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Jul 10, 2023
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edward do you want to weigh in on this? i'd love to hear what you can take to the bank in harris county for us in harris county, we know that you know, because houston and harris counties such a large geographic area we know that we have a high in users in terms of people downloading audio books and so with that we we saw that even increased during the pandemic but it's just been steady in terms of how people utilize the resource. and i think that here a lot of people do listen to audiobooks but i agree with lisa you know it is about choice because we do have, you know, people who still want those print materials and and want the digital content and with the current digital content, we it's here to stay. we know that we we have to invest in it. and so now is for us to try to figure out how do we balance between maintain the print collection as well as the digital collection and how do we make sure that, you know, digital is kind of like the more money for the more you to going to get it's just inevitable it happens way. so
edward do you want to weigh in on this? i'd love to hear what you can take to the bank in harris county for us in harris county, we know that you know, because houston and harris counties such a large geographic area we know that we have a high in users in terms of people downloading audio books and so with that we we saw that even increased during the pandemic but it's just been steady in terms of how people utilize the resource. and i think that here a lot of people do listen to audiobooks...
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Jul 4, 2023
07/23
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is that edward chin? who was the pay master of the regiment put in the paperwork saying that all monies do to john saratoga were to go to him for he is my slave for life. so here we know that we had so kate's munford was a free person of color and then we've got john saratoga who is an enslaved person both serving in the regiment on the roles major john taylor from virginia brought an enslaved. servant with him and registered him into the regiment so that he was getting then rations and pay through his enslaved servant. so we do know that they were there there were other accounts for putnam's regiment at one point about like 27 men and hazen's regiment was part of putnam's regiment and they said there were 27 african-american with the regiment at that time. some of them were probably in hazen's regiment. but so i was really trying to track him down but i i found it. very interesting. they did not make that designator. and what does that mean that they are not making that designator on these troops? down w
is that edward chin? who was the pay master of the regiment put in the paperwork saying that all monies do to john saratoga were to go to him for he is my slave for life. so here we know that we had so kate's munford was a free person of color and then we've got john saratoga who is an enslaved person both serving in the regiment on the roles major john taylor from virginia brought an enslaved. servant with him and registered him into the regiment so that he was getting then rations and pay...
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Jul 9, 2023
07/23
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now, this has never been a problem for edward chancellor. his books come out just in time for the world to say. my god, he was right. in his first book, a history of financial speculation, titled devil take the hindmost, he warned in 1999 that the surge index stocks had all the earmarks of earlier financial manias. and next year, the dot com bubble burst. later, he published crunch time for credit, warning that the housing and credit bubbles would burst disastrously. and sure enough, they promptly did a leading to the financial crisis in 2007 and then the great recession. so early last year, when nobody worried about bank bailouts, when the federal reserve was still blithely keeping the interest rate at zero, he went to press with his latest book, the price of time the real story of interest. he warned that we would pay a hefty price for the fed's irresponsible and unprecedented decade of easy money. and sure enough, you know, here we are with headlines about failing banks. but collapsing pension funds and fears of an even worse financial cr
now, this has never been a problem for edward chancellor. his books come out just in time for the world to say. my god, he was right. in his first book, a history of financial speculation, titled devil take the hindmost, he warned in 1999 that the surge index stocks had all the earmarks of earlier financial manias. and next year, the dot com bubble burst. later, he published crunch time for credit, warning that the housing and credit bubbles would burst disastrously. and sure enough, they...
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Jul 4, 2023
07/23
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edward jenner's lance that's here. they use they didn't have hypodermic needles back then, so they would use a lancet to make a small incision and i think maybe folks are listening to this or watching it. it's a good way to think about the washington monument, not only was he a commanding general, the continental army, the first president, but it protected the soldiers and the people of the united states, set a precedent that the government has a duty to protect public health established from the very that inoculation vaccination are patriot acts in the united states. so that's where i'll stop. i'm happy to answer questions. any aspect of the talk, any part of the book that you would like? thank you. a little bit about the use of smallpox as bioweapon in that time period. i think they gave blankets to the indians during the french and indian war. did that occur during the revolution at all? yeah. so i get into some of that in my book, there were there were rumors about using smallpox as a weapon. it's important to real
edward jenner's lance that's here. they use they didn't have hypodermic needles back then, so they would use a lancet to make a small incision and i think maybe folks are listening to this or watching it. it's a good way to think about the washington monument, not only was he a commanding general, the continental army, the first president, but it protected the soldiers and the people of the united states, set a precedent that the government has a duty to protect public health established from...
