50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FREEDOM RIDES APRIL 20, 2011 PAGE 1

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FREEDOM RIDES APRIL 20, 2011 PAGE 1"

Transcription

1 PAGE 1 TOM PUTNAM: I'm Tom Putnam, Director of the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum, and on behalf of Tom McNaught, Executive Director of the Kennedy Library Foundation, and all of my Library and Foundation colleagues, I thank you all for coming. Let me begin by acknowledging the generous underwriters of the Kennedy Library Forums, including lead sponsor Bank of America, Boston Capital, the Boston Foundation, Raytheon, the Lowell Institute, and our media partners, The Boston Globe, NECN and WBUR. We're thrilled to be partnering with WGBH this evening to help premiere Freedom Riders, a new American Experience documentary which airs nationally on PBS on May 16th and to have as our moderator, Callie Crossley, from WGBH's The Callie Crossley Show and also a regular on Greater Boston's Friday night Beat the Press. Callie also served as a producer of the Eyes on the Prize documentary series. We're short on time this evening, and I did want everyone to know the film lasts about two hours, and then we'll have a conversation after that for about 45 minutes. So we plan to end this evening at 8:15. And the buses, if you took public transportation, will be running through 8:30. But there's really no better way to introduce our speakers, Genevieve Hughes, Bernard LaFayette Jr., and Ernest "Rip" Patton than simply to watch this incredible film. But before doing so, I wanted to thank our three guest speakers. You honor us this evening with your presence, and we are a far better country for your courage and convictions that helped as a people move closer to the ideals on which this country was founded. Now on with the show. [Applause] [Film shown]

2 PAGE 2 CALLIE CROSSLEY: Good evening. We're waiting for Bernard. He'll join us up here in just a second. But while we have a moment to just catch our breath and respond to all of that wonderful emotion, let's give a hand to my fabulous friend, Stanley Nelson and his film. [Applause] And if you know something about filmmakers, and having been one for just a hot minute with Eyes on the Prize, then you know that the thing that we rely on when we're doing a true story, a narrative non-fiction, is that we have all of the research, all of the work done by scholars who have spent all of their waking hours putting the pieces together and giving us an analysis on which we can then make a filmic journey for all of you. So to that, we must then also recognize Raymond Arsenault, the author of Freedom Riders. [Applause] Bernard LaFayette. [Applause] Genevieve Hughes Houghton. [Applause] Ernest "Rip" Patton Jr. [Applause] We're all delighted to have them here. For those of you who have not attended a Kennedy Library Forum before, I will ask a few questions and then later on -- as you see there are microphones in the aisle -- I will entertain some questions from you, not comments, some questions to our guests, and we will enjoy a wonderful enriching conversation for all of us. I'm going to start in a way that I think many of us would want to know after having watched you up on that screen, what do you all feel like, looking at your young selves [laughter] in the film? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Despair. CALLIE CROSSLEY: What does it feel like, Rip Patton?

3 PAGE 3 ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I think things are, in a sense, the same as they were in '61. I still feel the same. I'm busy doing the work. So it hasn't stopped. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Bernard LaFayette? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Well, I was asked, since I've seen it so many times, that I want to sit in the back and take a nap. [Laughter] But I just want to take a little nap. But what I did was each time I see it, even this time, I recognize myself again and I hadn't seen myself in certain places. So I feel a sense that it's a distance for me, psychologically. And yet, when I see the film it reconnects me emotionally with that particular period. And then once again, I remember the feeling I had. So it's a buildup; each time I see it, I feel closer and closer to that experience. CALLIE CROSSLEY: And what was the feeling you had at that time? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Well, one of the things I felt was that we were going to succeed. There was never a moment -- whether it was at the bus station being beaten up, or whether it was being arrested and put in Parchman -- there was not one moment that I ever doubted that things were going to change. CALLIE CROSSLEY: And Genevieve, for you? By the way, Bernard was 20, Genevieve was 28, and Ernest "Rip" Patton was 21. GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Well, I felt the same way Bernard felt. I felt we were at the right point to really win and that's one reason why I was so enthusiastic about going on it. I like to win. It's a wonderful feeling. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: How were you feeling, Rip?

