Columbia university, and it is a great pleasure to welcome back our guests, coauthors irina boar began and andre sold to have who will be talking about this book just out called the compatriots. Irina and andrei are cofounders of [inaudible] authors of the red web previously, a history of russias internet, governance of the internet, and then also the excellent book the new nobility, which was on looking at Russian Security services. So this, i guess, is the third part of the trilogy [laughter] and were, were so excited that youre, that youre here with us today. The i think just a couple of issues. One is we are filming this, so just a note to the audience as you engage and ask your questions, well can can you to identify yourself well ask you to identify yourself, and everything here is on the record in terms of the discussion. And then the, two, just in terms of format well start off with some general questions that ill ask our cono, sir, and then well segment coauthors and then well
They were living in stamford connecticut in 1963. It was north stanford thats where they have more land. It was our family. It may have been two or three. Thats how they segregated themselves. What you remember about being one of the few african americans. I felt very insecure shy, i did not want to be different in any other way. It was part of my experience there. For fifth grade i was the only black child in the school. I dont think they wanted us to have that level of isolationn they were not setting us out there as an experiment. He wanted to live there and have privacy. It was 45 minutes in new york city. They actually ran into housing discrimination. It was actually with the health of injury and simon. She lived in a community during the summertime that we were able to even find this particular property. We have a trophy room in our house. And wherever we went public it was a different experience. He would walk into the dining room and everyone would turn and look. Y the downspou
In 1963 . Well, it was north stanford so thats mad mow had more land it and was our family. In 63 may have been more. May have been two or three. In that section of the south. Very much signature segregated ourselves in stanford, connecticut. Host what would you. At that segregation, one of the fee africanamericans. Guest i remember in Elementary School children asking me if i bathed and me feeling very insecure, very shy, not didnt speak at all. I wouldnt ask questions. I wouldnt wear my glasses because i didnt want to be different in any other way and didnt understand that was part of my experience there, being the only black child in the fifth grade. So fifth grade i was the only black child in the school. Host why did mom and dad want you to have that . Or wanted you to live there. Guest i dont think they wanted to us have that level of isolation nor lack of really they werent sending us out there as an experiment. It was that my father was still playing for the brooklyn dodgers, w
Power shut off. How they plan to keep running safely. Schools are also shutting down, uc berkeley is among those shutting down. The scope of this power shut off is unprecedented but so are the catastrophic wildfires we have seen in recent years. Pg e is set to pull the plug on 800,000 homes and businesses starting just after midnight. It will begin to our north and then roll south across the bay area as the day progresses. More than 200,000 of those pg e customers are in the bay area. The outages are happening in eight of the nine bay area counties. Only San Francisco is exempt. People across the bay area are scrambling to get ready. Our Team Coverage begins with amberly at an open gas station where there were lines of cars waiting to fill up today. Reporter we are at a busy gas station on mountain boulevard in the oakland hills. The manager here tells me there have been lines all day. There are still people here filling up. Everywhere we went, people told us they did not want to take
We begin near caldecott tunnel with pg e and caltrans are hooking up generators to keep the tunnels open. No one wants to see those tunnels close. It certainly would, frank. This is a key area for the bay area, east bay transit. We understand they made the decision late tonight to supply the generators so that the four boards could remain open. Elsewhere the Power Outages are expected to have a huge impact on the businesses and water supply. Caltrans says the caldecott tunnel cannot on the operate safely without power. They have agreed to bring in four generators to keep the critical artery open. The tunnels have large fans to circulate to make sure the exhaust from the out reporter pg e plans to shut down power in some areas at noon. That could have an impact on some stations. Some may need to conserve water so there is enough for fire hydrants. We want to preserve the water supply. Well be asking people to conserve water and then ask them to shut off irrigation. Reporter Small Busine