From people at work for years. The Premier League SeAson might not even be over, but the Transfer Speculation is starting. England Captain Harry Kane is understood to be frustrated at tottenham, with widespread reports over his long term future. We are live at the royal horticultural Societys Brand new garden, Rhs Bridgwater in salford. Its opening has been delayed by a year because of covid but it opens today and looks blooming marvellous. Good morning from the top of the London Eye. What a view on a gin clear view, you can see a0 kilometres in every direction as far as Windsor Castle. Many of us starting dry with some sunshine but through the day, further showers developing some with hail. All the details later in the programme. Its Tuesday 18th may. Our top story. Ministers are stepping up calls for people to book a Coronavirus Vaccination as soon as theyre offered one, amid increasing concern over the indian variant. Its now spread to 86 local councils, with more than 2,000 confirm
News 12 s Book Club Series, Curated by Amazon Books, Features Local Tri-State Area Authors and Settings Long Island, New York - News 12 today announced an.
Michael Hines’ book “A Worthy Piece of Work: The Untold Story of Madeline Morgan and the Fight for Black History in Schools” is the latest selection in our Black Voices Book Club Series. It tells the story of how Black history came to Chicago schools.
Getting to the why is the theme of the book in the latest installment of our Black Voices Book Club Series. “Hood Healing: Interviews With Some of Chicago’s Most Prolific Voices In Media and Black Culture” unpacks the generational trauma Black people experience and how that impacts communities.
John McGowan
7:00 pm EST
John McGowan (Fellow, 2017–18), John W. and Anna H. Hanes Distinguished Professor Emeritus of English, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Host: Marlene Daut (Fellow, 2016–17), Professor and Associate Director of the Carter G. Woodson Institute for African-American and African Studies, University of Virginia
In
Pragmatist Politics, John McGowan suggests that perhaps the best response to the cynicism and despair that permeate contemporary American politics is a return to pragmatism. Offering an expansive vision of what the United States should be, McGowan combines the thinking of philosophers like John Dewey and William James with the ethos of comedy to imagine what American life could be like if we more fully embraced values such as love, forgiveness, and generosity that are too often left out of our political discourse.