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And as i grow, i continue to sprout bits and pieces of that history. And im thankful. Im thankful because without the central high crisis, my life would be totally different than what it is now. But because i have learned to love and still love to learn, i am blessed with the opportunity to introduce to you some panelists that will talk about whats happened since the crisis. First of all, i will say that our first two speakers will be members of the little rock nine. And you have to forgive us because this is a very busy day, they will be exiting as soon as theyre finished speaking because they have other events they must attend. Let me introduce the panelists and then well get started. One of our youngest members is krystle c. Mercer, little rock born. She is the proprietor of columbus arts. Her artistic talents have been displayed around the state in new york and canterbury, england. She fuses art and activism to tell social justice narratives through merchandising and storytelling. Her Public Service complements the Public Service of her father, civil rights lawyer. Dr. Laverne bell tolliver is an associate professor of social work with a masters level clinical social worker. A licensed certified social worker in the state of arkansas, registered therapist, supervisor and clinical member of the American Association for marriage and Family Therapy. Her experience includes mental health, Child Protective Services and private practice. She earned her phd in Family Therapy at texas womens university, and also serves as a senior pastor. Coach eddie boone graduated from home in high school in arkansas. He is a charter member of the National Federation of interscholastic athletic association. Lifetime member to arkansas activities association, little rock retired Classroom Teachers association, Arkansas Education association, National Education association, retired activities supervisor with the city of little rock parks and recreation. He was married to the former and. Aine easterlin we have an investor of little rock since 1957. She is the daughter of howell and lewis payton putillo. Her roots are in the state prior to the civil war. She earned a bachelor of arts in journalism from San Francisco state in a masters from Columbia University school of journalism. She has written two Award Winning books. Carlotta is the youngest, and has been an ambassador of little rock since 1957. She attended Michigan State university and earned her degree in colorado. Her arkansas roots are deep into the 1960s. She continued the family trade of selfemployment when operating her Real Estate Brokerage firm in colorado. She continued the family trait of selfemployment when operating her Real Estate Brokers firm in colorado. And with that id like to start this part of the section by giving melbur bills an opportunity to speak to you. [applause] im going to reverse your decision because camallo has information that goes prior to mine. Im not being bitchy. Thats ok. [laughter] we can do it like that. [laughter] is it still morning . Good morning. [laughter] yes, melba would probably like me to speak first. What id like to say upfront is this. I am the only one of the group living today that experienced 1959, 1960 at little rock Central High School. I speak the name of jefferson thomas, who was also with me, who graduated with me in may of 1960. We are two that experienced that year without the troops. I think were the only in fact, i know were the only two that from the 10th grade through the 12th grade that experienced everything that you heard before, in the middle of the lost year and then the year of graduating in may of 1960. I would like to say and uplift those that were helpful to jefferson and i in the 12th grade. We did not have the troops, we did not have the extra help to protect us during that particular time. But that did not say we did not have problems. We continue to have problems with some of those that were determined to keep us out. But the leadership, i think, did not want to go through the 19571958 time frame. So my senior class members took a little bit extra effort in trying to quell some of the things that were going on. Unfortunately in february of 1960, my home was bombed. I was fortunate enough, my mother and two sisters and myself happened to be on the other side of the home and was able to be here to tell you about it. My father unfortunately because of the fact he was having trouble getting jobs, when they would find out he was the father of one of those at central, was not there because he was working at his fathers cafe at the time. It happened around 10 30. And because he was not there, he was considered a suspect. Along with my friend who lived up the street by the name of herbert muntz. Id like to put his name into the record because he was incarcerated for five years for bombing my home, which i knew he had not done. [applause] i hear that there are a couple of professors here in little rock that is trying to get his records expunged. I hope that does happen. I understand it is on the governors desk. And i would hope that they would see to it there was no way possible he could have done that. We knew it. Unfortunately, without having the legal help extended to him, he could only afford so much. And