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Apr 5, 2015
04/15
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dubois. i am who i am because the import dubois love to me. he loved the truth. he loved justice. i love truth and i love justice and dubois was not a christian. he was a post-christian where he went to church in the church wants to them but they almost had to leave the church to promote the gospel. the churches were just too narrow in that day. they were too cowardly and too accommodating to the powers that be. then he says we know history is the history of the present. the past and present eyes intertwined in the third dimension to the future always is the object of our vision mediated their understanding of the past. our actions you know there's a great speech that martin. thank god he had the courage to give it. >> host: he closes the speech with a refrain about being dissatisfied. the arc of the speech itself is to get to do why what he calls divine dissatisfaction. >> guest: brother martin on the great dubois. >> host: than a refrain that is not be satisfied. his refrain is let us be dissatisfied until every man can have food and freedom and human dignity for his. >> guest:
dubois. i am who i am because the import dubois love to me. he loved the truth. he loved justice. i love truth and i love justice and dubois was not a christian. he was a post-christian where he went to church in the church wants to them but they almost had to leave the church to promote the gospel. the churches were just too narrow in that day. they were too cowardly and too accommodating to the powers that be. then he says we know history is the history of the present. the past and present...
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Apr 19, 2015
04/15
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that view eb dubois -- w.e.b. dubois deliver that. they were players in civil war memory and the most remarkable one was the 1913 gettysburg reading. they have a totally different view. prof. varon: tell us about that reading and then about the take. prof. gannon: you have the 1913 reading. president wilson was a southerner. everyone talks about he gives the speech and it seemed to be some key moment of reunion reconciliation. prof. varon: describing the heroes. prof. gannon: the blue union boys were all heroes. people said things like there were not any african-americans there and there was a tale of what the 1913 reunion was like. the newspaper covers it that way. they're all american heroes. they were all americans because that is the way americans are. they are heroes. they were trying to merge the confederates and u.s. military tradition together to prove that we are all americans, all heroes, and sort of embrace it. they were americans. that is the way we are. that was the thought process. they had this reunion. there is sort of
that view eb dubois -- w.e.b. dubois deliver that. they were players in civil war memory and the most remarkable one was the 1913 gettysburg reading. they have a totally different view. prof. varon: tell us about that reading and then about the take. prof. gannon: you have the 1913 reading. president wilson was a southerner. everyone talks about he gives the speech and it seemed to be some key moment of reunion reconciliation. prof. varon: describing the heroes. prof. gannon: the blue union...
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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because dubois was time in his. the last thing you want because people are saying you are kind of this is to go and reflect on this black communist. what does martin do? kiss my so-and-so. i am a free black man. i say what i want. i do wonder what. i will give it to to the great debbie be devoid. i annoy them in part because dubois loved me. he loved the truth. he loved just the. i love trees. i love jessica dubois the christian. he was a post-christian, like the great james baldwin. where he went to church and the church went to but almost had to leave the church or to promote the gospel. it is the churches were just too narrow entity, to cowardly, too accommodating to the powers that be, the status quo simply. any sibling of history is something which is a kind history of the present. the past and present are always intertwined and the third dimension of the future always is the object of our vision mediated through our understanding of the past and our actions in, that's a great speech that martin gave. thank god
because dubois was time in his. the last thing you want because people are saying you are kind of this is to go and reflect on this black communist. what does martin do? kiss my so-and-so. i am a free black man. i say what i want. i do wonder what. i will give it to to the great debbie be devoid. i annoy them in part because dubois loved me. he loved the truth. he loved just the. i love trees. i love jessica dubois the christian. he was a post-christian, like the great james baldwin. where he...
