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Apr 14, 2024
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and jane more than 40, 50 meters apart. so if we think about slave marie in the north as being somehow gentler or kinder because the enslaved were largely domestic labor inside the houses, they certainly considered family in death because families were buried close together and sicily and jane were not in fact, this is the situation in the burying ground. in 1741. you can see that the two of them are on the absolute fringes of the cemetery at that time marginalized in india as in life. but let's go back to that. catoctin furness, burying ground. i got very interested in what was me about space and genetic relationships, so i got very interested in this this map here. it shows a very similar arrangement. it shows rows of burials roughly, oriented east west headstones and foot stones. in the case of catoctin furnace, they are field stones. they're not carved with with names and in information. but the information comes from the from the genetic. that's what's particularly fascinating to me. i will zoom in here on family a whe
and jane more than 40, 50 meters apart. so if we think about slave marie in the north as being somehow gentler or kinder because the enslaved were largely domestic labor inside the houses, they certainly considered family in death because families were buried close together and sicily and jane were not in fact, this is the situation in the burying ground. in 1741. you can see that the two of them are on the absolute fringes of the cemetery at that time marginalized in india as in life. but...
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Apr 3, 2024
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but you've included jane adams here as well. we did include jane addams. jane addams was also a very important voice within the anti-imperialist league. she was a social reformist and a number of women who participated, who were advocates of women's suffrage, identified with this moment of imperialism overseas and with the disempower our ment of populations that would come from it. in the case of jane addams. she thought, well, the united states has already a presence in the philippines through this war. we need to now democratize the situation because we are a country that stands for democracy. we cannot impose our government without the consent of the governed. and so that was her position. and in the end, she won a nobel peace prize. she did win a nobel peace prize. yes. well, let's find out what's happening around the globe while we're discussing this at home. while debate was happening back in the united states, what was happening in puerto rico? so puerto rico, along with cuba, was the kuban. puerto rico were the last remaining colonies of spain in t
but you've included jane adams here as well. we did include jane addams. jane addams was also a very important voice within the anti-imperialist league. she was a social reformist and a number of women who participated, who were advocates of women's suffrage, identified with this moment of imperialism overseas and with the disempower our ment of populations that would come from it. in the case of jane addams. she thought, well, the united states has already a presence in the philippines through...
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Apr 2, 2024
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a lot of people, including my great aunt jane, mary jane clark. i saw her receipt where she was given the money to go back to port jervis to reimburse her for her which is pretty cool. that's what i wish my grandmother lived to see that she really should've been amazed by that. and they can. then they convene the end of june more than 20 witnesses are called two days of testimony. again, this is secret. and on june 24th, the grand jury issues, a report, a handwritten report, which was widely written about at the time but no one had ever seen, and basically they say, we cannot come to a decision on who is responsible because either the witnesses claim to not know anything or they just seem to have not seen anything, or they're just forgetful, or they're purposely lying to us. they're basically tell the judge we're trying, but we're not getting information. he sends them back to says, no, listen, just go back to deliberating. we'll get some more witnesses. the d.a. gets more witnesses. they bring more people over. and on june 29th, 1892, they hands
a lot of people, including my great aunt jane, mary jane clark. i saw her receipt where she was given the money to go back to port jervis to reimburse her for her which is pretty cool. that's what i wish my grandmother lived to see that she really should've been amazed by that. and they can. then they convene the end of june more than 20 witnesses are called two days of testimony. again, this is secret. and on june 24th, the grand jury issues, a report, a handwritten report, which was widely...
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Apr 6, 2024
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she also left money for jane's children. they could get educated and that would have been if they used it properly. she would have had a better education than she had. i'm sure she left money. go to goodrich. i don't know if you know the goodrich from york county they were i mean one of their claims to fame is that that one of the members of the goodrich family was a pioneer in photography. this country did some amazing things, but they got into the underground railroad. they got so far into it that when the fugitive slave act was passed, they had to think about getting out of town. and some of them did, too, just to survive. they went north to get out of it. out of here and is actually a goodrich museum in new york today, if you ever want to go and take a look at it. she was the court's frequently to address problems. she had personal financial. and i think, again, as with her investments in real estate, she was advised by thaddeus stevens. why would you advise housekeeper to to help build up an estate. well i'll tell you i
she also left money for jane's children. they could get educated and that would have been if they used it properly. she would have had a better education than she had. i'm sure she left money. go to goodrich. i don't know if you know the goodrich from york county they were i mean one of their claims to fame is that that one of the members of the goodrich family was a pioneer in photography. this country did some amazing things, but they got into the underground railroad. they got so far into it...
