quickly treated all of the books were secured would be available for recovery the following day. the truth is the implied somewhere in between. in the morning the library twitter account transmit the following message. the n.y.p.d. has destroyed everything and occupy wall street and put it on dumpsters, including the uw ows library. stephen boyer had lived at the part for the most of the tune of the cabinet, worked in a fibrin hope to create the massive ows poetry anthology with an honesty famous contributors around the world. at night he said he could fairly save the massive anthology before the cops shoved him out of the park and he watched them books and the backs of the tracks. our library has over nine votes and a little less than 5000 were taken that night he said adding the rest of the books stored in a nearby space to the movement. i see the anthology by strapping those two men back and read from it during the raid. when asked about the incident, though from the lib
the book cal s almanack profiles america s 30th president, calvin coolidge. the book is a collection of president coolidge speeches examples of his political thinking and photographs, editorial cartoons and the campaign, really get that stands his political career. the william k. samford library in new york post this hour-long talk. thank you. it s great to be back here at the library. i had a great time last year. i guess the basic question before us is why chronicle and commemorate the words of calvin coolidge, a politician and president renowned for doing nothing and for saying less. why, indeed. because the basic premise of the question is small. the modern world view of calvin coolidge as a failure, political cypher who met a man who not only accomplished nothing but who columnist and abundant walter wittman famously charged the variable genius for inactivity. it all depends of course how one defines inactivity, presumably mr. wittman him as eight unimaginable leader