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Apr 4, 2015
04/15
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laughter you cited dubois and william paterson. dubois had lost his job. william paterson is a communist. dubois works with him. could you sketch out for us the organizational and the ideological differences between the council on african affairs that absorbs dubois's attention and that robison was intimately involved in, their critique of the naacp on the one side. and then naacp's critique of them going the other way. carol: in that -- and that really is in the italian colonies chapter. that was a teaser. the council of african affairs was created in 1936. and it saw as its mission the liberation of africa. and that sounds beautiful. it sounds wonderful. but the devil is in t he details. and the details for the council on african affairs is that it believed the soviet union held the holy grail for liberation. and that the soviet union knew how to lead folks out of the hell of colonialism, that it had the prescription for doing that. and so, i'm going to tell another tale that would be me back into the second part of your question. so, on the italian colo
laughter you cited dubois and william paterson. dubois had lost his job. william paterson is a communist. dubois works with him. could you sketch out for us the organizational and the ideological differences between the council on african affairs that absorbs dubois's attention and that robison was intimately involved in, their critique of the naacp on the one side. and then naacp's critique of them going the other way. carol: in that -- and that really is in the italian colonies chapter. that...
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Apr 25, 2015
04/15
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KCSM
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dubois.e other period, of course, would be the harlem renaissance. >> hinojosa: mm-hmm. >> the harlem renaissance, which was a time of... well, it's the... historian david levering lewis puts it, "it was civil rights through art." black people had the idea-- which was a not very efficacious idea, but they had an idea-- that they could change the image of the race vis-à-vis white people who doubted our ancestor's intellectual integrity and intellectual capacities by creating great literature and art. so there was this big revolution of writing and it was called the harlem renaissance, but it led to renaissances throughout the caribbean and even in africa. you know, the négritude movement, which was started by a martinican, aimé césaire, and léopold senghor, who went on to become the first president of senegal, they were students at the sorbonne. they heard about the harlem renaissance and they created the négritude movement starting in 1934. and langston hughes, probably the most googled and s
dubois.e other period, of course, would be the harlem renaissance. >> hinojosa: mm-hmm. >> the harlem renaissance, which was a time of... well, it's the... historian david levering lewis puts it, "it was civil rights through art." black people had the idea-- which was a not very efficacious idea, but they had an idea-- that they could change the image of the race vis-à-vis white people who doubted our ancestor's intellectual integrity and intellectual capacities by...
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Apr 19, 2015
04/15
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dubois was not a christian. he was profoundly spiritual. the four questions. how shall integrity face oppression? what dishonesty do in the face of deception? what does decency do in the face of insult and how shall virtue meet brute force? four pillars to bring us together. a quest for integrity honesty decency and virtue. i think one thing we fundamentally agree on anybody in america who is fundamentally committed to the quest for integrity, honesty, decency and virtue is profoundly countercultural. cutting against the grain because instead of integrity what is predominant in america? love of money. money, money money. crash -- cash rules. everything around me take cash. it doesn't have to mean -- rule may, does not to rule us. instead of honestly what do we get? much mendacity, just downright lies. and i'm thinking about one tv channel. [laughter] the mendacity is across-the-board. why? because they are fundamentally concerned with what? with what? money, money, money so what do they do? they down the public conversation and the name-calling. to sensational
dubois was not a christian. he was profoundly spiritual. the four questions. how shall integrity face oppression? what dishonesty do in the face of deception? what does decency do in the face of insult and how shall virtue meet brute force? four pillars to bring us together. a quest for integrity honesty decency and virtue. i think one thing we fundamentally agree on anybody in america who is fundamentally committed to the quest for integrity, honesty, decency and virtue is profoundly...
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Apr 3, 2015
04/15
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joining me now is deepak chopra and joshua dubois.deepak, let me start with you and your new book which tells a story of a young girl who had a chance encounter with jesus before she was crucified. when you were thinking about writing this what called you to the story of the life of jesus? >> two things about the new testament have been with me all my life. one is the sermon on the mount and the other is when he says i'm the way, the life and the truth. >> yeah. >> i wondered what those things meant. i also felt the new testament as we read it we don't look at the feminine aspects of the divine. beauty intuition, nurturing, tenderness, truth, goodness beauty harmony, evolution, joy. >> and those things could certainly be on the male side. they're not unique. >> the masculine has been predatory. i've always been a student of awareness. the "i" represents the spiritual eye. the truth of eternal life is transcendence. when you look at all these different religions, including islam and judaism, there are two things in common. one is trans
joining me now is deepak chopra and joshua dubois.deepak, let me start with you and your new book which tells a story of a young girl who had a chance encounter with jesus before she was crucified. when you were thinking about writing this what called you to the story of the life of jesus? >> two things about the new testament have been with me all my life. one is the sermon on the mount and the other is when he says i'm the way, the life and the truth. >> yeah. >> i wondered...
