News Clip7:40
PBS

Massive Financial Crisis

12th - Higher Ed
As part of his continuing series of reports making sense of business and the economy, Paul Solman talks to MIT finance professor Andrew Lo about why he's asking Congress to keep investigating the financial crisis.
News Clip7:38
PBS

Economics Is Not a Morality Play': Paul Krugman on Managing Financial Crisis

12th - Higher Ed
Economics correspondent Paul Solman sits down with economist Paul Krugman to discuss the provocative bestseller "The Great Deformation" by David Stockman and the government's role in mediating economic meltdowns. (see David Stockman June...
News Clip6:28
PBS

White Americans Feel Ceiling Effect

12th - Higher Ed
A new study shows that since 2006 whites have grown more pessimistic about their economic outlook while African-Americans and Latinos have grown more optimistic. Ray Suarez talks with Matt Barreto of Latino Decisions and Ellis Cose,...
News Clip5:48
PBS

Sen. Duckworth writes of resiliency, healing in her book that’s a ‘love letter’ to America

12th - Higher Ed
Sen. Duckworth Writes Of Resiliency, Healing In Her Book That Is A ‘Love Letter’ To America
News Clip3:23
PBS

Take a 360 tour of President Lincoln's summer retreat

12th - Higher Ed
Like many presidents before him, President Donald Trump spent part of the summer away from the White House, taking a 17-day Òworking vacationÓ at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey. President Abraham Lincoln could relate. To get...
News Clip9:02
PBS

Kenya Elephants

12th - Higher Ed
Widespread illegal poaching in the African wild is threatening elephants and putting them at risk of disappearing in 10 to 15 years. Using some of the same techniques developed to fight terrorism, a new intelligence-led effort...
News Clip10:18
PBS

In Afghanistan, Fighting The Taliban Increasingly Involves Covert Operations

12th - Higher Ed
The U.S. has been fighting in Afghanistan since shortly after 9/11, ousting the Taliban and their harsh interpretation of Islam from power that fall. But the insurgent group as which it reformed has plagued Afghanistan with violence ever...
News Clip9:17
PBS

Following The Way Of Love Through Divisions, Upheaval And Uncertainty

12th - Higher Ed
The Most Rev. Michael Curry is the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church of the U.S. His latest book "Love is the Way: Holding Onto Hope in Troubling Times," reveals how love fueled his journey from descendant of slaves to the top...
News Clip8:25
PBS

Michael Chabon (Author Interview)

12th - Higher Ed
Book: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay
News Clip6:28
PBS

U.S. Troops Suicide

12th - Higher Ed
Suicides by active duty U.S. troops last year exceeded the number of servicemen and women killed in combat in Afghanistan. Ray Suarez talks to psychiatrist and retired U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Stephen Xenakis, who says more than half of the...
News Clip8:38
PBS

What one ass't principal learned from shadowing a student

12th - Higher Ed
Karen Ritter, an assistant principal at a high school just outside of Chicago, wanted to see her school through a student's eyes. So she decided to follow 9th grader Alan Garcia, who came to her asking to be switched out of the many...
News Clip3:52
PBS

The how and why of buying bitcoin

12th - Higher Ed
The basic idea of bitcoin is simple: Instead of a financial institution holding a bank ledger, a chain of computers linked through the internet are all using the same software to record and verify every transaction. But how can a...
News Clip16:52
PBS

George Kennan Interview (August 22, 1991)

12th - Higher Ed
Robert MacNeil interviews American diplomat George Kennan about the failed coup in the Soviet Union to overthrow Gorbachev.
News Clip13:56
PBS

Coverage of Mikhail Gorbachev's Resignation (Dec. 25,1991)

12th - Higher Ed
Reaction from Moscow, and a conversation with former United States National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski.
News Clip4:40
PBS

Brendan Slocumb

12th - Higher Ed
Brendan Slocumb spent most of his career as a performer and teacher, but this year released his first book, a mystery called "The Violin Conspiracy." The novel is a reflection of Slocumb's experience in the classical music world, where...
News Clip6:41
PBS

Prolonged Brexit Impasse Causes Rising Angst In The Uk

12th - Higher Ed
European leaders agreed to delay the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union for at least a few weeks, but there is still no deal for how the withdrawal will occur. As the impasse drags on, protesters take to the streets and...
News Clip10:32
PBS

NIH's Francis Collins On How Americans Can Take Responsibility Amid Spreading Virus

12th - Higher Ed
Coronavirus is spreading across the United States more widely than it did in previous waves. U.S. hospitalizations rose 40 percent in the past month and increased across 38 states during the past week. The country saw more than 75,000...
News Clip2:33
PBS

I'm not making trouble. I'm making progress'

12th - Higher Ed
With all of the revelations of sexual misconduct and the toppling of famous directors, actors and anchors, one would think that it's easier to come forward and speak out. Nope, says Nell Scovell. The veteran TV writer and creator offers...
News Clip5:55
PBS

Even With A Vaccine, COVID-19 Will Last For Years, Expert Says

12th - Higher Ed
While Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health and other health experts are hopeful vaccines will make a real difference in managing COVID-19, some of the pandemic's challenges are likely to persist for a long time. Dr....
News Clip5:54
PBS

Earth's Ozone Layer Continues To Recover, Scientists Report

12th - Higher Ed
In one of the great environmental success stories of our time, scientists say that a 35-year-old agreement has resulted in the steady and promising recovery of the Earth's ozone layer, a critical protective shield that blocks harmful...
News Clip6:49
PBS

How Abraham Lincoln Shaped American Politics, Popular Culture (Feb. 20, 2012)

12th - Higher Ed
On this Presidents' Day, Hari Sreenivasan and historian Richard Norton Smith discuss President Lincoln's influence on American politics and popular culture as they tour the Ford's Theatre's new Center for Education and Leadership...
News Clip6:25
PBS

‘The Triumph Of Nancy Reagan’ Explores Former First Lady’S Influence In The White House

12th - Higher Ed
An actress-turned-first lady. During her more than 50 year marriage, Nancy Reagan was also the most trusted adviser to her husband, former President Ronald Reagan. Washington Post columnist Karen Tumulty is out with a new book about her...
News Clip7:57
PBS

U.S. World Power in Decline?

12th - Higher Ed
As part of his continuing series of reports examining the country's economic future, Paul Solman sits down with Yale historian Paul Kennedy to discuss the rise and fall of the U.S. and other great economic powers
News Clip7:19
PBS

Americans Waste Up To 40 Percent Of The Food They Produce

12th - Higher Ed
If food waste were a country, it would be the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases behind China and the United States. NewsHour Weekend's Megan Thompson sat down with Elizabeth Balkan, director of food waste for the Natural...