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Jul 14, 2023
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. >> edward in key port, new jersey. independent. good morning. >> thank you. and what a great forum, i get to speak to my governor. mr. murphy, i think you've done a great job. happy that you're updating the unemployment system, that was an issue, the wind farms, great. you need to open up the marijuana industry a little bit more. to mr. cox, as you're incoming chair, states rights issues, how do you as governors push back against the federal system of lawmakers that are pushing conspiracy theories and whatnot that cloud the state issues that we all care about? >> okay, we'll get a response, edward. governor cox, do you want to go first? >> yeah, thank you, again, if you look back to the founding of our country you look at the federalist papers and the constitution, the states were set up to be a co-equal branch to the federal government. i certainly think that that over time that the federal government has gotten much more powerful than the states and so, you know, we-- the states rights piece is very important and we work very diligently with our fellow gove
. >> edward in key port, new jersey. independent. good morning. >> thank you. and what a great forum, i get to speak to my governor. mr. murphy, i think you've done a great job. happy that you're updating the unemployment system, that was an issue, the wind farms, great. you need to open up the marijuana industry a little bit more. to mr. cox, as you're incoming chair, states rights issues, how do you as governors push back against the federal system of lawmakers that are pushing...
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Jul 31, 2023
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lee edwards, who's double or what? barry goldwater and bill buckley and brant senior and falwell robertson recently all did you know so i'm a i'm an active at the national level longer than everybody except dr. lee edwards. so lee is a dear friend i've known since 1961. and he calls me on the phone one day and says, let's have lunch with this young conservative of you need to know him. he doesn't know you. you don't know him. so we had nice lunch at the mayflower and so i liked the lunch money. so well invited. morton back ten days later for another lunch as he and i. and at the end the lunch, morton said, i spoke magic words to it and the magic words i spoke to him. i said, morton, i want you to come work with and help me build the movement. and he said at that he would taking a pay cut. i gave him a little pay increase. but anyway after some years he left and they ended up working for ronald reagan in the white house. and then that he left and started something the leadership institute and it's in there almost no i c
lee edwards, who's double or what? barry goldwater and bill buckley and brant senior and falwell robertson recently all did you know so i'm a i'm an active at the national level longer than everybody except dr. lee edwards. so lee is a dear friend i've known since 1961. and he calls me on the phone one day and says, let's have lunch with this young conservative of you need to know him. he doesn't know you. you don't know him. so we had nice lunch at the mayflower and so i liked the lunch money....
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Jul 22, 2023
07/23
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in 1953, didn't like oppie, partly for just kind of petty personal reasons teller edward teller didn't like oppie because teller thought he should have been appointed the head of the theoretical division and lo said not better. there are these people that kind got together in the early fifties to take down r.p. and some of it was for petty reasons. some of it was for security reasons. maybe he was connected with the soviet union, but also i think it's because we as a country had come to a in the road and. oppie was saying maybe we should be rethinking this fork, that we're going down in nuclear weapons. maybe we should go a different way and in december of 1953, a report was given to president eisenhower here saying more probably than not, oppenheimer was a soviet spy. so so course ike then created a wall around r.b. oppenheim, who still had his top security clearance. so what to do about that a couple of days before christmas in 1953, louis straw's had come into his office and say, you know, there is this report about you and we're going to have to remove top security clearance. and y
in 1953, didn't like oppie, partly for just kind of petty personal reasons teller edward teller didn't like oppie because teller thought he should have been appointed the head of the theoretical division and lo said not better. there are these people that kind got together in the early fifties to take down r.p. and some of it was for petty reasons. some of it was for security reasons. maybe he was connected with the soviet union, but also i think it's because we as a country had come to a in...
