Brief bio give you a very brief by you. She has worked at the Washington Post since 2000 and see previous of reported the philadelphia inquirer, the Charlotte Observer and last but not least the bryn mawr haverford scholar news. [laughing] as as a former college newspapr personon myself, i want to pay tribute to that. [applause] the 2015 Pulitzer Prize among many other accolades for her work on misconduct inside the secret secret servicl be discussing today, and in addition to this book, zero fail the rise and fall of the secret service, we will be discussing today, she is w also written two other books, a very stable genius donald j. Trumps testing of america come with her colleague philip rucker, and also i alone can fix it donald j. Trumps catastrophic final year. So please give her a warm tucson welcome. Thank you. [applause] so, thank you so muchg here today your book captures the systemic Management Issues inside the secret service as well as the individual heroism of agents when
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Learn about “The Invention and Evolution of Slavery” with Rappahannock Institute for Lifelong Learning
Warsaw, VA –Rappahannock Community College’s Rappahannock Institute for Lifelong Learning (RILL) will offer several classes this summer with some held in person and others on Zoom.
When the first Africans arrived at Jamestown in 1619, there was no provision in English law for perpetual servitude. It would take most of a century to create the legal structures to support slavery. When those provisions were finally in place, the institution was not static; it continued to change. By the same token, emancipation was not brought about by a single proclamation or victory in battle; it was the result of a struggle that was already under way before the American Revolution began. This class will trace the rise and fall of American Slavery in a series three lectures.
Posted On May 12, 2021
Rappahannock Community College’s Rappahannock Institute for Lifelong Learning (RILL) will offer several classes this summer with some held in-person and others on Zoom.
“Church and State in Colonial and Revolutionary Virginia” will examine how Virginia moved from a royal colony with few dissenters and a well-established Church of England to an independent commonwealth that declared religious freedom to be a natural right of mankind. Robert Teagle, executive director of Historic Christ Church and Museum in Weems, will teach the class on May 26, June 2 and June 9 from 10 a.m. to noon each day in the Bayne Center. Advanced registration and payment of $35 is required.