I really could, like, walk into a Grocery Store and probably i really could like walk into a Grocery Store and probably finde five in a single like outing to walmart, so is very rich with students who had lived that experience and from various perspectives. At i reall the thing i realize when i i started interviewing was that there are so made different perspective there can ever thought about what life might look like for a kid who was five when the schools closed, so when i met those students i thought i should passed a wider net. It was amazing to meet someone that was not able to start their education until they were 10 years old and was pushed throug school in seven years and frustrated many teachers. That was a totally different experience from these kids who quit to school at 13 or 14 through no fault of their own, but because of school closures, so i did my best to cast a wide net and figure out what some of the main themes of the stories were and i have to say that narrowing d
A detearatiriorating climate. In certain aspects recently we see people wanting to leave. This is an issue for china. Can it become an independent nation if the talent is leaving . In new york, we are seeing more and more chinese sending their kids overseas. They are frustrated just like jack. Not that you have to be a genius in math but they want to study liberal arts. It is like a boiling pot that the government is hammering down the lid. The internet can be a release and social media allows people to vent and also maybe thread in serb sir circuses and gives them things to buy. It is a canary in the coal mine. Any comments . Yes, you do. Sorry. Hi, i should say we were in high school together. Yes, it is me. My french me. Basically alibaba is a marketplace. You are saying they are selling like crappy plastic bins originally and the chinese are trying to build this consumer based model. Do you see the emergence of like major brands emerging in china . There is already higher which mak
According to the preface, he didnt take notes and then he lost the first two he got burned up and still wrote it. If you read the book it has enormous detail about the sand a dunes and what happened on the day of the movement. I dont know how he could possibly remember all of it. Its some of the most elegant writing ive ever read, so i read at night to go to sleep and i read a little bit of the seven pillars of wisdom and after zonkars of wisdom and after you have enough airplane time to read . I dont read much on the plane. I go back and forth to tennessee. Nd thats about an hour. So i usually read a newspaper or catch up on work or sleep. I read when im by myself and at night before bed or sometimes early in the morning. Or in the summer i go fishing for a couple of weeks and ive take some books to read. Mrs. Alexander is also a reader. Big time. She loves to read. We went to a discussion recently and she was talking about her list of the best which she had done for parade magazine a
Date in history posts. Its my honor and pleasure today to welcome you to this virtual lecture delivered by marlene [inaudible]. Marlenes a lawyer. Shes also the author of a book entitled fair labor lawyer the remarkable life of new deal attorney and Supreme Court advocate [inaudible]. Shes currently working on her second book entitled the history of the [inaudible], 1855 through 1946. For the last decade of her 30year career, as a marylands attorney generals office, from which she retired in 2013, she served as a special assistant to the attorney general and was responsible for enforcing Consumer Protection laws governing the marketing of tobacco and alcohol and internet safety. [inaudible]. Has twice received the attorney generals Exceptional Service award. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate and a member of the board of trustees in a college in maryland. She earned her law degree from George Washington university and her mba from Loyola University of maryland, where she has also taught law. Sh
Remarkable life of new deal attorney and Supreme Court advocate [inaudible]. Shes currently working on her second book entitled the history of the [inaudible], 1855 through 1946. For the last decade of her 30year career, as a marylands attorney generals office, from which she retired in 2013, she served as a special assistant to the attorney general and was responsible for enforcing Consumer Protection laws governing the marketing of tobacco and alcohol and internet safety. [inaudible]. Has twice received the attorney generals Exceptional Service award. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate and a member of the board of trustees in a college in maryland. She earned her law degree from George Washington university and her mba from Loyola University of maryland, where she has also taught law. She has received recognition and financing for research and grants for fellowships for the National Endowment for the humanities, brandeis institute, and the American Jewish archives. [inaudible] to be sure. She