unfortunately, he spent 18 months of that five years in prison here in arkansas. But i will say with that, in may of 1960, jefferson and i graduated. And let me tell you, i knew that i had completed the task that i started. [applause] carlotta i needed that diploma. That diploma validated everything that i had gone through. And that very next day, i caught the first thing smoking out of little rock. I vowed never to return but i did six years later. And since then ive seen a lot of changes, i see progress going on. I see progress going on in our country. I also see that there is a necessity for us to be vigilant about what is going on in our country, speak up, get involved, vote, help change what is going on in this country. As you know, there are people trying to reverse what is going on, all of the progress we have made. And thats pretty much what i really would like to say today. So thank you very much for that opportunity. [applause] dr. Melva veels good morning. Ive been requested i move a little bit to the center. Im dr. Melva patelo veels. I think that perhaps what im going to do is tell you a little bit about what happened and then you can ask questions. So think about what you want to ask me. After the little rock central high incident, prior to when carlotta went back, most of us were told to get out of little rock because we were under great pressure. And the ku klux klan was offering 10,000 dead, 5,000 alive. And at the time i had someone call up my grandmother and they said get her out. During this time right afterwards everybody got out of little rock. And what happened was the naacp sought avenues for us to get out, and there were avenues sought all over the place. In many instances, families sponsored us were contributed to help us get settled in other places. If youre going to talk to us, each one of the nine has a different settlement story. I was sent from here to San Francisco, california, where i almost had a heart attack. I wanted to live with a black family, i wanted my own phone and a subscription every magazine. When i got off the plane, 13 white people rushed towards me to hug me. If youre from little rock, no white folks were rushing to hug unless they have a rope in their back pocket. It was not a happy greeting for me, but it would change my life. Among them were the woman and man who i would call my mother and father. He turned out to be dr. George mccabe, the founder of sonoma State University and in sonoma, california. My mother was an activist. And she combined with my birth mother, where both very pushy ladies, you are to achieve we do not come home. If you come home and have not achieved enough, you will go back and do it again. The collaboration through my mother, who had been a professor, and those people in santa rosa, was shattering for me because theres no way out. But on the other hand, my father changed my name. Would not let me use my first name, except maybe joy. Would not allow many have any interviews by the press. Took away all my privileges. Youre not a star, baby. Youve got to make it through school like the rest of us. Were going to do some good and some homework. Were not traveling anywhere. Were going to have to earn our money from the baseline. Please go make your bed and check with me when youve got your housework done. So when i first got there, i was frightened to death. Im leaving with these white folks. I dont know what they are going to do to me at night, but they built me a bed by hand. He said to me later, that they were building me, my selfesteem. My dad said look here, you are never less than my daughter, never less than my child. And thats how its going to be always. No one can deny you anything, because you are not meant to be denied anything. When i was taken downtown to the santa rosa Swimming Pool and forbidden to swim, my father got the rest of his teacher friends from sonoma State University, put signs in the air and said, hey, were going to march until you let her swim. When the neighbors came over to say, what is nigger swimming in our neighborhood and they started throwing rocks, my daddy got some rocks and started throwing back. [laughter] they were not very wealthy but straightline people who were teachers. They were quakers. Fighters for rights and preschools. My mother set of only Public Television station in santa rosa, california. She would drag me around. It was so funny because at her funeral everybody looked at me and i was the only black person there. They also, oh my goodness, that is why your mother dragged you around all the time. She kept you with her. People in town wondered who i was, because there were very few black people there. But they stood up against whatever happened and they showed me a lot not by what they said, but their behavior, how they treated me. My father took me to school to register on the first day, and people looked at him like he was crazy. And he said this is my daughter, and im here to register her for school. She is going to Start College today. Each one of us has heart wrenching stories about where we went, what we did. Some went off to University Like arnie green. Ernie green. Each of us went through the whole process of orienting ourselves to adulthood and life. But among our greatest needs during this period was a healing. We had to find