Go back to school with the country's top professors lecturing on a variety of topics in American his
York College professor Jacqueline Beatty discussed women’s rights and changing political power durin
Iowa State University professor Tracy Lucht talked about women journalists in the late-19th and earl
Georgetown University professor Bonnie Morris talked about discrimination against women in sports an
Professor Donald Spivey talked about the legacy of pitcher Satchel Paige and Negro Leagues baseball.
Professor Joan Waugh talked about the rise of baseball as a national activity, spectator event, and
Pepperdine University professor Loretta Hunnicutt taught a class about baseball during the Great Dep
University of Maryland history professor Michael discussed, in the second of a two part lecture, the
University of Maryland history professor Michael Ross discussed the 1893 trial of Lizzie Borden, who
Richard Brookhiser has written and edited for National Review magazine for over 50 years. He has als
In the first week of publication of Erik Larson's latest book, "The Demon of Unrest," sales put it a
In 1943, in the middle of World War II, the Allied leaders FDR, Winston Churchill, and Josef Stalin
Indiana University history professor Carolina Ortega discussed the 1929 Great Depression, President
University of Dallas history professor William Atto discussed the decade leading to the 1787 Constit
Florida State University history professor Paul Renfro discussed the life and death of Indiana teena
Boston College communications professor Michael Serazio discussed how baseball connects Americans to
University of North Carolina at Pembroke history professor Jamie Myers discussed Southeast Native Am
Hillsdale College history professor Mark Moyar discusses competing interpretations of the Vietnam Wa
Georgetown University English professor Christopher Shinn discussed the history and cultural recepti
University of North Carolina at Pembroke professor Ryan Anderson discussed the rise of a Bohemian cu
Presidential historian Lindsay Chervinsky discussed how presidential foreign policy and warmaking po