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Apr 1, 2024
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she also left money for jane's children. they could get educated and that would have been if they used it properly. she would have had a better education than she had. i'm sure she left money. go to goodrich. i don't know if you know the goodrich from york county they were i mean one of their claims to fame is that that one of the members of the goodrich family was a pioneer in photography. this country did some amazing things, but they got into the underground railroad. they got so far into it that when the fugitive slave act was passed, they had to think about getting out of town. and some of them did, too, just to survive. they went north to get out of it. out of here and is actually a goodrich museum in new york today, if you ever want to go and take a look at it. she was the court's frequently to address problems. she had personal financial. and i think, again, as with her investments in real estate, she was advised by thaddeus stevens. why would you advise housekeeper to to help build up an estate. well i'll tell you i
she also left money for jane's children. they could get educated and that would have been if they used it properly. she would have had a better education than she had. i'm sure she left money. go to goodrich. i don't know if you know the goodrich from york county they were i mean one of their claims to fame is that that one of the members of the goodrich family was a pioneer in photography. this country did some amazing things, but they got into the underground railroad. they got so far into it...
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Apr 26, 2024
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so many great adaptations of jane austen novels as an example. and also just biographies that kind of give us a new dimension of these figures. you know, like there's a wonderful recent biography of henry david thoreau by laura dussault walls. she connects you with thoreau as someone who has just got a lot more dimensions than the guy just hanging out. you know, by the pond, trying to think great thoughts. there's a great reason anthology about henry david thoreau. now comes good sailing. it's edited by andrew blotter a lot of great writers who talk about how thoreau is deeply relevant to them and the modern lives that they lead, and probably my favorite essay in here is by george howe holds. there's just really a neat writer analysis. thoreau on ice and he talks about the fact that thoreau just really enjoyed ice skating and he just had a great time out on the ice. this is not a henry david thoreau that we typically think about a guy who's out there having fun. and so i, i just think if we can create as many opportunities as past rebel for reade
so many great adaptations of jane austen novels as an example. and also just biographies that kind of give us a new dimension of these figures. you know, like there's a wonderful recent biography of henry david thoreau by laura dussault walls. she connects you with thoreau as someone who has just got a lot more dimensions than the guy just hanging out. you know, by the pond, trying to think great thoughts. there's a great reason anthology about henry david thoreau. now comes good sailing. it's...
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Apr 29, 2024
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two, the software defense coalition that is led by jane lee is producing actionable recommendations for the subcommittee. and finally, the atlantic council commission on software defined warfare on which i serve, is again producing actionable recommendations. i urge the committee to follow up on these. thank you. >> thank you, ms. lord. are recognized for five minutes. mr. luttrell and distinguished members. thank you for inviting me to speak on the topic of software development. from 2016 to 2021, i was a member of the board and co- chaired along to do software. this was established in 2018. our report was called software is never done. the key findings of our report was that congress and dod had been talking about the importance of software. in many ways, the report was just a rephrasing of the 1987 defense task force on military software 32 years earlier. identified itself over previous on that topic. chapter three, been there, said that, we know what we need to do. we need to figure out how to actually do it and get to it. our 2019 report, i believe we are still the most important p
two, the software defense coalition that is led by jane lee is producing actionable recommendations for the subcommittee. and finally, the atlantic council commission on software defined warfare on which i serve, is again producing actionable recommendations. i urge the committee to follow up on these. thank you. >> thank you, ms. lord. are recognized for five minutes. mr. luttrell and distinguished members. thank you for inviting me to speak on the topic of software development. from...
