In tonights Progressive Roundtable, Thom talks with Democracy Spring Director Kai Newkirk and Sarah Badawi of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee (PCCC) about the mistrial ruling in the case of Walter Scott, Trumps review of the Army Corps of Engineers decision to divert the Dakota pipeline, and the #Pizzagate debate in the nations capital.
Thom then talks with George Washington Univ. professor and author of Obama on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President and Bush on the Couch: Inside the Mind of the President, Dr. Justin Frank, about Trump as a person, his behavioral traits, and his eccentric threats on Twitter.
For more information on the stories we"ve covered visit our websitesatthomhartmann.comandfreespeech.org
You can also watch tonight"s showonHuluand over at The Big PictureYouTube page.
Walter Scott Death: Video Shows Fatal North Charleston Police Shooting | The New York Times
Omaha businessman Walter Scott Jr. has donated $53.3 million to Colorado State University, the largest contribution in the schools history.
The money will go toward scholarships, faculty support and research, said the university, which will name its engineering college the Walter Scott Jr. College of Engineering.
Scott earned a bachelors degree in civil engineering from the college in 1953 and began his career at Peter Kiewit Sons Inc., becoming its chairman and CEO and now chairman emeritus.
As we get older, I think its natural to think about the generations that will follow, Scott, 85, said in a press release. And in a technological age, its important that our top students have the opportunity to study at strong research universities.
We are humbled and incredibly grateful for this remarkable gift from Walter Scott, Colorado State President Tony Frank said in the press release. Walter has been a passionate
and generous supporter of CSU since he graduated more than 60 years ago, and this gift is truly transformational.
Scott has donated more than $220 million to the University of Nebraska at Omaha, which recently named its south campus after him. His UNO support includes scholarships for 130 to 150 students per year and donations to establish the Peter Kiewit Institute, residence halls and other facilities.
At Colorado State, his money also helped build the newly completed Suzanne and Walter Scott Jr. Bioengineering Building and provide support for more than 30 faculty members and 120 graduate students who conduct research there into water, energy, health and environmental challenges.
The latest gift will expand Scotts scholarship program at Colorado State to as many as 80 undergraduates and 30 graduate students.
It will create presidential chair faculty positions in water, health, energy and the environment, the colleges four areas of excellence, with laboratories and other infrastructure to support teaching and research. The donation also provides discretionary funds for innovative and leadership programs.
Kiewit Corp.s office in Englewood, Colorado, employs more than 100 of the universitys alumni.
Engineering Dean David McLean said the gift will help the college attract top students and faculty members and become one of the best engineering programs in the country.