Dessert selection of works that harriet were when she was living in his house and we like to show people other sides of Uncle Toms Cabin that Harriet Beecher stowe was known for. They have like to let our visitors know that harriet has made a Lasting Impact and we want to make sure her story is not forgotten. Stowe died in 1896. She was 85. She died in this house as her husband had before her and when she died this parlor were standing in the front parlor. Her coffin was laid out here and this is where the wait lists of the New York Times wrote this up. It was widely reported and she was so famous that many came to visit and give their respects. She was buried next to one of her children, two of her children who predeceased her and her husband in andover, massachusetts. Where they had been living when their son henry died at 19. Whatever i could stand by this and funny and i dont have to do this again. He am fine. Well, i was wrong. People went abcly nuts for it. Some people loved it.
As i got for is the end of the book, there is one story that had to be rich and i didnt want to write about it. I didnt feel a need to write about it. I felt very selfconscious writing about it, but it was about 9 11. If i did not write about it, there wouldve been a big hole in the book. When i started writing about it, it was like the first couple of days i dont remember much. It is all kind of a blur to me. Even when i hook up with guys with me at the time, they say the same thing like they remember something very vividly. I have no recollection. I remember something very vividly they cant remember. So for all of us, the first couple of days with kind of a blur. After that, and i was working 12 hours on, 12 hours off for the next two months. My unit was in the detective bureau, so we got assigned and our job was to remain in. I could write about what i saw and what we did. Those are peoples families, family members and i couldnt write about it. But i think i wrote about my feelings
We will finish up our primetime programming at 11 00. That all happens tonight on cspan2s booktv. Welcome to montgomery, alabama on booktv located on the alabama river, population of 200,000 making it the second largest city in the state. We explore the history of the city and state by local authors including a look at alabamas most powerful governors. Go around the entire south, louisiana had the laws, georgia had the challenges, South Carolina had pitchfork intel and strom thurmond. I would say we can say and put ourselves up against theirs. Later we will go inside the home of F Scott Fitzgerald to learn about the importance of montgomery. We show you a house that was the turning point for scott and zelda. You will find out F Scott Fitzgerald is more than just a writer. He is not a genius who can come up with everything on his own. He needed a partner, someone to give him a life full of ideas that he could write the Great American novel. That was elza. We speak with fred gray about t
And somewhere in the audience is billy but let, a former preacher from tuskegee who now lives here and his daughter, jean nate. He came to us as our preacher to days after she was born. No she is a student here at georgia state, and i am upper shifted to them and maybe some other persons year. I met one lady who bought a copy of the First Edition of bus ride to justice. It was in 1995. I had autographed it. I put a little note on it. She had to get the current edition because of live has happened since 1995. Men inside or not waiting for me as i walked out the white marble steps of the United States Supreme Court on all warm may morning in 1959. But i was waiting for them. I and those i represented have been waiting for several centuries. Those are the beginning words of chapter one of bus ride to justice. I express the feelings that i had as i was doing so are you my first case in the United States Supreme Court even though i had other cases. Add one other cases in that accord without
About immigrants. As they say to provide tonally sensitive messaging points to those members of the grand old party who just havent evolved disgurively on immigration. Some of the dos and donts are dont use phrases like illegals or aliens and never say anchorbaby. Instead, why not use undocumented immigrant when referring to those who are here without, well, documentation. And when addressing border security, dont ever say send them all back or electric fence. How about the enforcement of our borders. The hln is a group devoted the bringing more voters into the gop, is highlighting that the president broke his promise on the Immigration Reform in the first term, but they caution not to focus on amnesty, and to avoid at all costs president reagans Immigration Reform as an example that applies today, so it got me wondering when i heard senator john mccain getting straight to the point this week. How do you convince the republicans about the path to citizenship . Well, look, i will give y