The 2020 presidential election was in some ways the exposed tip of an iceberg.
Written By:
Michael Hamad, Hartford Courant | 9:37 am, Jan. 12, 2021 ×
Rioters enter the Senate Chamber on Jan. 6 in Washington, D.C. Two men photographed carrying zip-ties in the U.S. Capitol were charged Sunday in a federal court in the District of Columbia. (Win McNamee / Getty Images / TNS)
HARTFORD, Conn. As the shock of watching swarms of terrorists ransack the nation’s Capitol began to wear off, the questions started coming: Why weren’t there enough police on duty? What was Donald Trump’s role in inciting the violence? What immediate steps are needed to safeguard the Republic?
HARTFORD, Conn. As the shock of watching swarms of terrorists ransack the nation’s Capitol began to wear off, the questions started coming: Why weren’t there enough police on duty? What was Donald Trump’s role in inciting the violence? What immediate steps are needed to safeguard the Republic? Less apparent, perhaps, but no less significant was a deeper question: How did we arrive at a .
Company Notebook
Princeton Review Recognizes UMass Amherst for Graduate Entrepreneurship Studies
AMHERST For the first time, UMass Amherst has earned recognition in Princeton Review’s annual selection of Best Graduate Entrepreneurship Programs. In the publication’s 2021 list, the university ranks 40th among 50 colleges and universities. Based on survey data from more than 300 schools, the rankings encompass a broad range of entrepreneurial activities inside and outside the classroom. The catalyst for student entrepreneurship at UMass Amherst is the Berthiaume Center for Entrepreneurship. The center serves the entire campus through a wealth of activities and resources. Gregory Thomas, executive director of the Berthiaume Center, noted that entrepreneurship courses and scholarships, faculty who focus on entrepreneurship, student competitions, student mentorship by entrepreneurs, and ventures by alumni and non-alumni all fall within the center’s purview. Its annual Innovation
It’s finally 2021. But that line in the calendar doesn’t mean that the pandemic is anywhere near over, so I want to start this year off by looking back at people whom I interviewed in the series that we launched before Audacious.
US in the Time of Coronavirus was a living history of our experience over nine weeks at the beginning of the pandemic.
In this episode, you’ll reconnect with an anxiety expert who tells us about trends he’s seeing in how people have been coping with the pandemic. You’ll hear from a man who was on a breathing machine for two weeks, and you ll hear a woman’s reflections on grief after losing her dad to Covid-19 back in March.