Marianne favro is in san jose with the latest. Reporter in Sonoma County, you can now eatout side. In napa, you can get a haircut. But in santa clara, the process is much, much slower. Today, the Health Officer once again explained why shes okay with baby steps. If we make a change and then we dont pause and wait to see what the impact has been, then were blind. We cant we cant see what our next what our next action may do. Reporter and dr. Cody says it could take two to three weeks to fully understand the impacts of easing restrictions. For example, allowing construction. Covid very much behaves like a fire in fire season. And so we have dry tender everywhere. And we do not want to have a large fire again. Reporter dr. Cody may not be alone in her call to slow things down. After recent spike in icu covid19 cases, Sonoma County now says it will slow down its reopening plan, as well. Back in santa clara county, dr. Cody continues to make her case. Noting that any new spike is likely to
Profiletalked with high alumni that continue to shape the Business Community including. Organ stanley chairman ceo [indiscernible] well hear from james gorman at other chats we had up Columbia Business School and many of those topics, they are week. D this that included a top story war. Week, u. S. China trade however, economics editor warns of unintended consequences. U. S. s almost as if the and china same to be intent on twoding the world into separate spheres just like really globalization in reverse. Use a much more recent analogy, its like the period ii and the cold war when there was soviet blocked comiccon and western doingies really not commerce with each other. That was not good for prosperity anyone. Conversationst with the Columbia Business School this week. Talked about u. S. China trade. Theres too much to be lost on both sides. If the United States and china dont work together. That is right. Involved, yougos get other things aside from the economy involved Like National
2945. Stocks in 52, 1 of the broadest surges forward since 2019. This shows you the performance of all three majors on a monthly basis. The end we are watching june are in any major reversal looking at three solid weeks for the s p 500, the nasdaq and the dow jones. May itsee what we saw in is a mirror image of what we saw in may. Blip for this year, behind for investors. In onl lets check back this chart that is hanging on by a thread. Interesting to see what happens. It is the 10year yield. Much of 2018 hanging out around 3 , even higher but the risk off volatility of the Fourth Quarter and investors moving into bonds moving all the way in to the lows here. Right now clinging to 2 at the bottom of the trend channel. You can see in the past highs where the support has been there there has been a backup in rates. 2. 3 orear could be higher. This is confirmed for even deeper below 2 . Right now it looks like there is a chance we could see a backup in rates with the momentum looking to c
Be readyor anything. It is wonderful to be here talking with you today about your book. I want to first say what an extraordinary achievement the book is. The authoritative history that ive ever read in the School Choice movement. Its thoroughly researched and it really feels encyclopedic to me almost. Its everything that you would ever need to know. I wanted to first ask, im very familiar with your incredible work as an education reporter and i know a lot of education reporters have these sort of crystallizing moments in reporting with a classroom or in the family and we have a moment. I am curious to know if you have one of those moments that led you to start writing the book . I started thinking about School Choice movement when i was reporting about segregation in florida and as a part of that, we interviewed our team interviewed dozens of families trying to escape these and i was sort of struck by the options were. There were other Public Schools, Charter Schools and then a sum of
Heurich was 11 years old living in germany. In 1853, she was a white woman from new york, moved down here and built the first africanamerican Teaching School for free africanamericans in washington, d. C. This is before the civil war. It was also called the miner school for colored girls. Mytrilla came in 1851 and only had 100 in her pocket when she came. Most people thought she would be arrested or killed when she said what she wanted to do. And although there were abolitionists who sympathized with her cause it was like her own independent project. I first thought for a while when i first read about the story she might have been some kind of tool of the Abolition Movement, really, she came down here all on her own at the start. She first established the school by the force of her own will, something almost unimaginable, giving the cultural firsts that opposed her at the time. Remember, this is a woman who came by herself to a city she never visited before, a city where slavery was st