After and it was published. We thank you. Our thanks to the staffs here at the William Jennings bryan home who opened their doors and their staffs and administration and the Medical Center which makes up the campus that we are at with part of the bryans home. We continue to look at his life and career. You can check out online on cspan. Org. What made an ideal republic . Here is what he had to say. Resting securely on the foundation stowed. And from t a republic proclaiming to the world. Self evidence, propositions that all men are created equal that theyre in doubt, government are instituted among men and the government derive their powers, be hold there is public in which civil and religious liberties endeavored and which the laws uplifted for a neighbors injury. Every citizen is a sovereignty but in which no one cares to wear a crown. On saturday, cspan looks at police and Race Relations. Well show you president obama at the Memorial Service for Police Officers killed in dallas and tim scott about his own interaction with the police and washington dc, police chief kathie lanir. It takes one or two small things to change the tone of an encounter with the Police Officer and sometimes it is the tone of the Police Officers, sometimes is the way you Say Something or how you Say Something or the way your body language when you approach the circumstances at the time. Once that tension starts, it tends to not stop. The important thing for us is Police Officers to remember is that you have to be very, very conscious of the way you approach people and the way you speak to people. Most people get defensive if they feel like you are being offensive. So, being respectful and you know and encounters and request if it is not a dangerous situation, request verses demand. Those things change the dynamic a little bit. You dont have authority or respect just because you wear the uniform. We tell every rookie that. It represents fear and oppression or hope and safety. You decide how people view the uniform, the uniform does not decide for you. Watch issue spotlight on police and Race Relations saturday on 8 00 p. M. Eastern on cspan. A look at our visit of William Jennings bryans house. You are watching cspan 3, all weekend. All men are created equal and government are instituted among men to secure these rights and government derive their just power from the consent of the governed. William Jennings Bryan is one of nebraskas most famous and prominent politicians. Hes most famous for the fact that he was nominated three times by a major party, the Democratic Party but he lost the election all three times. They moved to lincoln in 1887, bryan was a lawyer in central illinois, he went into kansas to collect some debts and collection of law practice. He said hes going to stop to visit an Old Law School of mind he saw weak Democratic Party so he saw some opportunities there. He started the construction of this will house in 1901. He and mary would drive way out of the country on a buggy. They fell in of of the house so they bought acres to build this house. Construction were finished in 1903. It is 11,000 square feet. Mrs. Bryans budget was 10,000. It is a beautiful house. The main level of the home is used for entertaining and political events and receptions. They would host a number of World LeadersWorld Leaders would come here and all kinds of political leaders and the most prominent being Woodrow Wilson coming out here when hes trying to give bryan support in the 1912 convention. There were a lot of People International and National Leaders would come and stop by to see bryan in this home. Right now we are in the lower level is the main activity where the family took place. We are in the office area right now. Thats where bryan and mary had their office and did their work and she was a very active partner in his career. Very accomplished lady, valedictorian of her College Dallas and got a law degree here at the university of nebraska. Studied german so she could read the european newspapers to see what they were staying about bryan. She was a very active in his political career. This desk is a replica of the desk that was in his study. You can see the two chairs, bryan used to sat in one chair and mary sat the other. Reflected the team of his political career. There is as couple of telephones over there that i would point out, at the time there were two independent Telephone Company in lincoln. If you just subscribe to one, you could not talk to somebody that just subscribe to the other. They had to subscribe to both. Here ace political newsletter they published close to 20 years which was similar