our balance, who are we, why are we on earth . Why are they taking pictures of us . What are we going to do later . What the most important question that hung in the air as carlotta mentioned was, have we done the right thing . And when we received the congressional gold medal of honor in the white house, it hit us all. Yeah, you did. You did what you were supposed to do, you did what god assigned you to do. You did the right thing and many people will benefit. As children, teenagers, you dont understand that. You dont totally understand why even though Martin Luther king said to us i was complaining. And he said, hey, look here , melva, you are not doing this for yourself. Dont be selfish. You are doing this for generations unborn, for people you have not met, people you will never see. I did not understand that at all. I didnt understand how what we did was an international act, a national act and an act that affected the people of arkansas. In my minds eye, the white people who were in Central High School and those battling against us, we were all going through a lesson. And all of it was a part of kind of an orchestration of a higher power to determine that we all learn this lesson that either were going to make it together or we aint going to make it. And as long as one of us is not free, none of us is free. And so it was a huge, hard, hard fought lesson, which would affect me for the rest of my life. For example, therapists say the reason why i lose weight and gain it, and lose weight and gain it is because when i am fat , i feel less vulnerable. And ive had psychological fears all my life. Everyone of us has residue left. Its not fun walking down the hallways knowing you will be hit any minute. We have things we all live with. People ask, do we stay in touch . You know we do. Out of the nine of us, five of us are blood cousins, that whatever we are, we are related to each other and we love each other with all her hearts. We miss jefferson. He is with us. We miss each other. I miss gloria. I love jean. She is a party girl, hey, now. I miss her telling me what to do next because im kind of boring. Carlotta is in charge, if youve got a social engagement, shes going to do it. Shes the one who was the main mentor of our little rock nine foundation. Shes a hardworking lady. Youve got to know where things are. When mr. Ernie green speaks, we follow. Because he is the oldest of us. Dont obitchy if you hy if you also bit itc dont follow him. Kerry is here to tell us jokes and enjoy and give us a spiritual thing. We all blend together and its a blend of love. We have respect for each other. Couldnt have made it through that without each other. Its as though god said im going to mix you a formula. When i put it all together, all your personalities, will fall into place and you will see how you each enable each other. And every single time we get together, every single one of us falls into that pattern. Ernie the boss, carlotta the organizer. If she says get to the airport by 7 00 a. M. , i know by butt better be there or its over. We all take our parts up. Gloria is dignified, knowing the history. Going to inform us. Everybody has a role. How do i feel about this . It is a unique experience. I will never be as close to anyone on the planet as these people because they know what really happened to us. At that age, we could not talk to our mother or father. Later on our sons, children, all interrelated, know and talk to each other and all say how it affected their lives. Of course. But we didnt go around saying, look here, we are the little rock nine, we are important, look at your history. I didnt say anything. My boys went to school and came home at five and said, hey, we saw a book in the library, warriors something or other. A black woman in the back looks like you, that she had the makeup. You know, you could look a lot better than you do. [laughter] somebody came to the door to interview me and they said, no, wrong house, slammed door. Wasnt like we were busy living as stars. The little rock nine. We all have individual lives. Gloria has lived her life in im going to get this wrong, sweden. With her kids and husband. Minnie jean lived a lot of her life in canada. Social worker. Always grassroots organizer, going to speak her mind. People played different roles. I was an nbc newscaster. For me, the news people here set a tone. I realized i watch them operate. If its in the news, hard to hang somebody when someone is writing it down, got a camera going. I became a News Reporter for nbc. I was with abc, and when i got done, i taught and ran a Public Relations company. I really believed that exposure in the news was what gets it. I was a professor and went on to retire and start writing books. Each of us has an interesting pathway weve climbed, interesting things weve all done in our lives. So you would have to look up each of the individual histories to get them. But we all grew up with the blessings of lord jesus. Thats how i feel. What could have happened to us didnt. When they gave us those incredible statues downtown at the capitol, we all looked at each other and said, huh. Terry was Walking Around with his grandson and we said, we didnt know we would live this long. Same thing first night we were here. How old are you . Im 75 too. Youre going to be 76 when . Minnie jean telling me im due for another birthday. I dont want to hear that. We know that on earth, only love is a healer. If not taking care of things and looking at what is going on around you, get off your butt and do so. It is you who decides what happens in the future. Dont forget where we came from. I never forget. Dont tell me we havent made some progress, people. I remember being that little girl who rode on that bus in the back of the bus. I remember sitting in front and getting on and slapped by bus man, and my grandmother dragging me to the back. I remember the water fountains. I thought to myself, hell i got a crayon, who is going around putting signs on everything that says white only . I just need paper and pen to redo this. [laughter] i just need a moment. Thats what is sad about life here. When i was four years of age, is i said to my mother, where did we come from . She said, you were brought by the stork. The stork comes around and you have the privilege i said well, ok. I got my red wagon, went to the front of the house and sat there for days and days. To this day, i know you better wear a sun hat. It hurt the top of my head, the sun did. You know what i was waiting for . I wanted the stork to come by, pick my butt up and get me out of here. I figured if he could deliver, he could pick up. That was my reasoning. Thats how badly i felt about watching my parents transform in the household from interesting people to when we went to local grocery store, yes, sir, no, sir. My grandmother reached for box of baking powder one day. I said, you know you cant do that. You cant take things off the shelf. We take them off. She stood in line to get meat. Somebody else came in, knocked out of line. People say to us sometimes, why did you want to go to Central High School . I bet you wanted to marry somebody white. My grandmother used to say to me, hey, you aint courting until youre 18. And you sure the heck aint getting married now. Thats not a purpose. That was never on any of our minds. You know what, we just wanted a better education. All right. Like there is some big, huge reason . We wanted a better life for our children and a better education. With that i will say that god in me is the god in you, were all the same. There is no difference. The same feelings of honor and courage that helped me go through the incredible experience of being in Central High School that would mark me and my family for the rest of our lives rests in you. You have to move ahead and march on. Grandmother used to say when i complained, march forward, girl, move on. Load is heavy, train is hot, its a heavy load. Keep moving on. I tell you, its not perfect, but its better. Not as perfect as i thought it would be but its ok. Im going to keep moving on, what are you going to do . I will now take a couple of questions. Thanks for listening, coming here, caring. [applause] yes, sir. [indiscernible] this is a general question i wanted to get in. What role, if any, did the church play in your situation . Church was a crucial role in the organization of Central High School and all of us. You have to understand that prior to that time, church was our source of news, any policing we got, doctoring, source of law. It was everything. Nobody else cared about us but our minister and rest of the people who attended. If i need my teeth done or needed something done legally, income tax . Go to church. Thats where i get help. Church was everything in my life and the only thing in my life that provided me with power and the people at that church back this up. And my mother i buried a few years back, i will never forget, they showed me a sunday school book, and they had marked down her contribution to the church for almost 50 years. And the fact that she taught sunday school. For most of us, religion of some description was the absolute Key Driving Force in our lives. There wasnt a day or moment that i didnt pray. And when i got into the worst trouble, people putting bombs on my head in central high, i said the lords prayer to see how many times i could say it, 13 1 2 times up three flights of stairs. So yes, aint no life without church. I dont have life today without it. There is no life without god. I just wrote a book about that. God is always here, always will be with all of us. There is no life. One more question and i got to go. [indiscernible] we never got a dime from the state. It cost my parents a lot of money to go through that. Illnesses, hardships and whatnot. No one ever offered a dime, we didnt take a dime. Nobody ever paid a dime to us. Any money given to naacp was utilized for things across the country. To people who object by the way to expenditure of cash on us for this celebration were having, ill say one thing, you know what, until you walk in my shoes, until youve been where ive been, dont you make no comment about whether or not weve made progress. Ok . [applause] dont you say a thing about what is going on. Were here because we need you to bring us here, because we hope our gathering will inspire and help somebody to keep moving forward. Thats the only reason were here. When we say somebody, we mean both whites and blacks, not just black folks. For example, let me tell you what we think. People always assume what they think im thinking. I wouldnt be here today without