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Jul 5, 2023
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it was not even complete, but it was enough for for edward savage to go on and do the group painting. i mean, robert treat paine really needed a better publicist. savage did not even finish it, but paine's daughters persuaded savage's heirs to part with it and had another artist complete it. so that's half a portrait for paine versus an in old age, comparing with 20 or more that john adams somehow find the time to sit for over his time, many of them were his wearing a wig. unlike what we see here in 1804, paine, finally at age 73, retire from the bench at age 80, robert treat paine paine is hobbling along with john adams at age 75, signed by side, as adams writes, founding father benjamin rush. it would divert you to witness a conversation between ancient friend and colleague, robert treat paine and me. he is about 80. i cannot speak and he cannot hear. and yet we converse. in may 1814, at age 83, paine catches a chill tending his garden and dies. on may 11th. adams writes a friend. alas, the message this is triumvirate is broken. judge paine is no more rare. remembering a forgotten f
it was not even complete, but it was enough for for edward savage to go on and do the group painting. i mean, robert treat paine really needed a better publicist. savage did not even finish it, but paine's daughters persuaded savage's heirs to part with it and had another artist complete it. so that's half a portrait for paine versus an in old age, comparing with 20 or more that john adams somehow find the time to sit for over his time, many of them were his wearing a wig. unlike what we see...
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Jul 16, 2023
07/23
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councilwoman tracy edwards. hi. well, don't you look marvelous. i am thrilled to call moderate event with former congressman steve israel. representative israel served in the us congress. from 2001 to 2017, including four years as chairman of the democratic congressional campaign committee. he left washington unindicted. he left washington undefeated and he. he left to pursue new passions and 2021, he opened a small independent bookstore for theodore's books with his lovely wife, cara, who is sitting right there next to my gorgeous husband, walter who was sitting right there. in his historic of oyster bay, fulfilling a lifelong dream. and author. in his own right, he has published two critically acclaimed satires of washington, the global war on morals and big guns. he proudly serves us on the library of congress madison council as well. many other board of directors, steve was most recently by president to the president's committee on the arts and humanities. please welcome my mentor, my friend, my former councilperson my former congressman. an a
councilwoman tracy edwards. hi. well, don't you look marvelous. i am thrilled to call moderate event with former congressman steve israel. representative israel served in the us congress. from 2001 to 2017, including four years as chairman of the democratic congressional campaign committee. he left washington unindicted. he left washington undefeated and he. he left to pursue new passions and 2021, he opened a small independent bookstore for theodore's books with his lovely wife, cara, who is...
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Jul 14, 2023
07/23
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governor edwards is a democrat. i'm a republican but would both represent states that a highly dependent on the energy economy and he has been again a remarkable partner working on those issues and so many others. i'm proud of his influence. have an edwards could not be here this week. we are happy to see first lady donna was been with us whose own service a leadership has been such a benefit to the nga and our work over the years. thank you donna. with so much fun. we had an amazing dinner. we all ate way too much less that the worksite of you and your husband now that you getting back after all of these years, and we know you have a grandchild on the weight and just great things happening. we're so proud of you. please give them a round of applause. [applause] >> with that, i would like to turn the microphone over to another governor who has been, who is a great friend and a great partner as he's walking up with his amazing children, we are excited to have been with us. our new vice chair and governor of the great
governor edwards is a democrat. i'm a republican but would both represent states that a highly dependent on the energy economy and he has been again a remarkable partner working on those issues and so many others. i'm proud of his influence. have an edwards could not be here this week. we are happy to see first lady donna was been with us whose own service a leadership has been such a benefit to the nga and our work over the years. thank you donna. with so much fun. we had an amazing dinner. we...
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Jul 23, 2023
07/23
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there's an instance, a very famous, well-known instance now where the actor edward harmon, who is no longer with us, his voice is being used to to narrate audio boxes of words under license. it's been a legal use of this voice and sort of revenue to his estate, which is a curious aspect of it. but yeah, the ai is has gone from being a pretty good tool for this to being an excellent tool. a couple of years ago when i first started studying it, you could tell there was still a computer. today, very easy to convince someone that that voice is a human, that was in the studio reading that book and it was generated very rapidly, very inexpensively with artificial intelligence. what is your company? the future of publishing and your website? the future of publishing e-commerce? what do you do? i consult to all kinds of publishers, to authors, to distributors. i work on all of the technical challenges that the industry that the industry faces. i've been doing that for quite a long time. what fascinates me most is that intersection point between technology and traditional publishing. do you f
there's an instance, a very famous, well-known instance now where the actor edward harmon, who is no longer with us, his voice is being used to to narrate audio boxes of words under license. it's been a legal use of this voice and sort of revenue to his estate, which is a curious aspect of it. but yeah, the ai is has gone from being a pretty good tool for this to being an excellent tool. a couple of years ago when i first started studying it, you could tell there was still a computer. today,...
