hopalong: hi, there. well, what cha doing way back there? come on up here. [laughs] ah, that s better. i am glad you dropped by. i have got a little story i think you ll like. it is about a four-legged friend of mine. no, i don t mean topper back there. this happened awhile back in the beautiful capitan mountain country of new mexico, on the lincoln national forest. it was may time on the capitan, dry and hot but still nice and peaceful. all the animals in the forest were having a grand old time in the sunshine of spring. there was one little, three-month-old fella in particular who did not have a care in the world. he was spending his time having fun, a-growlin and a-prowlin and a-scratchin . that s right. that bear cub did not have a care in the world, and somebody, a two-legged somebody, got careless. it took several hundred men five days to lick that fire. 17,000 acres of timber were destroyed, timber that could have been used for homes and furniture, along
1,emberg, germany, june 1946. grace, my dearest, it is now but not :00 p.m. and i am here with you. i prefer to pass my time if you rather than reading or doing anything. you are so much on my mind at all times. i had a nice letter from judge wine thanking me for a picture i sent. he said he showed it to judge jennings, who showed interest but made no comment. wind said this is the greatest trial in history and while it seems long now, in a few years i would look back with great satisfaction. reade way, be sure to walter lipman s article in the ladies home journal for june. it is a good thing and give you some idea of how important this proceeding is. there is a great satisfaction of doing what s job, particularly a job like this. it is of great importance to everyone and as lit lippmann says, someday it will be recognized as a great landmark. it is the highest calling of the legal profession, and i am proud of my part in it. it continues to mean sacrifice and struggle, and
her, but a brilliant woman. she got killed in a fluke auto accident in new orleans when the whole city blacked out. so her parents created a memorial lecture for her at a private school there. in metairie, louisiana, what they do is get guest speakers, two a year they pay for. and i did rosa parks biography, so they had me give a lecture on rosa parks. and ann was my chaperon. she took me around the school and introduced me to students, we had a dinner in my honor because they do for the speaker and all that. ask we started dating, and she was a graduate of tulane. and i was just getting ready to start teaching at tulane moing there. and ended up living together on jefferson aef across from the gnuman school where people like i think michael lewis and walter isaacson. nick went to country day. but any rate, with respect living there. i can walk to my office at tulane. i would run in audubon park at the zoo. and with respect very happy there. and katrina hit and i wrote about
for all the work you have done on this. and, since he showed up, mark who is retired from the central plains, i/o have a special thank you. over the years, i have done a lot of research at the national archives. back when you were at [indiscernible] and the archivist always seem to know what i was interested in. or have suggestions for what i ought to be interested in. and mark called me when i was working on cold war kids and said, you know, there is this collection are my be interested in. well, yes, i was very much. and it became part of a chapter in a book. so, thank you, mark. now, for tonight s discussion. what do school lunch programs the indian adoption project, polio shots, and comic books have in common? you are going oh, obviously, your first guess would be, yes, they all have something to do with the postwar years. but to they are also examples of the uptick and an unprecedented uptick in the federal intervention in children s lives between 1945 and 1960. wh
by the archives of kansas city. holt: good evening, and thank you for arranging this, and especially kimberly, thank you for all the work you ve done on this. since he showed up, mark, who is retired from the central plains. i ll him a special thank you i oh him a special thank you. i have done a lot of research at the national archives, and the archivists always seem to know what i was interested in or had suggestions for what i ought to be interested in. mark, when i was working on cold war kids said you know there s this collection you might be interested in. yes, i was, very much, and it became a chapter in the book, so thank you. now, for tonight s discussion, what do school lunch programs, the indian adoption project polio shots, and books comic books have in common? you re going, oh, there s a quiz? your first guest would be they all have something to do with the postwar years, but they are also examples of the uptick and an unprecedented uptick in the fe