the rabbis, the lawyers, the you know what my sons names are . Matthew thurgood and evan marshall, for a reason. We wouldnt be here without attorneys and white people who sneaked over to help us around. That woman who stood and walked elizabeth out of there, wouldnt be here without the white News Reporters that wrote what they wrote was a or the white people that brought over food when we didnt have it. Not a single oriented project but cooperative. Yes, they were really bad white folks, but really good ones who risked their lives to see that we got out. Some really good ones. Nice soldiers who laid their lives on the line to see to it i didnt get acid in my eye. He slammed my head beneath water fountain and ran me out to get help. Let us not make conclusions about anybody. People say about us, who of us hates somebody . None of us do. We dont have an ounce of hate in our system for anybody. We just think one thing, it is love that will save the world. God bless you, thank you for listening. [applause] all right. Six decades of education and it was nice to have that summed up. Six decades of education. We should reflect on the progress. We have other members of this committee, this panel. I would like to start by asking a few questions. You can sit at your seat and respond. What was right about the Little Rock School district of 1957 . Boone, let us start with you, what was right . Coach boone well, ok. I cant speak for what is right now. Because times are different. In 1974, i came as the football. Oach the central we had an enrollment of about 70 to 30. We had more whites than blacks, yearsworked there for 20 and i was not the first africanamerican coach. Coach crater and coach johnny year,was there for one and i spent 20 years at central. I saw five different principals. In 1994, i retired. But i had diversity on the football, basketball, into track and track teams. We had big participation there. You dont see that today. It has kind of changed. Private schools have taken away a lot of the good athletes and students from the private sector. I am the daughter of the late attorney who was the secretary for the naacp during the 1957 crisis year and practiced law for 59 years until the end of his life in 2012. Feel i had an opportunity because of the little rock nine, the naacp, because of my father and so many centralayers, to attend high school and received the education and diploma and have moved on to other things. What is right is already right and working. I am in a place where i want to focus on what is wrong so we can fix it. There are a lot of things that are right. People mention we have come a long way but we have a really long way to go because we are regressing. The things that have worked in the past or that students are receiving, the education, people should have equal access to education and representation to equitable education in the city of little rock. [applause] laverne i am laverne bell tolliver. I am part of what you call, phase two. 25 students who desegregated the Junior High School in little rock. Ofr of the five at the time the Junior High Schools, which were grade seven through nine were desegregated in 1961. The final school was desegregated in 1962. That was phase two. Phase three was the desegregation of the Elementary School. I would like to say that what is right, is that there are some schools, including Central High School, who are excelling in their academics. However, there are three high schools that are under distress, and i believe we need to work on that. There are some schools that are doing well, but we need to focus on where we need to go from here. There is much more i can say. I am glad i did the powerpoint. You can see the timeline i gave to you, that was passed out, that shows the types of otheractions, as well as actions that took place from 1956 to the present. If you have a question afterwards, i would be happy to answer. There are a few of the schools that are doing well so far, but we have miles to go. [applause] we know what was happening that was right. We also want to know what was wrong and what we can use to propel students for higher students forward in the fight for better education, so what we ca can we do to propel them forward . It is important to activate the idea in young people that they can do it. Children move president s to act. Many genes minnie jean touched on a couple of things, where young people stood up and spoke out and kept at it throughout history, and they were these catalysts for change. This change that is still in the process of happening. Im a graduate student in my second year at the Clinton School of Public Service. These are things we analyze and discuss every day about how to be of service to the public. How to work with young people and engage them in things they are interested in. We need to give them an opportunity to know they are worthy and capable and that they have a voice, to engage them in Voter Registration practices. It is not like, you turned 18 and you go through this thing, it is like what does it mean to vote when you are in kindergarten . Worked well that do for you to understand the process by the time you were old enough . What is it mean to be an active participant in your parentstudent and teacher associations . And what is happening with extracurricular