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Jul 2, 2023
07/23
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edward everett two and a half hours worth of. extraordinary class, vocal oratory and no one afterwards could remember a single word of. it. and lincoln stands up and speaks for two and a half minutes. and as charles sumner said, lincoln could not have more wrong when he said the world will. little note long remember what we say here. sumner said, oh, no, no. the world will always know and will always remember what said here. what lincoln said of gettysburg was more important than the battle itself. 272 words. 190 of those words are single syllable. and did it a wisdom, winston churchill, that that that short are the best words to communicate, and the shorter and the more, the more short words are, the better. and lincoln has a grasp of that. because what lincoln wants do is to communicate with people. there are really two eras of lincoln's oratory here. there is there an era from the first time he begins to speak in public in the 1830s until he comes from his sole term in congress. in 1849 and the lincoln, that oratory is is a ve
edward everett two and a half hours worth of. extraordinary class, vocal oratory and no one afterwards could remember a single word of. it. and lincoln stands up and speaks for two and a half minutes. and as charles sumner said, lincoln could not have more wrong when he said the world will. little note long remember what we say here. sumner said, oh, no, no. the world will always know and will always remember what said here. what lincoln said of gettysburg was more important than the battle...
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Jul 17, 2023
07/23
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to robert e lee has to be part of your factor in understanding who you are, because edward david bland, my grandmother's grandfather, would run against his white cousin and beat him. and then election after the end of reconstruction. and that was the next thing that kind of blew my mind was we were always taught basically, like, you know, there was a civil war, there was reconstruction. and then there was like jim crow, but nothing happens in an instant. there was a period of transition in between and. when i realized my grandmother's grandfather had run for office in 1880 and reconstruction ended in 1876, and the terror of the klan had been unleashed for four years. and when he would run for reelection, six people would be killed in that election by white supremacists. i realized i'd stumbled into this kind of like i've been taught a fiction. i've been told he was a reconstruction statesman. he was a statesman after reconstruction. and then the only thing i've been taught about him is that he helped start virginia state university. and so as i dug in, i what i realized was a it was af
to robert e lee has to be part of your factor in understanding who you are, because edward david bland, my grandmother's grandfather, would run against his white cousin and beat him. and then election after the end of reconstruction. and that was the next thing that kind of blew my mind was we were always taught basically, like, you know, there was a civil war, there was reconstruction. and then there was like jim crow, but nothing happens in an instant. there was a period of transition in...
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Jul 12, 2023
07/23
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a warm welcome john edwards to the great state of maryland. [cheering and applauding] please put your hands together and come to the field to join the team and we are pleased to enter into the hall of fame for 2023. [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] left field, emily. [cheering and applauding] the one and only amy -- [cheering and applauding] pbs news hour. [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] a giant round of applause, a fun time. [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] cohost of the new york times. [cheering and applauding] it's my honor to announce one of the hall of fame for 2023. [cheering and applauding] >> i'm pleased to introduce our colorguard this evening. welcome the nations capital,. [cheering and applauding] before he sing the national anthem, breast cancer survivors and those battling this. our dear friend who passed away last month. he chronicled the games most exciting moments as w
a warm welcome john edwards to the great state of maryland. [cheering and applauding] please put your hands together and come to the field to join the team and we are pleased to enter into the hall of fame for 2023. [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] left field, emily. [cheering and applauding] the one and only amy -- [cheering and applauding] pbs news hour. [cheering and applauding] [cheering and applauding] [cheering and...
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Jul 30, 2023
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edward cox next to susan, the son in law of president and mrs. nixon. many of you recall that the hauenstein and the ford held a joint program. i figured it out 12 years ago. you asked when it was 12 years, 2011, where we were at the ford museum and featured ed cox talking about what it's like to work with presidents. he's worked with four of them. he's a corporate lawyer, finance lawyer. and he and tricia nixon. i found out this story last night. they met in new york at a class dance in 1963 when they were seniors in high. they married eight years later, of course, the famous marriage in the rose garden that we're all familiar with. and just celebrated their 50th anniversary at the nixon in 2021. so congratulations congratulations, everyone, on that. harry mattson, who's next to ed? we're with both mrs. nixon and, mrs. ford. she served the assistant press secretary and speechwriter in the white house office of the first lady during ford administration, the nixon administration, patti traveled extensively and she traveled not only domestically but inter
edward cox next to susan, the son in law of president and mrs. nixon. many of you recall that the hauenstein and the ford held a joint program. i figured it out 12 years ago. you asked when it was 12 years, 2011, where we were at the ford museum and featured ed cox talking about what it's like to work with presidents. he's worked with four of them. he's a corporate lawyer, finance lawyer. and he and tricia nixon. i found out this story last night. they met in new york at a class dance in 1963...