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Apr 25, 2024
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i would say say, jane, can you give some closing thoughts on what we could do to reclaim the term anti-racism. yeah, well, i think we have to return the definition of racism that was used of by civil rights leader martin luther king said that racism is doctrine, congenital inferiority of a people. that's the kind racism that civil rights movement thought. and i think that's fully destroyed at least the bulk of it. so if we return to that racism that of racism, which can be applied and is applied to every group of people, in different measure. we have to stand against that kind of racism. whoever is for it, you have to stand against it when it comes of the mouth of those some some idiot calling black the n-word. and we have to stand it when it comes out of the mouth of some ivy league professor talking about how white people are all evil. you have to stand equally against all of this stuff as. a signal to our. our fellow americans that we will we will just not tolerate anybody denigrating whole people, rather than judging people as individuals. this is something that we have to continually ann
i would say say, jane, can you give some closing thoughts on what we could do to reclaim the term anti-racism. yeah, well, i think we have to return the definition of racism that was used of by civil rights leader martin luther king said that racism is doctrine, congenital inferiority of a people. that's the kind racism that civil rights movement thought. and i think that's fully destroyed at least the bulk of it. so if we return to that racism that of racism, which can be applied and is...
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Apr 28, 2024
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i look at the social feminists like jane addams, lillian, florence kelley, even black women, feminists like, ida wells, mary church, terrell how their notions of social feminism come from progressive era reform movement, but progressive era of reformers in the south, for instance, were very part of this unwinding of reconstruct some legacy. this is when in the south instituted all white primaries that's seen as a progressive reform, but it's actually a part of the unwinding of reconstruction. so the progressive era reforms are also bent faced. some of them can seen today as, you know, advocating some protections for labor protections certainly for women, labor child labor, getting rid of child labor, etc. but on the other, there were also some sort of un democrat reforms that some of the progressive era intellectuals sort of put forward. so it's, you know, you can see a lot of these reform movements in the u.s. whether it's progressive reformers, labor reformers, women's they are all laboring under the shadow defeat of reconstruction. and for many of them, race remains their achilles h
i look at the social feminists like jane addams, lillian, florence kelley, even black women, feminists like, ida wells, mary church, terrell how their notions of social feminism come from progressive era reform movement, but progressive era of reformers in the south, for instance, were very part of this unwinding of reconstruct some legacy. this is when in the south instituted all white primaries that's seen as a progressive reform, but it's actually a part of the unwinding of reconstruction....
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Apr 3, 2024
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an actress named jane fonda was the lead speaker of an anti-war protest and the local cameras filmed her and. so rocky branch heading off to the edge of the park is the site of one of the major student protests in columbia is history and students were on campus at that point most of them remember that moment quite clearly. so as think about and we're close things up here what should we remember about rocky branch it's an american story it's a human story or is it just water flowing downhill? so anything that sticks out to you that maybe we should remember. i was going to say it's just water and not like the stories come out of it. how did you human interactions go? okay. so it's humans interacting with the landscape or near the water. the water doesn't care at least far as i know. maybe. i mean, the wonder twins, if you watch any of those old cartoons, they were all about water and turning water into different things. so water seemed to have a consciousness for them. but for the most part, water, it's hard to figure it has a consciousness, but it's the human consciousness, right? so
an actress named jane fonda was the lead speaker of an anti-war protest and the local cameras filmed her and. so rocky branch heading off to the edge of the park is the site of one of the major student protests in columbia is history and students were on campus at that point most of them remember that moment quite clearly. so as think about and we're close things up here what should we remember about rocky branch it's an american story it's a human story or is it just water flowing downhill? so...
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Apr 6, 2024
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and so because it was a kind of an over-the-top title, jane took a lot of flack for that. a lot of psychologists criticized her because what she was showing was these graphs of mental health of, let's say, mental illness, of depression, anxiety were like little hockey sticks, like they were flat. and then they would go up in 2013, 2014 and 2015. and i thought, wow, three years of data. i see that. i see the upturn. but if this goes down next year, she's going to be really embarrassed that it didn't go down. it just kept going up and up and up and it's continue going up ever since. so the teen mental health crisis began in 2013. that's when all the numbers began going up in 2011. there's no sign of a problem. 2013. 2014 is when everything goes up, but it takes us a while to notice it because know we researchers, we don't get the data, the data collected. it takes two years before you see the published and but we began to notice on campus around 2014, 2015 that all of our mental health centers were flooded. we couldn't keep up with the demand. and so at the time, we thought
and so because it was a kind of an over-the-top title, jane took a lot of flack for that. a lot of psychologists criticized her because what she was showing was these graphs of mental health of, let's say, mental illness, of depression, anxiety were like little hockey sticks, like they were flat. and then they would go up in 2013, 2014 and 2015. and i thought, wow, three years of data. i see that. i see the upturn. but if this goes down next year, she's going to be really embarrassed that it...