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Apr 11, 2015
04/15
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any number of african-americans web dubois was aware of ira aldridge so again in his day he's not so much known -- americans don't remember ira aldridge but europeans more or less do. he met richard wagner the great german composer and what not he's one of these characters like george c. marshall. if you ask high school students in america who is george c. marshall, of course the great great -- the man that winston churchill said won world war ii. if you ask american high school students they may not know george c. marshall. but if you ask german students who george c. marshall was, they know he was the man behind the great marshall plan after world war ii. so there's certain americans that are almost better known in europe than they are in this country. and i think ira aldridge is certainly one of them. >> thank you. thank you all for coming. a third thursday of next month with jim barber and everett dirkson. thank you very much. >> yes, thank you for showing up. [ applause ] you've been watching c-span city's tour. find out where we're going next on line. and a quick reminder that
any number of african-americans web dubois was aware of ira aldridge so again in his day he's not so much known -- americans don't remember ira aldridge but europeans more or less do. he met richard wagner the great german composer and what not he's one of these characters like george c. marshall. if you ask high school students in america who is george c. marshall, of course the great great -- the man that winston churchill said won world war ii. if you ask american high school students they...
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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dubois, who had been kicked out of the naacp, he complained bitterly that the naacp was useless in the fight to free africa from colonialism because, he said, the association was just a bourgeois set up, afraid to do anything not respectable," and communist william paterson who had tried to submit a petition to the u.n. charging the united states with committing genocide against african-americans but was blocked by the naacp fumed that "the very same americans interceded in order that the reverend michael scott white speak, they were also the ones who refused to intercede when the petition dealing with genocide in the united states was submitted. similarly, historians decades later tell us that the naacp was so infused with liberal ideology that all that it could think of was to try to get more african-americans in the foreign policy bureaucracy. as if that was going to make any difference. timidity and collusion with the u.s. government led to a faustian bargain whereby the association received a pittance of civil rights concessions at home in exchange for silence on foreign-policy is
dubois, who had been kicked out of the naacp, he complained bitterly that the naacp was useless in the fight to free africa from colonialism because, he said, the association was just a bourgeois set up, afraid to do anything not respectable," and communist william paterson who had tried to submit a petition to the u.n. charging the united states with committing genocide against african-americans but was blocked by the naacp fumed that "the very same americans interceded in order that...
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Apr 21, 2015
04/15
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ALJAZAM
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dubois is a big big hero of mine. >> tell me why. >> he's just one of the smartest people in the world. and-- to read what he wrote and to understand the th-- thoughts he went into, you just think "wow why can't i be like that?" and someday i will. >> do you think the media is doing a good job of covering racial-- >> no, not doing a good job of covering these kind of things and i'm not sure exactly what it is or why it is. and it seems like they're missing something. they're not telling the story the way the story should be told. they're not telling it all. they're leaving something out. i'm not really sure what it is but i know i'm missing something. >> do you feel like you had that something before and it's gone-- >> yes i think i had it had a media that told the story more clearly in the past than is true today. not told it better but-- well, maybe even told it better than is told it-- today. >> still ahead on talk to al jazeera, julian bond talks about where he'd like race relations to be 50 years from now >> al jazeera's investigative unit has tonight's exclusive report. >> storie
dubois is a big big hero of mine. >> tell me why. >> he's just one of the smartest people in the world. and-- to read what he wrote and to understand the th-- thoughts he went into, you just think "wow why can't i be like that?" and someday i will. >> do you think the media is doing a good job of covering racial-- >> no, not doing a good job of covering these kind of things and i'm not sure exactly what it is or why it is. and it seems like they're missing...
