Extraordinarily important. As far as a bullet goes, more for the record, i know five cdc people arrive and this is different. This is unprecedented and we have a lot of infectious bass diseases. Doctor ben from washington dc, hes help to cure over 5000 kids in uganda and i have introduced a bill and we have asked you repeatedly look into it. We are talking about getting this involved and this is a situation of kids who are dying horrible deaths and i have seen the kids and i have met the children and i had one of the neurosurgeons testify from africa. And that is part of the vision to grow the capacity of the resurgence in africa. I just want to thank you and i want to thank you for your leadership on all of these Global Health issues. We have set a tone for American Leadership at this point tremendous results. The thank you goes to you for these results. On may 22 we will have part of this policy and we a have been designed to take the thousand days approach targeting pregnant women i
Display in the building. I would like to specially thank the society for its efforts to assist my predecessor and the Curators Office of obtaining the portraits of all 19 of the prior courts which have now been obtained. On behalf of all the officers of the court here, i would like to thank the society for the all the efforts they give to all of us. We are joined by three distinguished scholars for discussion of the civil war and its impact on Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. The moderator of the program will be professor brad snyder. He is an assistant professor of law at the university of Wisconsin Law school. He is the author of wellpaid slave. He is currently at work on the society of truth and other progressives that lived in the Dupont Circle rowhouse and formed a political salon in the 1910s. He has written extensive articles about justice holmes. Tonights analysts are James Mcpherson and g. Edward white. James mcpherson is the George Henry Davis Professor Emeritus of United State
Welcome to the Supreme Court. It is great to see so many people here for the Supreme Court historical societys second lecture of the 2014 government lecture series. The society was formed in 1974 by chief Justice Warren burger with the notion of promoting public understanding of the history of the court. It does that in many ways through lectures like these, through the publication three times a year of the journal of Supreme Court history, and through the acquisition of portraits of the justices for display in the building. I would like to specially thank the society for its efforts to assist my predecessor and the Curators Office of obtaining the portraits of all 19 of the prior courts which have now been obtained. On behalf of all the officers of the court here, i would like to thank the society for the all the efforts they give to all of us. We are joined by three distinguished scholars for discussion of the civil war and its impact on Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. The moderator o
Penguins are without the fast bowler jofra archer. He was excluded after breaching health and safety rules put in place by the team to stop the spread of coronavirus and its understood he made a mile detour home. With half centuries from ben stokes and dom sibley. England finished on 207 3. Gloomy skies over old trafford, but that was the least of englands worries after an extraordinary, Early Morning twist. Jofra archer is one of their biggest stars. It emerged after the first test in southampton hed stopped off at his home in brighton. The players were supposed to drive straight to manchester so as not to jeopardise their bio secure bubble. When his driving detour came to light, archer was told to isolate for five days, but he was excluded from the team. Jofra realises that obviously what he did was wrong, hes very remorseful for that and we will support him. But ultimately we are grateful to the west indies for the way they have taken that and obviously a breach of any protocol when
That the future of the space once occupied by the statue of the slave trader Edward Colston must be decided on by the people of the city. The space has been replaced by the figure ofjen reid, a black lives matter protester. The installation was not done with permission as our correspondent jon kay reports. Undercover and before sunrise, artist marc quinn and his team erected their statue without permission. On the plinth where slave trader Edward Colston stood until last month, they installed a resin replacement of a local womanjen reid. It was inspired by this photo of her taken during the black lives matter protests. Out with the old and in with the new. And i think thats that statue, putting aside it being myself, it definitely says colston is no more and its time for change, time to move on. People of my colour walking past that statue and knowing that change is happening and it will continue to happen. When crowds pulled down colstons statue and threw it into the citys docks, it p