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Apr 2, 2024
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our challenge, jane, because police forces are just coming in to existence. and so the records that they keep are are sporadic at best. now, there are some port cities that have decent arrest records. one of those places is new orleans. and so this is a photograph i took of a police arrest book that is housed in the new orleans public library, the top shelf of the municipal archives are and what you can see, what this arrest record is. you see the names of three fmc, free men of color, right. who were arrested by officer lynn by virtue of a warrant on board the brig fashioned for coming into the state in contravention of law. all right, i've got in trouble reading that. it literally took me decades to figure out how to read something that looks like that. right. but now i'm really good at reading my students handwriting. so i guess there's you multiple uses for that. but as you go through the as i went through these volumes, i started to create what i hate doing. this is the one part of doing history i don't like. i created a database, right? i literally crea
our challenge, jane, because police forces are just coming in to existence. and so the records that they keep are are sporadic at best. now, there are some port cities that have decent arrest records. one of those places is new orleans. and so this is a photograph i took of a police arrest book that is housed in the new orleans public library, the top shelf of the municipal archives are and what you can see, what this arrest record is. you see the names of three fmc, free men of color, right....
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Apr 8, 2024
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his jane did not like his political career. so let's go back to new hampshire. do something else. so he didn't run for office again until the presidency, but he did run the democratic party. he was the chair of the democratic party in the state of new hampshire, which kept him in the mix. and then in 52, he's basically hoping maybe at the convention he might get the vice presidential slot. well, as it turns out, james buchanan, one of those who is up for potential nomination, lewis cass is up for the nomination. those democrats that two thirds rule that requirement had to get to two thirds at the convention. it really tough to do to get the nomination. it's one of the reasons why we get these dark horses are that are looked at to potentially come in and that's how franklin pierce gets nomination because they couldn't settle on someone else is that how about that guy franklin pierce he gets the nomination beats winfield scott who would have been his commander in the mexican army or in the mexican war. scott and there's the last to run for the president. franklin takes over. all rig
his jane did not like his political career. so let's go back to new hampshire. do something else. so he didn't run for office again until the presidency, but he did run the democratic party. he was the chair of the democratic party in the state of new hampshire, which kept him in the mix. and then in 52, he's basically hoping maybe at the convention he might get the vice presidential slot. well, as it turns out, james buchanan, one of those who is up for potential nomination, lewis cass is up...
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Apr 7, 2024
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his he wanted a minute to think mary jane i can see that from here no i didn't maybe didn't phrase it you know you i says please please know i think again mckinley really really thought hard and long before america entered the spanish-american and congress kept pushing the newspapers kept pushing him to you know, to go war. and he really reluctantly decided to do it. so i think the decision making was a long, hard process. he really, you know, thought a lot of his generals and thought a lot of their their input. and i think he gathered all that information. then he finally came to the decision that we had to get involved in order to to rectify this war. so i really think, you know, the spanish-american war was really the very first examples that i can that i can recall, that it was a long, hard process for him to come to terms that we should fight that war. i think i'll stick with d-day because it really was kind of it was a big one, even though he wasn't president yet. but. he, first of all, believed in the resilience of the people that he was working with, the troops and that kind o
his he wanted a minute to think mary jane i can see that from here no i didn't maybe didn't phrase it you know you i says please please know i think again mckinley really really thought hard and long before america entered the spanish-american and congress kept pushing the newspapers kept pushing him to you know, to go war. and he really reluctantly decided to do it. so i think the decision making was a long, hard process. he really, you know, thought a lot of his generals and thought a lot of...