4 PAGE 4 ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: The same as Bernard, because we came from the same background as far as the Civil Rights Movement was concerned with our sit-ins in Nashville. And we had been very successful in Nashville. Nashville was like a little battle and the Freedom Ride was more like getting into the war. Nashville was a local movement, and the Freedom Ride was more of a national movement. We just had the faith and the confidence. We knew that the Nashville students would back us up, because of the first, second, third, fourth and fifth wave. Nashville had the largest contingency of Freedom Riders. And Tennessee State had the largest within the Nashville area of people to go on the Freedom Rides. So we knew that that group would back us up. But we didn't necessarily know that it would grow as it did. Of course, that's what we wanted, and that's what we did in Nashville, was to fill the jails. And we wanted to fill all the jails in Jackson, Mississippi. We didn't know about Parchman though. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: Yeah, that was not a jail, that was something else. Because we have the advantage here of everyone having seen the film, I can ask you all some largerthemed issues. Something that comes up all the time -- and I bet for all of you who speak to students frequently -- is how do you know how it was going to turn out in the end? They're a little afraid to engage sometimes in something they can't see down the road how it's going to turn out. And I say all the time, these people didn't know. They didn't know how it was going to turn out. So you just decided, "I'm going to be committed to this " Because? Explain that. What drives you to jump in, particularly after you've signed an application that says you may lose your life. Don't everybody I will call on you. [Laughter] Genevieve, why don't you start, while Bernard is thinking. GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: All right. I felt, and possibly I felt incorrectly, that I had a pretty good knowledge of the white middle class, and I knew they felt guilty; I just knew them well enough that they would support this -- which means the money, among other things, to carry on and the money to form new chapters. I felt it was

5 PAGE 5 overdue, in fact. I felt people had been ready for quite a while and that gave me confidence because however terrible it was in the Deep South, it was not that terrible towards the North. I got terrific support. I remember I went somewhere in our apartment building and we had a little party and I asked people to donate, and they donated $700. Well, this was 50 years ago. These were just the people who lived in our apartment building. So for me, that kind of response tells me something. CALLIE CROSSLEY: And what did you think your presence being on those buses, being a part of the Freedom Rides might say to somebody else looking from the outside? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Well, I think they'd have to puzzle over it for a bit. I mean, here we were, an integrated group, which hadn't been that way before. They'd have to figure it out. And I knew that some people were going to be very antagonized, that was obvious. But I thought we would win. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Rip? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I always go back to the sit-ins in Nashville, because I think, for Nashville, that's where it started. We had our training from Dr. Lawson and the training that we had brought us together, the students together. So we knew that no matter what, as Bernard said in the piece, no matter what, we would come. The first wave would go, and he was leading the second wave. Jim Zwerg had said that he was the one most likely to be attacked and to be killed. And Bernard said, "Well, no matter what, I'm bringing the second group." And the group that was more or less following not following him, but the group that was with him felt the same way. I was in the third group. I felt when it was time for my group to go, there was no problem; I didn't have a second thought.

6 PAGE 6 CALLIE CROSSLEY: But why was that? There were 30 of you. There's 60 more outside of that group. What made you all do it? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Numbers had nothing to do with it. This was my own individual decision to make. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Right, right. So why? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Because I knew that it was the right thing to do. It was something that I wanted to do. And it was something that I had been trained to do, to overcome fear and to know that we were doing the right thing. CALLIE CROSSLEY: And for you, Bernard LaFayette? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: I wasn't prepared to live with segregation and discrimination. If it took death to stop it, so be it. I wasn't going to live with it. CALLIE CROSSLEY: What had happened to you in your life that got you to the point of saying, "I must do something to change this and I believe I can"? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Well, it was my grandmother. I was seven years old and she was my leader. And I'd seen her do some things that were not ordinary. And I wanted to follow in her footsteps. Like for example, in Tampa, Florida, she went and bought an orange grove and got some lots, cut them up, sold people lots, and they got Walden to help them build houses on them. She opened up a grocery store. I was standing right there when the fellow was digging the foundation, and she told him how deep to build the foundation. And when she came back, it wasn't deep enough. And he said, "Well, I know what the code is, okay? This is sufficient for a one-story grocery store."