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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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. >> including jeff dubois from our cbs affiliate in seattle.le he did not appear to be enjoying this assignment. >> aye, aye, aye. they're flying all over the place.ng it's unnerving, to tell you the truth. >> reporter: it was far worse for his cameraman, damien glitch, who was stung 20 times. >> i feel light headed and i'm numb. i had stings to my face, to my arms. they crawled up my jacket and my lower back, my stomach. >> reporter: as many as 20 million bees were lost, and they won't survive without their hives. they were en route to a farm to pollinate blueberry crops. >> there's no other insect on earth that can do what they do. >> reporter: christian englund was one of the bee wranglers. >> it's a setback for thele farmers because they have to get the bees on their crops because they have a certain window of time that pollination happens.pp >> reporter: bee pollination is responsible for one-third of all the food we eat.mill there were five million active bee hives in the u.s. in the 1940s. now, there are half that, due in large part to what's known as colony collapse disorder.
. >> including jeff dubois from our cbs affiliate in seattle.le he did not appear to be enjoying this assignment. >> aye, aye, aye. they're flying all over the place.ng it's unnerving, to tell you the truth. >> reporter: it was far worse for his cameraman, damien glitch, who was stung 20 times. >> i feel light headed and i'm numb. i had stings to my face, to my arms. they crawled up my jacket and my lower back, my stomach. >> reporter: as many as 20 million bees...
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Apr 13, 2015
04/15
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KGO
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potrero hill and all the way up to dubois park and mission bay, and just as some people were reportingseeing the power go out they also said that the power started to return as well. we have been seeing that as we came here to city hall. the twitter headquarters which is just around the corner i saw the lights sparkle up as we were getting ready to bring you this live report. we are still monitoring progress on the power outage and the return to power. we will be sure to have details obviously as they are available. reporting live in san francisco, abc7 news. >> thank you. your twitter account is getting lots of response. >>> emergency crews will be back out tomorrow searching for a motorcyclist who fell off the antioch bridge. witnesses say his motorcycle hit a car and then he fell the 135 feet into the water. the driver of the car that was involved remained on scene and no one else was hurt. police in san francisco were investigating a shooting at fisherman's wharf. no one was hurt there but the glass was shattered at a camera shop. police chased a suspect on a motorcycle, but he got
potrero hill and all the way up to dubois park and mission bay, and just as some people were reportingseeing the power go out they also said that the power started to return as well. we have been seeing that as we came here to city hall. the twitter headquarters which is just around the corner i saw the lights sparkle up as we were getting ready to bring you this live report. we are still monitoring progress on the power outage and the return to power. we will be sure to have details obviously...
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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dubois who does not have the same experiences, a free man, a northerner come a educated who goes to harvardwho you are and how close you are in time to this event, changes how you view it. so not all african-americans are going to look at slavery and the new south in the same way. it is very confiscated. a very complicated civil war narrative. a tremendous amount of discord. so let's move forward and look at reconciliation taking hold. to bind the nation's wounds is a quote from another lincoln inaugural address. and it sits very aptly with reconciliation. one of the reasons that the american civil war remains so popular in modern america is because, well, one, many can trace ancestors back to the civil war. it is very close to us, it is on our own soil. we have a great record of primary sources. civil war soldiers, union and confederate alike, wrote a lot about the war. they wrote letters home, kept diaries and journals during the war. very good accounts. >> and there is an industry that pops up after the war as far as publishing, they couldn't get enough of people writing these. jennifer
dubois who does not have the same experiences, a free man, a northerner come a educated who goes to harvardwho you are and how close you are in time to this event, changes how you view it. so not all african-americans are going to look at slavery and the new south in the same way. it is very confiscated. a very complicated civil war narrative. a tremendous amount of discord. so let's move forward and look at reconciliation taking hold. to bind the nation's wounds is a quote from another lincoln...