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Jul 5, 2023
07/23
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were not alone, there were 26 colonies in america in 1776, several in canada nova scotia on prince edward in the bahamas and bermuda but the real jules were the ones nicole has mentioned and those were the sugar islands in the caribbean especially barbados jamaica and is much as i from virginia want to talk about tobacco the number one coupling in north america that was grown mostly by insulative people in north america. tobacco was not the number one cross throughout the colonies, sugarcane was and partly for candy bars but really that's where you get the molasses that makes rama. when you talk about this today, what is the big burly industry in north america before he had even before the text of males of the industry is that distilleries turning molasses in the roman and molasses from sugarcane raised by slaves in the caribbean and is a reminder that is a virginia, a home from the state built on the slavery people know that, massachusetts was built on slavery as well new york written about in your book bound which comes out on my birthday june 16th of 2022, so shows how dependent new yo
were not alone, there were 26 colonies in america in 1776, several in canada nova scotia on prince edward in the bahamas and bermuda but the real jules were the ones nicole has mentioned and those were the sugar islands in the caribbean especially barbados jamaica and is much as i from virginia want to talk about tobacco the number one coupling in north america that was grown mostly by insulative people in north america. tobacco was not the number one cross throughout the colonies, sugarcane...
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Jul 26, 2023
07/23
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the civil rights act of 1964 past because of senator edward dirksen, senate republican. you just beat him about the head and shoulders. everything i told you, have on a 3 x 5 card. when they say this foolishness, without your card and say this is what colonel west told me and tell him you are wrong. you are welcome. [applause] >> thank you for being here and for your service. >> happy to be here or governor walker -- thank you all for being here. >> i attend the university of tennessee. >> you will always be. >> my question for you is you mentioned you grew up in a methodist church. you are familiar with the division regarding -- >> it is horrible. >> my own church is dealing with it, very hard on people. my question, what do you think allowed for that politicization of our religious institution and what do you recommend to avoid that division? >> there's a book called woke jesus. i suggest you read that book. the devil is very smart, the best way to go after us is -- a judeo-christian nation, the going to the church. when we see rainbow flags and all these things in chu
the civil rights act of 1964 past because of senator edward dirksen, senate republican. you just beat him about the head and shoulders. everything i told you, have on a 3 x 5 card. when they say this foolishness, without your card and say this is what colonel west told me and tell him you are wrong. you are welcome. [applause] >> thank you for being here and for your service. >> happy to be here or governor walker -- thank you all for being here. >> i attend the university of...
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Jul 31, 2023
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. >> edward would you like to mention differentiating between what is known as muncie and also what is known as lenape, language in the community identity. >> hi them sometimes correct me if i'm wrong, but okay, and so muncie iss part of the lenape bt he said language dialect and within that there are the dialects. i forget that but there are other dialect so when i'm referring to muncie refer to the language of the people i say lenape and so is my clear understanding and if you very much for his father but affect into the person mentioning and thank you so much i would encourage you to reach out which is a farm here in the hudson valley and there indigenous farm and they do amazing work we have done about making sure that their team homage reflexively and ends literally solve fire .com. and if you google them you will find them but i think that's really cool they also trying to save you know that i see you and think you so much for that. i acknowledge opacity and sensor friendship and thank you for honoring mind as well. >> thank you very much let me just say that we also at the lenap
. >> edward would you like to mention differentiating between what is known as muncie and also what is known as lenape, language in the community identity. >> hi them sometimes correct me if i'm wrong, but okay, and so muncie iss part of the lenape bt he said language dialect and within that there are the dialects. i forget that but there are other dialect so when i'm referring to muncie refer to the language of the people i say lenape and so is my clear understanding and if you...
