, like an outline, we can start off with a few pages of that. For those of you to respond to competitiveness, have a couple door prizes i will give out at the end to people who can answer a couple questions that might occur during the talk. But mostly this is going to be visual. We are going to wait through to going to wade are through two centuries, works of art, mostly paintings, stump statuary of George Washington portrayed in art i should say a little bit about myself. They say i am chief historian, i am not an art historian, but anyone who appreciates the multiplicity of doing hi
Lunchtime lecture series at u. S. Capital historical society. I want to end the series with something instructive, of course but also, not light and frothy by any means but something a , little less serious. By that i made, there is going to be a lot of visuals and i figure visual intelligence is something we can all lay a little bit of a claim to. For those of you who need the more traditional scaffolding, like an outline, we can start off with a few pages of that. For those of you to respond to competitiveness, have a couple door prizes i will give out at the end to people who can answer a couple questions that might occur during the talk. But mostly this is going to be visual. We are going to wait through to going to wade are through two centuries, works of art, mostly paintings, stump statuary of George Washington portrayed in art i should say a little bit about myself. They say i am chief historian, i am not an art historian, but anyone who appreciates the multiplicity of doing hi
Digiacomantonio. I wanted to end the series with something instructive, of course, but also, not light and frothy by any means, but something a little less serious. For those of you to respond to competitiveness, i have a couple door prizes i will give out at the end to people who can answer a couple questions that might occur during the talk, but mostly this is going to be visual. We are going to wade through two centuries of works of art, mostly paintings, some statuary of George Washington portrayed in art. I should say a little bit about myself. I said i am chief historian, i am not an art historian, but anyone who appreciates the of doing city history, understands you have to work with art understands that is how people express themselves when they are at their best and sometimes their worst, as well see. When i taught a course at Gw University on George Washington, i made sure there was one lecture on George Washington in the art and i refined it a little bit for todays purposes,
Streak due to data out of china. Joe it didnt feel dramatic at any point, but after a string of gains, we had a real selloff. Alix you could see it starting u. K. He miners in the that spread over here to the u. S. In particular, the u. S. Metal and mining etf, falling the most since 2011. Not sustainr could the rally. Joe japanese borrowing costs, sovereign debt, the yields continue to collapse. This is a chart of the fouryear bond. Rate 40year government bond. Its continuing with disappointment and growth and inflation. Scarlet in currency, speaking of japan, the yen getting a safe haven bid for the second day, stronger than 15 of the 16 major currencies. The pound had the biggest decline and a most two weeks. All of that stemming from the commodities market and the continuing route. You had oil at one point breaking above the 100day moving average, but could not sustain it, then declined over 4 . Goldman sachs saying you have to short copper, saying it could fall another 20 . Squeez