7 PAGE 7 She goes, "A grocery store?" She finished the 3rd grade. In fact, you look like my grandmother. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: Oh. I'm sure she was 20, that you're remembering her at 20. [Laughter] BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Yeah. She looked at him and she told him, "I told you to dig it deeper. I'm building a one-story building, but Junior might want to put another story on it. And if you don't dig the foundation deep enough, he can't get another story." So it was a two-story store that she was thinking about, even though she was going to build a one-story. So it's the future. So what's possible, she did the impossible. So that gave me the determination that we could do it. And she fell one time. We were running, trying to catch the streetcar, and you had to put your money in the front and then you had to leave and go to the back door to get on the streetcar. She fell. Here I was, seven years old, I'm reaching for the door and I was reaching for her, and I felt a sword just cut me in half. And I said to myself at age seven, "When I get grown, I'm going to do something about this." I'll never forget that incident. So every time I got a chance to make a difference. I was kidnapped in Colombia, Latin America, by the FARC, six years ago because we were transforming a community, to get them to stand up. And that's what I do now. I help people learn how to train others to be able to stand up, the same training I got 52 years ago. We do that, and we're able to transform a prison, like Valle Vista, into a nonviolent center. We have a prison now that's a nonviolent center in Medellin. We've got another center in Johannesburg, the King-Luthuli Transformation Center. So what I do is help establish these institutions. When I studied at Harvard University, some students followed me and set up a peace education program at Harvard University.

8 PAGE 8 At Gustavus Adolphus College in Minnesota, we have courses in nonviolence and peace in every department. One of the things that we have failed to do in our educational system is to infuse nonviolence so that people will have these tools, so that when they run into conflicts, they don't have to use violence. Or either when they run into violence, they know how to respond in a nonviolent way. And that was the thing that inspired me from the beginning. I have been so amazed at the power of nonviolence. Looks like some other people in the Middle East have discovered it, too. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: That's one of the things that, I think, people always ask about when they see people in the Civil Rights Movement and see them practicing nonviolence. I'd like for all of you to speak about that and how important that was in the work that you were doing as Freedom Riders. Want to start, Rip? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: When the workshops started in Nashville, I heard about the workshops that Jim Lawson was conducting. I wanted to be a part of that. And I hear lately, in my years that have passed, I come across a passage in the Bible which is Romans 12, the first and second verse. And in that first verse, it says, "Do not conform to this world." I look at that as before I was a part of the Movement, before I started the nonviolent workshops, that my parents were a part of segregation. So they went along with segregation. They didn't mind sitting at the back of the bus, or not being served downtown. In the second part Romans 12 says, "Do not conform to this world, but be transformed." I look at that as being, once I started in the Movement, I went over to the transformed; I was transformed and I've lived that life ever since. I joined the Movement because it was in Nashville. Nashville is my home town and I wanted to do something for Nashville. And I did. So when it came to the Freedom Rides, there was no question as to whether or not I was going to be a part of that.

9 PAGE 9 CALLIE CROSSLEY: Genevieve, was nonviolence as transformative for you as it was for Rip? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Yes. It was. I had to learn it from scratch. Didn't come naturally to me. But when I was exposed to it, I knew it was the right way. And at other times in my life, for instance, I have found a shelter for battered women, which has the same thing -- trying to end violence against women, which is very pervasive in our society, unfortunately. So I always kept that in mind. I'm not an absolute pacifist, but I'm pretty close to it. [Laughter] BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Since you raise this question about nonviolence, just one thing I think is important and that is we must understand why people behave the way they do. We saw this violence that took place in the bus burning, and all that sort of thing. The first step towards nonviolence is trying to put yourself in the other person's position. That is, to try to see through their eyes the world that they see. Because people behave towards you based on their perception of you and their perception of themselves. So before you can ever even start to solve the problem, you've got to look at the world through their eyes. At least try. I was a Nashville student, and I studied at night and I used to turn on the radio trying to get some music to study and kind of relax. In Nashville, how many country stations they got? I don't know. That's all I can get. [Twangs] [Laughter] We grew up in the South and I used to see my parents change the station, Hee Haw and Grand Ole Opry, and stuff like that. So what happened is, I said, Okay, I give up. I'm just going to stop. I could hear them, but now I'm going to listen. So I just put everything down and I listened. You know what I heard? [Sings:] She was poor, but she was honest, Victim of a rich man's pride, When she met that Christian gentleman, Big Jim Folsom And she had a child by him.

