Democrats 202 7488000. Independents 202 7488002. One headline in todays wall street journal is also on the issue of immigration we were just discussing. Oricans aim to jam court deportees. As donald Trump Presses ahead with the and immigration crackdown, one group is pushing ahead with a strategy to fight the likely increase of deportation of their undocumented compatriots. The alreadysing overburdened system to break down. Advising immigrants in the u. S. To take their cases to court and fight deportation if detained. The backlog in the immigration system is tremendous. Idea is to double or triple the backlog until trump the tssts this idea trump desis this idea. Catherine on the democratic line. Good morning. Caller good morning. We should go by law. If we do so, should start at the top. That means that the socalled statesnt of unitedunited should be impeached because he aided and abetted a foreign country when he was running for president. That is against every law you could possibl
Denver, colorado. We spoke with professors, authors and graduate students about their research. This interview is about 20 minutes. We are with professor Vernon Burton of Clemson University and peyton mccrary, George Washington University Law School Lecturer and former department of justices story. You are fresh off your panel on historians as Expert Witnesses. When our historians used as Expert Witnesses, professor burton . Vernon in our case, we have done mainly Voting Rights work. Goes back a number of years but historians were used quite a bit now in a lot of different kinds of litigation. Explaining circumstances. Looking at intent. Environmentalfrom concerns to medical issues. Tobacco. Company. Suits. Think, they me, i could almost be used anywhere to help put things into perspective for what is the Voting Rights, sort of law canon we think of, explaining the totality of circumstances of why a law is passed. Host you spent 26 years with the Justice Department. When did you become
Sort of helping to build the foundation of what chico is today. Standing in front of an altar of a chinese temple housed here at chico museum. They started here as early as 1840. This was part of a movement happening across the United States. They were looking for more opportunities and a lot of them came here. For byassage was paid other chinese merchants and in coming here, they had to work to pay back that expense. The working in andculture and factories working in major houses and whens and the transcontinental railroad. Onward, thered were primarily male workers and there was a lot of friction between them and a lot of other ethnic groups. They were looking to settle in their own communities. They were seen as a competition because they were willing to work for lower wages and seen as moralitydown american because they had settled in groups where there was and theyion, opium use to thensidered a threat racial composition in america. This would iraq into violence and in chico, ther
Indiana university talks about abrahaming book lincolns indiana childhood. The Lincoln Group of the district of columbia hosted this. It is just over an hour. Thank you, john. Our speech or our speaker tonight is a professor of history at anderson university. He has several books about Abraham Lincoln, including his first book, which was a comparison of Abraham Lincoln and jefferson davis. He also wrote lincoln the lawyer , which everybody in this room has read. He wrote lincoln and the constitution and lincoln and white america. Tonight he is going to talk about his newest book. Lincolnslk about indiana years. Lincoln spent from the age of seven until 21 and indiana, so his formative years. Welcome dr. Brian di erk. [applause] powerpoint it is good to go. Thank you for inviting me back. I was saying at dinner this evening, this is actually my third visit to the Lincoln Group. I do not know if anybody was here when i was first here in the year 2000. I was a freshly minted professor at
Indiana university talks about abrahaming book lincolns indiana childhood. The Lincoln Group of the district of columbia hosted this. It is just over an hour. Thank you, john. Our speech or our speaker tonight is a professor of history at anderson university. He has several books about Abraham Lincoln, including his first book, which was a comparison of Abraham Lincoln and jefferson davis. He also wrote lincoln the lawyer , which everybody in this room has read. He wrote lincoln and the constitution and lincoln and white america. Tonight he is going to talk about his newest book. Lincolnslk about indiana years. Lincoln spent from the age of seven until 21 and indiana, so his formative years. Welcome dr. Brian di erk. [applause] powerpoint it is good to go. Thank you for inviting me back. I was saying at dinner this evening, this is actually my third visit to the Lincoln Group. I do not know if anybody was here when i was first here in the year 2000. I was a freshly minted professor at