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Nov 26, 2016
11/16
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a plus and two years later and tell a new who lawrence was, henry lawrence a slave trader. i didn't know that faÇade which is still standing today, charleston was the faÇade of a rice mill and i learned later that rice was a very important commodity in colonial southy imt carolina.ony it made the colony wealthy and charleston rivaled philadelphia and new york in prominence.and but i did know and we all knew and we all hated henry lawrence. pardon me john c. calhoun. calhoun street is the church -- the street on which the church sits. the church is on calhoun street and not to far from the street is a statute of john c. calhoun. in the book i interviewed austin and mr. osten told me that as a boy growing up there he used to throw rocks up there, he and his friends used to throw rocks to try to get the statue. they never hit the statue but it improved their baseball arm. years later i met harvey jones. harvey was a few years older than me and harvey was probably one of the first person to told me of his relationship with church and his role as a young protester in the civil r
a plus and two years later and tell a new who lawrence was, henry lawrence a slave trader. i didn't know that faÇade which is still standing today, charleston was the faÇade of a rice mill and i learned later that rice was a very important commodity in colonial southy imt carolina.ony it made the colony wealthy and charleston rivaled philadelphia and new york in prominence.and but i did know and we all knew and we all hated henry lawrence. pardon me john c. calhoun. calhoun street is the...
73
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Nov 26, 2016
11/16
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rivaled philadelphia in new york and providence but i did know and we all knew and we all hated henry lawrencejohn c calhoun, calhoun street is the church, the street on which the church fronts, a statue of john c calhoun. in the book i interviewed mister austin, used to show -- throw rocks up there, hitting the statue. he never could hit the statue but he improved his baseball arm i met harvey jones, a few years older than me and harvey was one of the first persons who told me his relationship with the church and his role as a young protester to the civil rights movement at emmanuel. one of the churches, the youth movement to nearly 60s to protest against segregated lunch counters on king street which is still today the central business district on the peninsula of charleston. harvey jones shared with me something he had written, kept that away and didn't do anything with it. will use this in some writing. marjorie called me and i thought of harvey and we set up any division interview. and his involvement in one of the marches of 1963 in which he met doctor king come to charleston. i will rea
rivaled philadelphia in new york and providence but i did know and we all knew and we all hated henry lawrencejohn c calhoun, calhoun street is the church, the street on which the church fronts, a statue of john c calhoun. in the book i interviewed mister austin, used to show -- throw rocks up there, hitting the statue. he never could hit the statue but he improved his baseball arm i met harvey jones, a few years older than me and harvey was one of the first persons who told me his relationship...
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57
Nov 14, 2016
11/16
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i did know and we all knew we all hated henry lawrence.nd as a church the street on which the church friends. in the book i interviewed austin told me he is to throw rocks up there. and try to hit the statue. years later i met harvey jones. he was a few years older than me. and he was probably one of the first persons who told me of his relationship with the church and his role as a young protester in the civil rights movement. emmanuel with one of the churches that organized a youth movement in the early 60s is still today the central business district. and they shared with me an essay he had written i didn't do anything with it at that time. maybe someday in the future i would be able to use this in some way. i called tim and we set up an interview and he told me about the protest time dr. king who have come to charleston. in the summer of 1963 they initiated the selective buying effort as part of the charleston civil rights movement. he's can participate in the student protest because he'd had just about enough of the laws. i realize i
i did know and we all knew we all hated henry lawrence.nd as a church the street on which the church friends. in the book i interviewed austin told me he is to throw rocks up there. and try to hit the statue. years later i met harvey jones. he was a few years older than me. and he was probably one of the first persons who told me of his relationship with the church and his role as a young protester in the civil rights movement. emmanuel with one of the churches that organized a youth movement...
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34
Nov 27, 2016
11/16
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i remember -- and so 1944, i was 5 years old when she took me to henry v, you know, the lawrence olivier movie. it's a wonderful movie. and that always stuck in my mind. she actually taught me to read in the first grade, i happened to be sick when the kids were being taught to read. so she taught me to read at home. a week or something. and so throughout my youth, she was giving me a lot of help and steering me toward literary interest, which i've always retained each though i didn't become an english professor. >> well, why don't we stop here and take some questions from the audience. you may have some questions for either the biographer or the biography, and we can open it up for some time. and remember to come up to the microphone to ask your questions. >> yeah, i have a question for the judge. your work in law and economics masker obviously, been one of the most important contributions in, like, modern legal thinking. how do you see this new behavioral economics fitting into that kind of interplay between law and economics? >> oh, you mean the notion of people as pushed by their psyc
i remember -- and so 1944, i was 5 years old when she took me to henry v, you know, the lawrence olivier movie. it's a wonderful movie. and that always stuck in my mind. she actually taught me to read in the first grade, i happened to be sick when the kids were being taught to read. so she taught me to read at home. a week or something. and so throughout my youth, she was giving me a lot of help and steering me toward literary interest, which i've always retained each though i didn't become an...
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99
Nov 13, 2016
11/16
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former virginia governor henry weiss's man nelson miles extends over sending them for the trenches on wide oak road. this bar in particular represents the ego of joshua lawrence chamberlain as single-handedly he manages to drive all three confederate brigades back into their own entrenchments. but the fifth corps now is isolate isolating pickett who on march 31 has the most successful day he will experience in the american civil war. pickett takes the cavalry around to try to strike sheridan in flank as he expects him to come from dinwiddie courthouse to the intersection. pickett and lee are able to push across chamberlain's run and send the federal cavalry back to the county seat. he swings his men for final every trying to end this maneuver maneuver. by this point night fall has sat in and pickett realizes that he's cuts off from the rest of the confederate army. phil sheridan is quite embarrassed on march 31 he has his worst day of the american civil war. and he's not too happy and needs to get his revenge on that punk pickett and tells grant if peurbgt is -- excuse me -- if i'm cut off from the rest of the federal army then surely pickett is cut off from
former virginia governor henry weiss's man nelson miles extends over sending them for the trenches on wide oak road. this bar in particular represents the ego of joshua lawrence chamberlain as single-handedly he manages to drive all three confederate brigades back into their own entrenchments. but the fifth corps now is isolate isolating pickett who on march 31 has the most successful day he will experience in the american civil war. pickett takes the cavalry around to try to strike sheridan in...