saw the best in us. and he never gave up and never stopped speaking out because he saw the best in us. he believed in us even though we didn t believe in ourselves. and as a congressman, he didn t rest. he kept getting himself arrested. as an old man, he didn t sit out any fight. sat in all night long on the floor of the united states capitol. i know his staff was stressed. but the testing of his faith produced perseverance. he knew that the march is not over. that the race is not yet won, that we had not yet reached that blessed destination where we are judged by the content of our character. he knew from his own life that progress is fragile. that we have to be vigilant against the darker currents of this country s history, of our own history with whirlpools of violence and hatred and despair that can always rise again. bull connor may be gone, but today, we witness with our own eyes police officers kneeling on the necks of black americans. george wallace may be gone, but w
The legendary DA ran a conviction machine that got results. In 1954, he persuaded a jury to send Tommy Lee Walker to the electric chair just three months after his arrest. But a new look at the case reveals one of the greatest injustices in Dallas history.
Undoubtedly, mother-daughter relationships are as varied in the Lone Star State as anywhere else on the planet, but in my experience, Texas moms are tough.
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When the University of Tennessee’s welcome was ramping up back in 2015, longtime neighbors and jam partners Reed Schneider and Freddy Bahati seemed to march through orientation to the beat