The following program is offered by the New-York Historical Society’s Planned Giving Advisory Council
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A thorough review of finances and legal matters with a team of advisors, including a lawyer and financial planner, should be undertaken after the loss of a spouse, either as a result of death or divorce. This program will explore the estate planning, premarital planning, and financial planning issues that require attention.
In partnership with the World Science Festival, the New-York Historical Society presents Nobel Prize-winning physicist and revered public intellectual Steven
Richards's career spanned the second half of the nineteenth century and the first five years of the twentieth. During these turbulent yet productive years, he created some of the most important and beautiful paintings in the history of American art. From 1854 through the 1860s, Richards concentrated upon landscapes of Pennsylvania and New York, earning his early reputation as a painter equally adept in the styles of the mainstream Hudson River School and the reformist American Pre-Raphaelites.
Due to unforeseen circumstances, this program has been cancelled.
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In January 1943, FDR and Winston Churchill convened in Casablanca to establish the Allied objectives: defeat the Nazi blitzkrieg; establish control over Europe’s sky and sea lanes; take the fight to the European mainland; and end Japan’s imperialism.
How did the Bush Administration’s policies toward the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict evolve in the years following 9/11? Why did the peace negotiations fail? Elliott Abrams, a former White House deputy assistant to the president and deputy national security advisor, provides an insider’s account of the Bush Administration’s crucial role in the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict.