The subject of daily news reports we next feature several historic films on the postal service. Zip zip how you to do we hope you have a moment or two to listen to what we have to say to each and every one of you it concerns our postal system. Our lifetime friend as all of you know they never failed us through the years through driving rains sleet or snow now they have a problem and what are they to do the answer my friend is very simple its up to you to see them through do do do do do do do do do do well back in the days of the 13 colonies freedom and how to defend it mailing a letter was in much trouble there werent many places to send it now its a different story they have more mail than ever before its stuffed in bags and stacked on shelves hardly room for anything more theres been a mail explosion theyve got a terrible load and you have to help them right away before the u. S. Post office explodes oh. It wasnt so long ago that communication was a simple act, but the range of the h
Book team of rivals was the inspiration for Stephen Spielbergs lincoln in 2012. Doctor goodwin earned her phd at harvard. So coming up, were going to re air her in death appearance where she discussed her entire body of work and took phone calls. Will also be showing you discussions from her books, leadership in turbulent times. In holy pulpit. So well start with a january 1st, 1995 the parents on cspan series footnotes. In this hourlong interview, she discussed franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt in the home front during world war ii. Her book, no ordinary time, won the Pulitzer Prize for history. Now here is historian doris goodwin. Author no ordinary time. If you could ask either Franklin Roosevelt or Eleanor Roosevelt a couple of questions after all of the work that is done. What would you be. I think it would like to understand why she was unable a certain moment in the middle of the war when he asked her to be his wife again and stop traveling and stay home and take care of him, and i
His appearance in 2012. For his final novel, back to blood. [applause]. Tom wolfe good evening everybody. Welcome. On behalf of all of us from the Miami Book Fair, we want to welcome you to the 29th book fair. Believe it or not. [applause]. This is a remarkable undertaking. Takes the work of literally hundreds and hundreds of volunteers. We have a remarkable board of directors to work extremely hard to doing this year round. None of this at all, could happen without the good good support of everyone here in miamidade college. Lets give them a huge round of applause. [applause]. Host i would particularly like to thank the sponsors. Without the sponsors and the funding from sponsors and governmental agencies, we would not be able to bring you this wonderful literary extravaganza. And many of you are friends of the Miami Book Fair. And that is the way you can support this book fair and make sure that it goes on for another 29 years as well. [applause]. If you look downstairs, you are more
Cant be bothered to look through the ends of their noses. At this week, the best moment in american, on behalf of literary realism, we need a battalion to head out into the wild and unpredictable country of ours and reclaim it as very property. The trouble is turning yourself in it is that you immediately expose yourself to be from the top, or using characters to exaggerate of modern society but the truth is the opposite pales into insignificance compared with all caps on he tried to capture. Tom wolf was born and raised in richmond and educated Washington University and started his journalistic career with the Springfield Massachusetts union newspaper. Correspondent for the washington post, foreign news prize for his coverage of the cuban revolution. 1962, he moved to the new york tribune where he had to. Writers assigned the sunday supplement which later became newspapers in 1962, 63 afforded him the opportunity to travel to socal to write an article he sent his notes to his editor w
Welcome back everybody, as you know weve been in the golden age for sometime now. We have already seen the Technological Innovations that have made some of this economic expansion possible. We saw about the economic transformations and the effects of those changes in the economy as far as lifestyles both of the very rich, these opulent robert baron lifestyles on the one hand and on the other hand on the very poor but it was the People Living shacks of the new england newtowns or whether it was when we explored the gilded age city, the increasing problems of housing that came with this rapid and in many ways, chaotic birth of the cities in the 19th century in all of it accompanied by problems going along with immigration. And then last time, we saw in particular there was some frustration with this new gilded age regime as we talk about the farmers in this period. That lecture really couldve been called the discontent in the gilded age part one. Today, we turn our attention mostly back