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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and in that fighting they will capture general joseph kershaw george washington cust s lee, dudley dubois and confederate officer who had been in charge of stonewall jackson's artillery and was wounded in the battle of chancelorsville with the general. he will be killed in that assault and buried on the battlefield. so with the counter attack taking place there along the creek one of the confederate soldiers who are in the battle mentioned in the final part of the battle said quicker than i can tell it the battle generated into a butchery and confused melee of brutal personal conflicts. bayonets and rifle butts crushed and pierced. others lost their weapons and used teeth to bite noses and ears in the terrible scuffle. one of the union soldiers that if you come to the park you will be introduced to his name was samuel eddie in the 37th massachusetts. they had a particular advanced weapon called a rifle that could fire seven cartridge rounds without reloading. and in this final attack eddie sees a confederate officer coming towards him with a white flag to surrender and eddie's officer mov
and in that fighting they will capture general joseph kershaw george washington cust s lee, dudley dubois and confederate officer who had been in charge of stonewall jackson's artillery and was wounded in the battle of chancelorsville with the general. he will be killed in that assault and buried on the battlefield. so with the counter attack taking place there along the creek one of the confederate soldiers who are in the battle mentioned in the final part of the battle said quicker than i can...
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Apr 25, 2015
04/15
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KYW
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well, car a dubois reports on some handy gardening apps. >> some advance planning, isr grow planner cost will save i time, money buy eliminating the guess work of what, where to plant. once sketch out the gym end seans, choose the plant would you like to grow, apple use your location data to tell when you to put the plant in the grounds and how far apart the space them. sprouted app relies on zip code to provide best recommendation from growing vegtables,, and fraught in your grander end, find out what will thrive, when to plant and harvest them, even recipes foreign joining the fruit of your labor finally if you seek inspiration from other guard end, unsure about the species snap a fit owe. let the ios app like that garden or android app floor checker do the work. free cross loader, will flower checker relies on real people to determine a species. each cost a dollar. san francisco, kara tsuboi, cnet.com. cbs-3 "eyewitness news". >> 6:23 right now. still ahead on "eyewitness news", spring cleaning, your finances. advice for tidying up your household budget. that's when we come back. stay
well, car a dubois reports on some handy gardening apps. >> some advance planning, isr grow planner cost will save i time, money buy eliminating the guess work of what, where to plant. once sketch out the gym end seans, choose the plant would you like to grow, apple use your location data to tell when you to put the plant in the grounds and how far apart the space them. sprouted app relies on zip code to provide best recommendation from growing vegtables,, and fraught in your grander end,...
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Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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KYW
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. >> including jeff dubois, from our cbs affiliate in seattle.ying this assignment. >> they're flying all over the place. it is unnerving, to tell you the truth. >> it was far worse for his cameraman, damian glitch, who was stunning 20 times. >> i feel light-headed and i'm numb. >> i had stings to my face to my arms. they crawled up my jacket and my lower back, my stomach. >> as many as 20 million bees were lost, and they won't survive without their hive. they were en route to a farm to pollen ate blue berry crops. >> there is no other insect on that's right can do what they do. >> christian england, one of the bee wranglers. >> this is a setback for the farmers, too because they have to get these bees on their crops, they have certain window of time that pollination happens. >> bee pollination is responsible for one third of all the food we eat. there were 5 million active behaves in the u.s. in the 194's. now, there are half that. due in large part to what's known as colon i collapse disorder. so this accident is a big lost. the driver of the s
. >> including jeff dubois, from our cbs affiliate in seattle.ying this assignment. >> they're flying all over the place. it is unnerving, to tell you the truth. >> it was far worse for his cameraman, damian glitch, who was stunning 20 times. >> i feel light-headed and i'm numb. >> i had stings to my face to my arms. they crawled up my jacket and my lower back, my stomach. >> as many as 20 million bees were lost, and they won't survive without their hive....
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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MSNBCW
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. >> brothers john and bob dubois from mission viejo, california. on this overcast day in alaska inland, the water is providing a bountiful catch for the six tourists on this steel hulled fishing boat. >> here's another one coming up. >> but their luck begins to change from big fish to big trouble. >> everybody get one of those on, please. >> turns out the motor located under the deck has malfunctioned and broken apart. its metal pieces ripping a hole in the boat. >> we were just having fun with the camera back and forth. and then it evolved into much more. i just kept the camera running. >> one of the diesels apparently sheared a shaft and we're taking on water. water with an electrical problem. we lost the radio communication. >> to make matters worse, the gps is shot, and there's no chance of using the ship's radio to call for help. >> filling up the zodiac right now with some air. poo we're all going to pile in there. this is really unbelievable. >> can you hear me? hello? >> bob calmly narrates the scene as emergency preparations are executed.
