I was happy to answer this call. I thought, this will be very interesting, in my mind, at least and predictable, but i learned it was a very very very, very wide subject. I hope you will profit as well. Living in new york, i was very, very fortunate to be living close to moma, the museum of modern art and the whitney and i take full advantage with my students. I think art can be a really profitable way to teach history, and i would be curious. Art for artyou use history in your own classes . I would say a good number of you. Briefly, how do you use our . I do not know if we can get the mic. Just a couple of i use it in my class and to establish Historical Context or perhaps multiple perspectives on an issue. Ms. Friedman mmhmm. Anybody else . History, and i do this with vocab were kids for pictures of vocabulary. Its not special art by any means, but yeah. Ms. Friedman ok. Also and ihistory use it to show cultural changes and things like that. Just to put it in context. Ms. Friedman ex
Thats 90 miles from Yellowstone National park, drawing many tourists to the city. We will learn about the history and the surrounding region. When i first moved, there were so many named story. A story streets, story motors, story distributing. Lot written on him. There was a historian who said bozeman is misnamed. Personally i think bozeman has a better ring to it than any of those other options. I was curious about nelsons story, since his name was plastered all over the place. Has not been a fulllength biography ever written about him. Over the years i put it together. Nelson story was one of the more successful western capitalists in the history of the American West. If you take a step back and try and name others, you come up with Leland Stanford in california. Im sure that name rings a bell area you would have John Creighton from nebraska. John e live from northern colorado, and all of those people were very good. They started the most part and goldmining. After making some headw
It is a rare treat to have the curtain pulled back from those who were on the front lines of protecting the president and the first family. We are honored to be joined tonight by three secret Service Agents Whose Service almost approached 82 years. 22 year veteran of the secret service. Larry was honored with the u. S. Secret Service Valor Award for his role in stopping an assassination attempt on president gerald ford in september of 1975 in sacramento. Later larry served 25 years as the security chief of the United States committee. Joe clancy is with us tonight. Joe served on the protective details of residence, including president bush, or trailblazers as he wouldve called them. President bush with strobe laser. Joes nearly 30 year career culminated in 2015 when president obama named joe the 24th director of the u. S. Secret service. He was in charge. Today joe is the chief Security Officer at comcast corporation. Nick is with us tonight. He served 30 years in the secret service. H