Washington Post national security editor Peter Finn recalled the life of Gertrude Legendre, a South Carolina socialite turned spy, who was held as a "special prisoner" of the Germans during the fall of the Third Reich
Former Speaker of the House of Representatives Newt Gingrich offered his thoughts on the threats the U.S. faces from China. He was interviewed by the American Enterprise Institute's Oriana Mastro.
Jack Goldsmith, former assistant attorney general in the George W. Bush administration, recalled the life of his step-father who was an associate of Teamsters leader Jimmy Hoffa.
Disability rights attorney Haben Girma, a Harvard Law School graduate who has been deafblind since birth, talked about navigating through a sighted, hearing world.
Former Harvard Law School dean Martha Minow examined cases in which the law is forgiving. She's interviewed by Georgetown Law professor and former federal prosecutor Paul Butler.
Former Harvard Law School dean Martha Minow examined cases in which the law is forgiving. She's interviewed by Georgetown Law professor and former federal prosecutor Paul Butler.
Nicholas Buccola, chair in political science at Linfield College, recalled the televised debate between James Baldwin and William F. Buckley Jr. over the civil rights movement that occurred on February 18, 1965.
Historian Richard Breitman recalled the efforts of Raymond Geist, an American consul in Berlin in the 1930s, to expedite visas for emigrants to the United States in the lead-up to World War II.
Former Harvard Law School dean Martha Minow examined cases in which the law is forgiving. She's interviewed by Georgetown Law professor and former federal prosecutor Paul Butler.
Obama White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships executive director Melissa Rogers explored the relationship between religion and government.
Mark David Hall, politics professor at George Fox University and author of "Did America Have a Christian Founding?," and Andrew Seidel, constitutional attorney and author of "The Founding Myth," discussed their respective books and debated whether America's Founders were influenced by their religious beliefs.