academics on campus . What does it mean . And not when you get to an age where you are allowed to speak, but what if we gave them a space with they are always allowed to be heard . I feel like i dont have all of the answers, but i can energize them to move others to act. [applause] what i see that is going on at this time when i was preparing for this conference, i looked at the fact that 28 Charter Schools are approved right now. There are a few extra that are in distress, but 28 Charter Schools are in existence. From the time william rector building the academy, funds have been taken away from little rock public schools. If you look at the history back in 1956 and 1958, there was an extraordinary session of the congress, Arkansas Congress at that time, that proposed the schools transfer funds for students who did not want to attend schools with africanamericans. Today, those funds are legally transferred to Charter Schools, which takes away the funds from little rock public schools. Consequently, we have approximately 19 20 caucasians attending little rock public schools. We need to do serious work in terms of considering how we can have schools that have the funding to provide quality services. Schools are in distress when we do not have the opportunity to have equal services. It is not a matter of whether or not the schools are desegregated, we already know. We need to figure out how to have access to the funds, to properly educate the students in the schools. [applause] a comment . Have right now, before as far as the students are concerned, when i was coaching at central, i had kids trying to play ball and they were from many different communities. You could never get them to cooperate like they should. This is part of the problem. You can clear that up. Kids rode the school bus and had passes. And the city bus would be lined up down 14 street and everybody could go home. Thank you. From a social education perspective, we have had six decades of education here and around the nation. Socially, as far as Extracurricular Activities and out of school time, what changes have you seen since your days in school that we need to reinstitute in schools today, as far as social activities for students like band, or glee club, or artistic endeavors . What have you saying that we are not doing now that we were doing during your time in school . What i see now and what i started to see before i got out of coaching, they dont have a lot of social things anymore. There used to be dances after the ball games and things like that. We dont have that anymore. Kids come and go to class. They get in their cars and go back to their communities. They socialize in other places. They are not really coming together. I have a bachelors of arts in theater arts and dance. Ivan artist. I love the stage. I pretty much fell in love with theater at Central High School. It was a big deal for me to have classes on that stage and perform on that stage because it is something that many talked about but few got the opportunity to do because they cannot participate in extracurriculars. I did debate, black culture society, poetry, a lot of artistic things. I am 17 years removed from high school, so i do not know if some of those things are still going on, but some of the people i work with dont opportunities do not have opportunities for those arts programs, either on the stage or in technical aspects, where they work on sets, or other things where they can explore creativity outside of a studio our class. I feel like if they had more artistic activities, that would be a big help. I volunteer for an Elementary School. Were i also graduated in the six grade, but i can tell you they do have a lot of activities that go on there. I dont see the care and regard that are elementary our Elementary School teachers provided during that time. Many of the teachers there are africanamericans, but something is missing that care, compassion, and expectation that a child is going to succeed and we need to return to that part. I do also see at central high various activities going on. I do want to mention again Charter Schools. Many times in private schools, you have to pay for those kinds of fees to participate in different activities, so that is who sendd many people their children to those Charter Schools cannot afford, so children will miss out in that particular way, but i would like to encourage teachers, educators, administrators to put that expectation that your children will succeed. I wrote a book, and there is also a card about it that you can pick up if you want, but the 18 people that i interviewed who desegregated the schools said that when they were in the schools, they did not have the opportunity to participate in those Extracurricular Activities. Many of them said, however, as someone mentioned a little bit earlier, that their church provided that. Pastor, a senior encourage churches to step up to the plate and provide those opportunities for young people because they may not be able or eligible for whatever reason to receive those activities in the school. Thank you. We are again running short of time, but as one last statement from each of you, i would like to ask you what is your vision for the education system, not just in little rock, but around our nation and world for the next 60 