stories like that that wraps the anecdotal around a kind of analytical strands so the book is the bright continent: breaking rules and making change in modern africa, dayo olopade, thank you for being here today. is a brilliant book. if you want to understand the continent better, you will buy it. thank you, good to be here. [applause] thank you for attending today s session. thank you to our moderator, doug foster and our great author, dayo olopade. e-book the bright continent: breaking rules and making change in modern africa on sale now in the main lobby. she will be signing copies just outside the auditorium for anyone interested. thank you very much, enjoy your afternoon with the bit fast. c-span2 providing live coverage of the u.s. senate floor proceedings and keep public policy events and every weekend booktv, for 15 years the only television network devoted to nonfiction books and authors. c-span2 created by the cable-tv industry and brought to you as a publ
american, old ben butler is said. yesterday morning the angel of death acting under the devil s orders took him from earth and landed him in hell and all the southern countries there are no tears and no regrets, he lived only too long. he has the last remove from earth and pity the double the position he has secured a. they don t write them like fat anymore. is my view that editorials by and large have got more water down over the years and the greatest editorials i believe were written around the late 1890s to the 1930s or the 1940s and as newspapers became more homogenized the editorial pages became more homogenized, the editorial began there have been great editorials written in the last 20 years. i have limited space in this book. i didn t think more recent editorials were as great as some of the earlier ones. i m mentioned chain newspapers. the first chain owner was frank muncie and he died in 1925 and when he died, the daily gazette wrote this. frank manzi, the great
first, syrian troops have captured a town close to the border with lebanon. it follows days of heavy fighting in which dozens of people were killed among them doctors and nurses. this is the latest victory for the regime after a string of verbal losses. troops pushed into the region cutting operable supply routes. this recent event a tough forced thousands of civilians to join their fellow syrians living across the border in lebanon. the international community must do more to support those suffering. thenio gutierrez believes conflict have this is the moment for international community to fully understand that the support provided to the counties of the region needs to be strongly announced, sneeze to be really messy because there is a risk for the space if that does not happen. syrians a risk of trying to flee the conflict but becoming stranded inside their country without being able to reach protection. oure can go to beirut and correspondent, lucy fielder, for more. v
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