feet. we still do have that coastal flood advisory on the bay. check out maryland s radar. oh, yeah, things are getting interesting now. we have ocean city. we are getting lighter rain in here, and we ve got that a little earlier this morning, but really now we are starting to see some of the moderate bands moving in. you can see that right here in the yellow. as we look farther to the east, this is the squall line justin was talking about earlier that he said he could see offshore in the distance. we re waiting to see if this makes its way in or if we get that before that comes in here. heavier rain across the area. we ll keep our eyes on the lookout for that. here s hurricane earl and the 105 sustained winds moving to the north-northeast at 16 miles per hour. the difference is now that 169 miles, because it is moving, that s getting knocked down some. south-southeast of ocean city, maryland, and it is a category 2. so we re looking at the wind field here. once again, we are
decision still stands as something of a judicial miracle. but the supreme court s decision in brown versus board of education was the result of careful planning and a careful strategy set forth by charles hamilton and enacted by houston and thurgood marshall. in 1935, walter white, who was the executive secretary of the naacp and truly an extraordinary character in his own right, an extraordinary american in his own right. he asked charles hamilton houston, please devise a strategy by which the naacp could seek to desegregate education and transportation in america. houston, who was at the time the most famous african-american lawyer in american history, and certainly the most educated lawyer african-american lawyer in american history, but that the budget of $10,000 said, mr. white, unique to pick one or the other. so houston and white take education. charles hamilton houston was a graduate of amherst college in washington d.c., graduated from amherst at the age of 19, ser
trouble someone you rely on things like that because you can t rely on an education in history or something in the more serious nature. you re liable to repeat the psychodrama where you try and outdo your father in history. host: let s get a response from karl rove. guest: first of all, before 9/11, we were as safe as we were after 9/11. he put his finger on one which was where the divide between the fbi and the cia not been able to share information. so we weren t able to act upon information that the cia might have the fbi might have that the other one might appeal to shed a light on how dangerous that information was. and after 9/11 we checked on the so-called wall that had been a wreck did by assistant attorney general jamie choleric that said you cannot share cia and fbi can t share information. we had to do one thing after 9/11 that would make us safer and could only do one thing. that would be it. .. father and the son, but it is typical of people on the left who m
it s that simple. .. the book root and branch profiles charles hamilton houston, the first african-american on the harvard law review and dean of howard university law school. and his student, thurgood marshall, valedictorian of his class in 1933. and future supreme court justice. the two lawyers lead the naacp s legal office in challenging jim crow laws with a focus on school integration. hue-man bookstore in new york city posted the 40 minute talk. [inaudible] [inaudible] remarked after her husband fall from grace, she said we are who we are, because of who we were. and her words betray not only a mature compassion but also speak to a recognition that the past is always with us. and indeed, as william faulkner tells us in his 1950 know bella does, the past is not even past. and in this way we as a nation are who we are. because of who we were. ours is not a nation that hides from its history, or hides its history from its history books. and indeed, one reason why