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Maineiacs vs Hijracrats: Paul LePage And The Coming Battle Over Immigration In Maine | Articles


Washington Post, July 2, 1978]
Over the years Nelson Rockefeller and his plutocratic colleagues used their financial influence to shove Stupid-Party policies down the throat of the GOP, making it essentially an echo of the Open Borders Democrats. Indeed, it was Rockefeller who spearheaded the sabotage of Barry Goldwater’s candidacy at the 1964 Republican Convention.
Maine has a year-round population of only 1.344 million. However, many of the plutocratic elite, such as the Bush Family, only live there part-time. Nevertheless, these elites continually insert post-American rubber stamps into Maine political office to do their bidding like William Cohen, a Republican who made his political mark in his first Congressional term by voting to impeach Richard Nixon during Watergate, and was subsequently rewarded with a Senate Seat, and later the position of Secretary of Defense for President Clinton. (Incidentally, Cohen also served as Best Man at John McCain’s wedding). ....

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Bill Buell's Electric City Archives: A look at the Wemple family's Schenectady history


Bill Buell’s Electric City Archives: A look at the Wemple family’s Schenectady history | The Daily Gazette
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As civic-minded attorneys, maybe entering politics is the natural thing to do. But while these two Wemples, both Republicans and both descended from one of Schenectady’s original founders more than three and a half centuries ago, were both immersed into electoral politics, no one ever accused them of being a life-long politician. They were both much more than that.
With the passing last month of former Schenectady police sergeant Ray Wemple, their distant cousin, I decided to look into some of the family’s history, and the trip back was well worth the visit. Here are the facts. ....

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MacArthur Park reboot: A Q&A with Victoria Ramirez of the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts


MacArthur Park reboot: A Q&A with Victoria Ramirez of the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts
March 3, 202111:55 am
ARKANSAS ARTS CENTER, TRANSFORMED: Like its new name, the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts’ new building nods to its 1930s origins. 
Studio Gang/courtesy of the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts
The Arkansas Arts Center has a new name to go with its $142 million new building in MacArthur Park. Now known as the
Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, the newly glowed-up art museum is slated to open in 2022, housing under one roof a restaurant, an art school, gallery space, a museum store and performing arts spaces for its acclaimed children’s theater and other groups. Architecture firm Studio Gang, founded by MacArthur genius grant award winner Jeanne Gang, designed the new building. The concept adds a sweeping glass-paneled “cultural living room” and simultaneously nods to the building’s history by uncovering ....

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To Try a President


To Try a President
Harry Kalven Jr.
© Ernst Haas / Getty
Organizing my files recently, I came upon an unpublished article by my father, Harry Kalven Jr. It was the last piece he wrote before his death in 1974. I had forgotten that it existed. Reading it now, 47 years after he wrote it, is an uncanny experience, for it speaks with singular clarity and force to a central question of the moment: How should the legal system respond to crimes that a former president may have committed while in office?
A law professor at the University of Chicago, my father was an expert in several fields torts, taxation, empirical research on legal institutions but his consuming passion was the First Amendment. After suffering a heart attack in 1969 at the age of 55, he reordered his priorities and began to work on a book he had conceived of early in his career but had long deferred: an intellectual history of the Supreme Court’s encounters with the First Amendment. ....

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