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Jul 23, 2023
07/23
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he wrote edward was emerson waldo's in 1831. no man lists himself or dies himself. he is necessarily with others, with society, and is obliged to contribute of his powers and worldly at goods for the benefit of his fellow creature is thus doing good to others. if we find the richest comfort to ourselves, so committed to this ideal interdependence. ripley strove to bring every into the fold. he was, in effect, like an anglican country vicar and maybe masterpiece theater, now visiting everyone, knowing everybody's names, trying to bring everybody together in a worship service that had really, at its core, celebration of community. trouble would this ripley spread the faith. he had deluded and so he went out of his way though had been raised in the calvinist in which he sought to build the church upon intellect of those who are the and could profess to having been born again having raised with their faith. he moved away from that and he came camphor getting everybody he could into the church. you relax the admissions requirements. we reduce the obligations of membershi
he wrote edward was emerson waldo's in 1831. no man lists himself or dies himself. he is necessarily with others, with society, and is obliged to contribute of his powers and worldly at goods for the benefit of his fellow creature is thus doing good to others. if we find the richest comfort to ourselves, so committed to this ideal interdependence. ripley strove to bring every into the fold. he was, in effect, like an anglican country vicar and maybe masterpiece theater, now visiting everyone,...
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Jul 16, 2023
07/23
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edward snowden say that's going to be the story of the year. 5 minutes later we were receiving maybe ten or 20 requests from people say, can you tell me if my number is on your list and? two days later we were having hundreds of that kind of free press, not only us, but all our partners around the world and and then we were having some requests from policemen, intelligence services were asking were waze that list, would you be okay to at least to for so we can inform the victims. so we say no, we just from that is we want to give you any documents or is what we are printing and and that's it. and, and so the pressure was high because. we were in the meantime in the last before the publication and in communication with lawyers of the nso group. so it was extremely intense. today's not only be full of big asian but right after because was not only a one day publication, it was a it was almost like two or three or four days with a revelation of head of states and the phone numbers were appearing on the list as well. and, and the other thing is that we publishing stories on outside of fo
edward snowden say that's going to be the story of the year. 5 minutes later we were receiving maybe ten or 20 requests from people say, can you tell me if my number is on your list and? two days later we were having hundreds of that kind of free press, not only us, but all our partners around the world and and then we were having some requests from policemen, intelligence services were asking were waze that list, would you be okay to at least to for so we can inform the victims. so we say no,...
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Jul 24, 2023
07/23
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he has one to edward are mirror, mirror awards won for his reporting the life and death of breonna taylor and another for his coverage of the trump administration's asylum policies on the us-mexico border. thank you for listening. and and please welcome ari shapiro to. theater. it's so good to be with you all here today, and especially with clay, who is a recent year and a half ago arrival to the d.c. area, who now serves us in the country at the library of congress, where he's doing incredible work. and i'm looking forward to talking to you all. thank you so much. i'm glad to be here and joe was like he took the screenshot he was so happy to introduce you. i woke up this morning and i saw that there's a new documentary on hbo about donna summer. and i thought her rashida talked to ari shapiro or watch the donna summer stuff about her. yeah it's a it's well it's very i assume you watched it on your way here in the on your phone just like, you know, it. why choose? that's my life motto. yeah. why choose? and i think i'm probably the only literary director in the history of the library of c
he has one to edward are mirror, mirror awards won for his reporting the life and death of breonna taylor and another for his coverage of the trump administration's asylum policies on the us-mexico border. thank you for listening. and and please welcome ari shapiro to. theater. it's so good to be with you all here today, and especially with clay, who is a recent year and a half ago arrival to the d.c. area, who now serves us in the country at the library of congress, where he's doing incredible...
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Jul 16, 2023
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pogue, edward baer from louisiana, a pogues from texas, and then a liberal actually wright patman and they just they do something no one had done. the freshmen vote them out. they say, you're not going to be chair anymore because you're not loyal to the national party. and kevin writes about the national party is changing the democrats since the forties are moving toward an embrace of civil rights and embrace of social welfare. and these southerners are kind of at odds with with where they are that that moment of toppling them is one of these inside washington story that was really important, had never been done before. and it sets a new mode, a new mood that i think also will alienate some of those southern democrat ites from hanging on anymore. i. good evening. thank you so much for sharing your perspectives on the book that i'm eagerly awaiting to read. i will admit i haven't read it yet, but i'm trained as a rhetorician and i to a two part question, one intended audience for your book, who could you chair? and you may have addressed this in early parts of the intro or the prolog.
pogue, edward baer from louisiana, a pogues from texas, and then a liberal actually wright patman and they just they do something no one had done. the freshmen vote them out. they say, you're not going to be chair anymore because you're not loyal to the national party. and kevin writes about the national party is changing the democrats since the forties are moving toward an embrace of civil rights and embrace of social welfare. and these southerners are kind of at odds with with where they are...