. >> brothers john and bob dubois from mission viejo, california. on this overcast day in alaska inland, the water is providing a bountiful catch for the six tourists on this steel hulled fishing boat. >> here's another one coming up. >> but their luck begins to change from big fish to big trouble. >> everybody get one of those on, please. >> turns out the motor located under the deck has malfunctioned and broken apart. its metal pieces ripping a hole in the boat....
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Apr 10, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN2
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dubois. and i'm going wow maybe there's a biography in this guy?, you know, advocating a very new strategy in the civil rights movement and challenging booker t. washington. i'd learned that there was a biography written him back in the, you know, 40 something years ago that was titled " the guardian" which is the name of his weekly newspaper. so i said, yeah, i think there's a place for a new biography. but then i got to 1915, and i got just surface, you know in some of these references to how he was at the forefront of this extended protest against the movie, like i said that i knew about. and i said, that was my aha moment. i said that's the drama that's the story to tell and through which to capture what i think are so many big ideas about civil liberties, civil rights, film, you know, media revolution. and that's where i started to channel all my efforts. c-span: here's an excerpt and it's a civil war battle. before we get to that, and is we'll come back to monroe trotter -- >> guest: sure. c-span: -- the stoneman family and the cameron family
dubois. and i'm going wow maybe there's a biography in this guy?, you know, advocating a very new strategy in the civil rights movement and challenging booker t. washington. i'd learned that there was a biography written him back in the, you know, 40 something years ago that was titled " the guardian" which is the name of his weekly newspaper. so i said, yeah, i think there's a place for a new biography. but then i got to 1915, and i got just surface, you know in some of these...
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109
Apr 18, 2015
04/15
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first world war, a great mystery not jm=1y9ñ when they're concern about the kind ofñrfá issues thatñr duboisr will enrich the lives of theirfá fellow stuefts even ñ those of their fellow student whose are not themselves on the liberal arts sidee1 of the curriculum. those who are in the professional or preprofessional: disciplines. this is a lesson we relearned in our class last night frome1 john henry newman. great work wemy discussedñr last nightt( in ouri]w3 seminarÑi on the idea of a university. newman was concern about two things, and tell me if that sounds familiar to you. he is writing all tg=m way back in the 1850s.w3 before our civil war. qd0ñ long time ago. he is ojt issues. that heq thinks are toxic to university education.Ñit( professionalization, and overspecialization. st([ j stewing and faculty scholarslp exploring narrowerÑ andw3çóokxtót(xd -- bits of inquiry and knowledge to the point where they have nothing to say toçó each other. there'sçó not( common intellectual s)ist for the mill. this was in the 1850s. and we lookxd at what we facec today, and there it is. then another
first world war, a great mystery not jm=1y9ñ when they're concern about the kind ofñrfá issues thatñr duboisr will enrich the lives of theirfá fellow stuefts even ñ those of their fellow student whose are not themselves on the liberal arts sidee1 of the curriculum. those who are in the professional or preprofessional: disciplines. this is a lesson we relearned in our class last night frome1 john henry newman. great work wemy discussedñr last nightt( in ouri]w3 seminarÑi on the idea of a...
