Your television provider. Welcome back to our centennial speaker series. Thank you for joining us for today its event featuring doctor shen that garrett scotch. If this is your first time joining us my name is donna and i have the honor of the school of business. 2020 marks a very special year for the Gabelli School. It is our hundred anniversary and we are celebrating 100 years of purpose driven bridge while business education. Since our inception we believed in the power of partnership to inform and lead change. I would very much like to thank the Gabelli Center for Global Security analysis and our wonderful partners, the museum of American Finance and the cfa society of new york who is cosponsoring todays conversation. One of the goals of the centennial series is to shine the light on the important history plays in shaping the future. In her latest book, banking on freedom, black freedom and u. S. Finance before the new deal, she explores a rich period of a black financial innovatio
The freeman foundation. By judy and Peter Blum Kovler foundation; pursuing solutions for americas neglected needs. And by contributions to this pbs station from viewers like you. Thank you. The governor of the state of michigan federal and state Law Enforcement are working together extremists never succeed in their plans, particularlyhen they target our dearly elected leaders. Six men have been arrested who are planning to abduct the governor and ovehrow the State Government. It looks like the nex president ial debate will go ahead after all. Now, President Trump has agreed to do it facetoface. A Record Number of coronavirus casesave been recorded worldwide. More than 330,000 new infections wereng noted in a day. We will lookt why theories known as qanon have been a major qanon has become actually planningifypes of violence in the real world. Lets begin with this pideve story in michigan. The fbi say it is charging six people in a plot tohr ove the State Government and to kidnap theove
Test test captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2008 young men and old men defending the frontlines, the home front, and others had fled because they knew they were in trouble with allied authorities that could arrest them. The chief physician and the head female nurse who were going to meet in a moment they decided they would stay with the patients and they were immediately arrested. Investigating officers we know they uncovered and here you see a photograph of that, 581 mass graveses in the Institution Cemetery and found the death register showing 15,000 patients dying, which is not what you would expect in an ordinary institution where mortality is 2 to 5 of the population. Just given that some people are older, elderly and might pass away in such an institution. They contact the United States work crimes branch, which is now located, because its so early the war is still going on, its in paris, to investigate this scenario. Now its just seeing those images is so startli
Ill even omit my customary lame professor humor about the ncaa tournament, for example, thats how serious this is. Lets think for a minute though about where were situated, what were working on here. In this last third of the course that we started last week, were dealing with the post revolutionary era. Weve built this idea that something radical and transformative happens to music nick the 1960s. You worked hard over the course of several weeks to establish those ideas. And we cant leave without justice a kind of baby boomer nostalgia for the days that were. What weve been trying to deal with is the sense of disappointment that the revolution somehow end nd the early 1970s, that popular music became a disappointment as thetically, politically. Thats the cliche. We saw plenty of evidence for it. What weve tried to do is say o kay, maybe if we shift perspective, if we dont simply buy the asumgtss thpgss that we the age of countercultural music i we do that, we may see music engaged in
And im the director of Community Partnerships for theMassachusetts Historical Society. Our program this evening is a seasonal, its a look at the tradition of Summer Reading we are joined by professor donna harringtonlueker on her new publication gavin kleespies, 19th century publishing the rise of Summer Reading. She is a passer in Newport Rhode island and she has an undergraduate degree from rhode island and phd. As a former magazine writer and editor, Research Interests include 19thcentury print culture, womens magazines on any period and radical or alternative press. Before we begin id like to extend a special welcome to anyone joining the Virtual Program for the first time. If youre not familiar with the Massachusetts Historical Society we are the first Historical Society in america and have been preserving publishing and sharing our history since 1791. We hold a collection of 14 million manuscript pages including the papers of the first three president s of the unitedstates. Or im