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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:20130520T184147CEST-3668b4ZdUv@artsboston.org
DTSTAMP:20130520T164147Z
CATEGORIES:Personal
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DESCRIPTION:Event Name: The Gardner Theft: Twenty Years Later\nEvent Url: h
 ttp://www.artsboston.org/event/detail/56027/The_Gardner_Theft_Twenty_Years
 _Later\nEvent Date Begin: 2010-03-04\nEvent Date End: 2010-03-04\n\nIn the
  early morning hours of March 18\, 1990\, thieves dressed as Boston police
  officers entered the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston and stole 
 thirteen works of art. Twenty years later\, the investigation to recover t
 he missing paintings continues.  In a rare public program\, Gardner Museum
  Director of Security Anthony Amore dispels some of the myths and misinfor
 mation by telling the real account of what happened on the night of the th
 eft. New information on the museum's progress to recover the works of art 
 add to this dramatic ever-evolving story of loss and hopeful recovery.  An
 thony Amore is the security director for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Muse
 um.  Prior to joining the museum in 2005\, he spent 14 years with the fede
 ral government as a special agent with the Federal Aviation Administration
  and later joined the Department of Homeland Security. He spearheaded the 
 efforts to federalize security at Logan International Airport after the at
 tacks of September 11\, 2001\, and was the agency's lead responding agent 
 to the attempted terrorist attack by the so-called 'Shoe Bomber' that same
  year.  He is currently investigating the theft of 13 priceless works of a
 rt stolen from the Gardner Museum in 1990.  Tom Ashbrook\, host of Nationa
 l Public Radio's On Point\, is an award-winning journalist whose career sp
 ans twenty years as a foreign correspondent\, newspaper editor\, and autho
 r. He spent ten years in Asia starting at the South China Morning Post and
  later as a correspondent for The Boston Globe. He began his reporting car
 eer covering the refugee exodus from Vietnam and the post-Mao opening of C
 hina\, and has covered turmoil and shifting cultural and economic trends i
 n the United States and around the world. At the Globe\, where he served a
 s deputy managing editor until 1996\, he directed coverage of the first Gu
 lf War and the end of the Cold War. Ashbrook received the Livingston Prize
  for National Reporting and was a 1996 fellow at Harvard's Nieman Foundati
 on.\n\nStart time: 6:30 PM
DTSTART:20100304T000000
DTEND:20100304T000000
LOCATION:
SUMMARY:The Gardner Theft: Twenty Years Later
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
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