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53
Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 53
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we're christians, dubois was not a crip but a was profoundly spiritual, but the four questions, how shall integrity face oppression? what does honesty do in the face of deception? what does decency do in the face of insult. and how shall virtue meet brute force. four pillars that bring us together in a quest for integrity, honesty decency virtue i think one thing we finally agree on. anybody in america who is fundamentally committed to the quest for integrity honesty decency and virtue, is profoundly countercultural. cutting against the grain. because of -- instead of integrity, what is prepredominant in america? cupidity love of money. money, money. cream, cash rules. everything. around me. that woo tang clan but doesn't have to rule me doesn't have to rule us. that instead of honesty what do we get? just downtown right lie -- just downright lies. i'm not thinking about one tv channel. [laughter] >> the -- across the board because they're fundamentally concerned with what? money, money. so they dumb down the public conversation into name-calling. to sensationalize the exchange rather tha
we're christians, dubois was not a crip but a was profoundly spiritual, but the four questions, how shall integrity face oppression? what does honesty do in the face of deception? what does decency do in the face of insult. and how shall virtue meet brute force. four pillars that bring us together in a quest for integrity, honesty decency virtue i think one thing we finally agree on. anybody in america who is fundamentally committed to the quest for integrity honesty decency and virtue, is...
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60
Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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dubois is who had the belief we should take from america and demand from them a series of concessionsnd economic benefits would be distributed by his term by the educated 10% of the population that would distribute we would demand it. that was his position and on the other side was a perky washington. we have to go back to the people we used to work for because we have to develop our own economy and resources. we have to be farmers so our sons can be mechanics and so their his other sons can be doctors. we don't have the right to ask for or demand respect and booker t. washington atopy teske d. institute was far higher and had a lover out of birth rate come out of wedlock birthrate and a lover out of wedlock birth rate and their test scores were high here and when they entered world war ii there were trainings and a equipment and best fighter pilots that never lost a bomber because booker t. washington realized the way to eliminate racism and prejudice is not through the demand that through excellence and the excellence of their performance. that was the america that we could have had
dubois is who had the belief we should take from america and demand from them a series of concessionsnd economic benefits would be distributed by his term by the educated 10% of the population that would distribute we would demand it. that was his position and on the other side was a perky washington. we have to go back to the people we used to work for because we have to develop our own economy and resources. we have to be farmers so our sons can be mechanics and so their his other sons can be...
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66
Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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eye 66
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if we created high-quality programs for all children like mayor dubois's io is doing in new york citylike republicans have done in oklahoma. the second time it's important is if kids are reading at grade level at grade three. the third time is after a grade. if a child is over age and under credited at that time, there is a real chance they will drop out of school. let's make sure the child is not doing what we hope they would do, let's have a real intervention. let's not threaten the child with you will not pass this grade. find ways to intervene and meet the child's need at that moment in time. that is the kind of thing we propose. what's happening is the republicans have said that they want less federal intervention. the democrats have said we want to do more of this kind of positive intervention. the balance is been in the bill that omar alexander and patty murray did was to move that intervention to the states and use it for poor kids. they went to move those interventions to the state level. host: we will be covering the debate on c-span2. this is a tweet from one of our viewers
if we created high-quality programs for all children like mayor dubois's io is doing in new york citylike republicans have done in oklahoma. the second time it's important is if kids are reading at grade level at grade three. the third time is after a grade. if a child is over age and under credited at that time, there is a real chance they will drop out of school. let's make sure the child is not doing what we hope they would do, let's have a real intervention. let's not threaten the child...
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168
Apr 28, 2015
04/15
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this year's second and third place winners are bethany of dubois and madeline of summer township respectively. natalie of royal city and caitlin of sandy township both received honorable mentions. i'd like to congratulate all this year's winners and thank you everyone who participated in this fun and exciting competition. madam speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlewoman from washington seek recognition? without objection, the gentlewoman is recognized for one minute. ms. delbene: thank you madam speaker. our thoughts are with the people of napal and their families. my heart sank when i heard about the 7.8 magnitude earthquake and its unthinkable devastation. it's estimated thousands of people have died and more are missing. three of those still missing are constituents of washington's first district. these people are pillars of our community. retired special education teacher doreen richmond retired firefighter jim lane, and small business owner jeanie. i want to do everything
this year's second and third place winners are bethany of dubois and madeline of summer township respectively. natalie of royal city and caitlin of sandy township both received honorable mentions. i'd like to congratulate all this year's winners and thank you everyone who participated in this fun and exciting competition. madam speaker, i yield back the balance of my time. the speaker pro tempore: the gentleman yields back the balance of his time. for what purpose does the gentlewoman from...