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Jul 3, 2023
07/23
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she has received awards, including national and regional edward our moral awards, a sigma delta chee award and declaring an award. gabrielle received her degree from dartmouth college and her doctorate from oxford university as a rhodes scholar. first, we'll hear from dan in just a moment. he's going to start us off with a reading. but first, to give us a little bit more background. i'd like to welcome gabriela over and she's going to fill us in. so gabriela. welcome. thank you. it is good to be here. as she just said, if you could all be thinking about questions during while we chat, we will be coming to you shortly. and i also just wanted to say, when i started reading this book, i was in chicago with my in-laws, and i just kept reading passages from it aloud to the household. it was that good. and by the time i came back to boston, they were like making sure they had the title right so they could order it. so this a fantastic book, and afterwards the book signing it is worth getting one copy signed and off getting copies as gifts because that is what i'm doing. well, what this boo
she has received awards, including national and regional edward our moral awards, a sigma delta chee award and declaring an award. gabrielle received her degree from dartmouth college and her doctorate from oxford university as a rhodes scholar. first, we'll hear from dan in just a moment. he's going to start us off with a reading. but first, to give us a little bit more background. i'd like to welcome gabriela over and she's going to fill us in. so gabriela. welcome. thank you. it is good to...
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Jul 22, 2023
07/23
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edward spangler the lane was packed with their dead. at one point. 13 dead bodies lay in a heap and other places they lay two, three, five deep. no battle of the war so short in duration. such a scene of carnage. we're going to move to the other simultaneous attack, the attack on the sunken road and attack the burnside bridge or simultaneous will move south to the south end. we're moving into the ninth corps, ambrose burnside. here's one soldier's account from ohio. the fearful moment had arrived. skirmishes were advanced. clear the bridge and ledges of rebel sharp shooters forward rang out along the lines and the assaulting columns. the bridge. the opposite bluffs and ledges and ridge were instantly lighted with one long sheet of flame. volley after volley of musket tree were driven into the faces of the advancing column. the head of the column on bravely. but it was seen to waver and melt away before such a murderous murderous. in vain. the champion of freedom struggled against the driving storm of iron and lead that tore remorselessl
edward spangler the lane was packed with their dead. at one point. 13 dead bodies lay in a heap and other places they lay two, three, five deep. no battle of the war so short in duration. such a scene of carnage. we're going to move to the other simultaneous attack, the attack on the sunken road and attack the burnside bridge or simultaneous will move south to the south end. we're moving into the ninth corps, ambrose burnside. here's one soldier's account from ohio. the fearful moment had...
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Jul 23, 2023
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so like edward house, colonel house, one of his closest advisers before edith kind of undermined him. he wanted to publish this whole, you know, correspondence between him and the president, especially during paris peace negotiations. and edith wouldn't let him publish anything that wilson written. and so his book is just his letters. and wilson's are paraphrased and she managed to exert total control and only allowed her hand-picked biographer, ray baker access to any of his papers. i wanted to say before we get to some questions i wanted to ask you about what is now the wilson center, which we all know in washington and how that came about. there's another great photo that yeah, i love this picture. so this is 89 year old edith. this is one of the last pictures of her in 1961 with president kennedy and what he's signing and handing the pen for is establishing woodrow wilson commission and. once they decided there would be a woodrow wilson memorial, there was a lot of talk about would it be a traditional memorial, you know, something figurative or would it be a living memorial or som
so like edward house, colonel house, one of his closest advisers before edith kind of undermined him. he wanted to publish this whole, you know, correspondence between him and the president, especially during paris peace negotiations. and edith wouldn't let him publish anything that wilson written. and so his book is just his letters. and wilson's are paraphrased and she managed to exert total control and only allowed her hand-picked biographer, ray baker access to any of his papers. i wanted...