You go to school. Thank you thank you thank. You. For this commercial long laugh because austin against you know downloading this for the brides for the night they can post im going to do which is about. Toning up now because amanda and i want to you more show proof for that i am going to do it not to get the show but oh my god. You. Know a new car so sit on the open much to me mama and sister are. Yes. For. Those that say should. Be children 6 brothers and 2 sisters from the of the shank of families suddenly became orphans home and watch thought to walk to snuff. I dont im just not for bob oh boy what are. Seen and. What is short you know mind im whooshed when we dont and you get. As if by a little magic Child Services did allow christina the older sister to keep the children in her care when you by just writing in the daily news but i did miss it all for why dont we speed show on we should e. G. Underwhelming i wouldnt want to give the bride. To push school so. Much. She was. Going t
marilyn monroe, blonde bombshell. get out the fire hose. hollywood super star. the late marilyn monroe. tragic victim. the story of marilyn monroe is an authentic tragedy. when we talk about marilyn poor marilyn, this vulnerable passive woman who is being destroyed by hollywood. that s the way the story frames her. after a reckoning in hollywood, it s time to reframe her story. now it can hit pause and roll it back a bit and ask ourselves, okay, what is it that we think we know? she was quite ahead of her time. and she was very much an architect of her own fame. you must think i was born yesterday. her performances are layered. they re funny. they re tender. they re human. they feel modern. bingo. she had a deep inner life. she was an artist. she was a poet. she was a businesswoman. what a power broker she was, renegotiating her contract, creating her own production company, getting films made. it s actually rather frustrating that people can t
Airs every saturday at 10 00 p. M. And sunday at 9 00 p. M. Eastern. You can watch all previous programs on our website. You are the author of the fair labor lawyers. Tell me about miss margolin. Betty was born in the jewish orphanage in new orleans that shaped her life profoundly. I like to say that before there was an the tour bs are gigabyte there was this. The fair labor standards act in the equal pay act. She champion those allies in her 30 years as an associate solicitor at the Labor Department. And she was a mentor to me. What were some other significant cases that she was involved in as well as the fair labor act. All of her time for the Labor Department was spent on the fair labors standards act. It was the whole body of work that caused the chief justice to say that she had put the flesh on the bare bones of the fair labor standards act and without her work the bare bones wouldve been wholly inadequate. Her most significant case standing alone was the first case argued under
Signing table. Thank you again for everyone attending here live. The signing table is directly outside the auditorium. Again we would like to thank mr. Peters on the habs of the lit fest and the lit fest appreciates your feedback which you can provide at pictures wrote lit best. Org. Thank you. [applause]. [inaudible conversation] [inaudible conversation] heres a look at books that are being published this week. Journalist Judith Schwartz look at ways to improve water availability and by the certification and water in plain sight. In the new trail appears, New York Post columnist naomi riley puts forth the policies she says will help american indians, from increased access to education to Legal Protections and entry into the free market. University at buffalo Political Science Professor James campbell looks at the causes of americas Political Division in, polarize. In the grid Gretchen Bakke reports on americas aging Energy Infrastructure and how to modernize it. Neuroscientist dean bu
I really could, like, walk into a Grocery Store and probably i really could like walk into a Grocery Store and probably finde five in a single like outing to walmart, so is very rich with students who had lived that experience and from various perspectives. At i reall the thing i realize when i i started interviewing was that there are so made different perspective there can ever thought about what life might look like for a kid who was five when the schools closed, so when i met those students i thought i should passed a wider net. It was amazing to meet someone that was not able to start their education until they were 10 years old and was pushed throug school in seven years and frustrated many teachers. That was a totally different experience from these kids who quit to school at 13 or 14 through no fault of their own, but because of school closures, so i did my best to cast a wide net and figure out what some of the main themes of the stories were and i have to say that narrowing d