You are about the increase in hostilities in yemen listen this is the moment to stop all the 30 action this is the moment also trades on fighting like we meet with the global news makers and talk about the stories that matter on the elders there are. Going to be ok look im sure thats truly the most infections of carla virus her capital in the rest not in new york city it is in the in the Navajo Nation the largest native american reservation in the United States now another hope people Indigenous People in the United States already a tiny minority under resourced as well how on earth are they going to cope with a coup or not virus that is what were going to be talking about today if you have ideas if you have experience if you have questions for i guess you know what to do a new to jump into the comments section and you can be part of the show. I will introduce the guests and they will introduce themselves to you had a time ran great to have you in the stream tell everybody who you are
Has deep roots. They have a very traditional culture, and the roles between men and women are still very well defined. When i think about it, palau is a tiny archipelago that thinks big really big. kauderael bintoriokeane palau is about 340 islands scattered in micronesia. Its about 500 miles from the philippines, in the western pacific. In palau, i think the last census was about 20 or 21 thousand population. Most people in palau live in koror, our main capital; the reason for that is thats where the government is, and most work, and schools. Japan took over palau, i think in 1914, from germany. They were in palau until the end of world war ii. Thats when the us won the war over the japanese. Right now, palau has a very Good Relationship with the United States. We signed into agreement a compact of free association, which says that the United States will protect palau for 50 years. Just recently, they renewed it, because it was signed in 1994. And so right now theres a small military
Intentions, what improvements did you suggest to retiring principal Maurice Weber . Guest well, one of the things that we wanted to get across is that its not so much that people intend to do bad things. Teachers dont go into education because they want to create achievement gaps, they dont go into education because they want some students to do well and others not to. But they do live in a society where race permeates everything about the society, right . Where the inequalities persist across a number of domains, and schools are no different. And part of the way this happens is not necessarily by the sort of oldfashioned racism where you have people organizing in the streets in ways that reproduce racial inequality, but the sort of daytoday dynamics that people engage in when theyre talking to someone, what they expect of them is and how that sort of manifests itself almost at a subconscious level where people act on their racial beliefs even when they dont intend to. And those are so
The most formidable people i have seen in my life have that balance. The ioc sports as the be all were involved in another part of their life the tunes you cannot out compete them. There is a way but when you build 16 million stadiums it is hard and not fair and to expect the kids to concentrate. Thank you very much. [applause] [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations]. Were kicking off a full day today with the new book, and president reagan talking about president interjects and present bush and the Science Behind but the whole the of civilrights and the relationship between the u. S. And israel in the American Space program. That is all, being applied today from boston for you can get the full schedule on line and follow us on twitter and facebook as well to give scheduled updates. Here is h. W. Brand from the 20th annual texas book festival live coverage on booktv from austin, texas. Good morning, good morning, and thank you so much for joining us at the 20th annual texas
[inaudible] [inaudible] managing senior tribal specialist with the [inaudible] her projects focus on and betting [inaudible] she is also the founder of every day eastern, a nonprofit with the conducting Community Engaged research, and Building Partnerships with tribal communities along the east coast. In addition to earning a bachelor of arts degree in international and humanitarian affairs from James Madison university, she earned a masters of social work from Columbia University and a masters of education from delta state university. She currently lives and richmond, virginia, with her husband, daughter, and dog. Please join me in welcoming diana gates. [applause] hi, everyone. I need to start by saying how interesting it is to take off a mask and talk to people in a room. We are like a year post introduction of covid and, so it is definitely interesting. [laughs] thank you all so much for coming tonight. The title of this discussion is exceptional women, virginia indian women in lea