years. Would you like to start us off, or do you need a moment . Thats going to be tough to deal with. I think is going to need to be a lot of changes. Ron a fine arts and financial a fine arts from and financial standpoint, we have become a coop and the participation of the community is not what he should be. I would like to see a system that does not privatize education and privatize prisons because i feel like the direction it is going in is creating an elitist system to educate some and contain others, and i would like to see a world ofre there is an equilibrium justice for students of all races and for them to have an opportunity to explore their s and creativity. It feels like we are in 1957. Theres not a mob waiting outside the clinton president ial center, but there are people in office who are responding to some of these new crisis ease moblike manner, and i would like to see a world where people are free and not oppressed and where our children have a chance. If we do not have education, if we do not have children, if we do not have seeds, we will die. I would like to first of all say what she said. Just in addition to that, one of ,he things that i keep thinking and this could be a little bit on the controversial side, but because so many people have desegregation as the beall and and all, endall, i think we need to talk about the fact that we may never get the schools to be equal in race and therefore have equal access to education, so i think that we need to look at what the students that i talked with said, which was they looks at the need to have the books, the materials that were first rate instead of used. They needed to have the equipment, the access to the best technology possible, and they needed to have all of that in an environment that was not , and thatwn on them was why many chose to attend the Junior High Schools at that time. Its not necessarily about race. Right now, it is about, yes, race, but its also about socioeconomic status because truth be told, if you are what weg some of our call desegregated public schools, caucasians are getting the same lowerclass education as other races, so we need to in 60 years make sure that we are providing top rate access to and expectations that everyone can succeed to the best of their ability. You all. Appreciate you all that has stayed. Please give our panelists that are still here at hand. We realize the constraints of time, but we are thankful for what we did get in. I appreciate each of our guests. You have been very helpful for me to learn more about what can be done, and i thank you for the opportunity to be your moderator. [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2017] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] will quickly, we know we have ms. Russo on the program to speak, but she has asked me to let me know there is information about little rock Central High School and what they are currently doing on the table by the exit. We would like to thank you for coming out and attending the symposium. Lets thank our guests one more time for coming out and supporting us. Have a good evening. This weekend on American History tv, tonight at 8 00 p. M. Eastern on lectures in history, university of california san diego professor luis alvarez on the 1943 los angeles suit suit riot. Zoot suit zoot suiters, mexicanamerican zoot suitors in particular, were viewed as enemy if not number one the number two or 1b japaneseamericans. Exploring the greenhill plantation. Greenhill plantation has the. Riginal slave owner here he was very active in the slave trade. One of the things he decided to put in his yard is a slave Auction Block and auctioneers stand. You can definitely feel the power of this place. That Auction Block is a huge part of why this site is so powerful. This would have been the last place men, women, children would have been with their families. After this place, they would have been scattered all across the united states, so this is really kind of ground zero for that bad experience. At 8 00, and interview on the stonemasons who built the outer wall of the white house. Over the front door, which is carved with lilies and flowers and ribbons and acorns and everything you can think of. Very lush over the front door. Probably the finest example of carving in america for 100 years. American history tv all weekend every weekend only on. Span3 we are in our 22nd year of the texas book festival. It was founded in 1995 by then First Lady Laura Bush and a Pretty Amazing group of dedicated volunteers who just decided that we needed to have a book festival in austin, texas, to celebrate Texas Authors and literacy and to support our texas libraries. Thee those early years, book festival has just exploded. It very quickly became a National Premier destination for the biggest books of the year. Join booktv for the texas book festival live from austin saturday and sunday, november 5 cspan2. An John Marshall was the fourth chief justice of the united states, appointed by john adams, serving until 1835. Next, legal scholars discuss landmark cases decided during on the courtnure including mccullough versus maryland and marbury versus madison. Its just over one hour and 20 minutes. Founded the James Wilson Institute in 2013, and the

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