Listen to free audiobook with a 30 day free trial :
https://esound.space/audible
Title: The Bob Edwards Show, Dr. Jerry M. Lewis, Dr. Patrick Coy, and Charles Cobb, May 4, 2010
Author: Bob Edwards
Format: Original Recording
Length: 57 mins
Language: English
Release date: 05-04-10
Publisher: XM Satellite Radio
Genres: Radio & TV, Great Interviews
Summary:
On May 4, 1970, a student protest against the Vietnam War on the Kent State campus ended in tragedy when members of the Ohio National Guard shot and killed four and wounded nine Kent State students. Dr. Jerry M. Lewis witnessed the campus shootings and since then has been involved in researching and memorializing about the fatal incident. Dr. Patrick Coy is director of Kent States Center for Applied Conflict Management which was founded as a result of the shootings. The two will discuss the 40th anniversary of the historical events and the role of student activism in American culture.
Then, following the Greensboro sit-ins fifty years ago, young black students formed a revolutionary grassroots organization. Charles Cobb was one of the founding members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee or SNCC (pronounced "Snick"). He describes the events of early 1960 and how their methods helped paved the way for civil rights. [Broadcast Date: May 4, 2010]
Contact: [email protected]
https://esound.space/audible
Title: The Bob Edwards Show, Dr. Jerry M. Lewis, Dr. Patrick Coy, and Charles Cobb, May 4, 2010
Author: Bob Edwards
Format: Original Recording
Length: 57 mins
Language: English
Release date: 05-04-10
Publisher: XM Satellite Radio
Genres: Radio & TV, Great Interviews
Summary:
On May 4, 1970, a student protest against the Vietnam War on the Kent State campus ended in tragedy when members of the Ohio National Guard shot and killed four and wounded nine Kent State students. Dr. Jerry M. Lewis witnessed the campus shootings and since then has been involved in researching and memorializing about the fatal incident. Dr. Patrick Coy is director of Kent States Center for Applied Conflict Management which was founded as a result of the shootings. The two will discuss the 40th anniversary of the historical events and the role of student activism in American culture.
Then, following the Greensboro sit-ins fifty years ago, young black students formed a revolutionary grassroots organization. Charles Cobb was one of the founding members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee or SNCC (pronounced "Snick"). He describes the events of early 1960 and how their methods helped paved the way for civil rights. [Broadcast Date: May 4, 2010]
Contact: [email protected]
Fler avsnitt av How to Get Audiobook in Radio & TV, Great Interviews
Visa alla avsnitt av How to Get Audiobook in Radio & TV, Great InterviewsHow to Get Audiobook in Radio & TV, Great Interviews med Free Audiobook finns tillgänglig på flera plattformar. Informationen på denna sida kommer från offentliga podd-flöden.