10 PAGE 10 It's the rich who gets the glory, It's the poor who gets the blame, It's the same the whole world over, Now ain't that a dirty, cryin' shame. Now he sits in the legislature Making laws for all mankind, While she roam the streets of Cullman, Alabama Selling grapes from her grapevine. This was a little girl who, this big Senator, who ended up being the Governor, he got the girl pregnant down in Cullman, Alabama. She wasn't setting grapes from her grapevine. [Laughter] We know what she was selling. Once you listen, that old country music is nothing but white folks' blues. They had the same feelings, the same problems. It was the rich who got the glory for them, the poor who got the blame. See, once you look at their lives through their eyes, then you can understand why they don't feel good about themselves, why they would go and put on a white sheet, because they couldn't afford a robe. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: So once you're looking through the other person's perspective, that puts you in a place to really be able to activate nonviolence, then. BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Yes, because what they like in their lives is somebody to respect them and for them to be able to feel good about themselves, and be able to share the best of themselves rather than the worst. When people bring out the worst in themselves, it's because they can't discover the best in themselves. So nonviolence is a thing that gives them the example of how they can bring the best out of themselves as we try to bring the best out of ourselves. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Now, all of you, it's established, we've seen the film, we've read your stories, we know you were totally committed to this. Once you applied, you wanted to do it, you did it. And no matter what, you were going to stay in it till the end. That's

11 PAGE 11 established. But for the rest of us out here, we want to know what moment, what scary moment came -- and it didn't shake your commitment -- but it gave you a moment of pause during these very brutal times of the Freedom Rides. Just one moment. Genevieve? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Well, I wasn't too happy when I was in the airport and I noticed that the restrooms, which of course were separate, four separate restrooms, were hidden behind a wall. And you had to open the door and go down into a place where there were no other people. And it was a very, very vulnerable situation. That was where anybody who didn't like you could just take care of you in no time, just like that. Well, I tried to avoid that restroom. [Laughter] Because I knew there was only danger there. I looked around at my fellow Freedom Riders. Joe Perkins was standing in front of a window and I walked up to him. We weren't very well organized, you see, we were just roaming around the airport. And I said, "Joe, why are you standing here with your back to everyone?" And he pointed at the window, and I realized it reflected behind him. All he had to do was look at that window and he knew exactly what was behind him. That was Joe Perkins. He was always thinking. I sort of admired his tactical ability. He's disappeared, unfortunately. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Rip, for you, the moment. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I think the one moment for me was when I was released from Parchman. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Let's pause. You all know Parchman, now, that was not a jail, that was the penitentiary. Go ahead. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Normally, when people were released, the smallest number were two. Attorney Young would come from Jackson and pick two people up

12 PAGE 12 and take them back to Jackson. The day that I was released, I was the only one. It was just the attorney and I, traveling from Parchman back to Jackson. Anything could happen to both of us on that long ride. I think that was the only time and the first time that I had ever had any kind of fear at all. Perhaps maybe if Bernard was there to sing me a country song [laughter] or one of the other Riders, if there had been two of us in the car plus the attorney, it may have been a different feeling. But going back to Jackson it wasn't frightening, I just didn't feel at ease being in the car with him by myself. CALLIE CROSSLEY: It gave you pause. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Yes. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Bernard LaFayette, your moment? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: I had to search for that moment but if you remember, when we got to Parchman, we were singing all the way and that kind of thing. The sheriff said to us, "All right, you're at Parchman now. Let's see how much singing you're going to do now." So I mean, we'd been singing in all the other jails. We got to Parchman, they took us in one by one and the person who went in before you, you didn't see him. And the other thing is when you walked in, behind that door, they said "Take off all of your clothes." You had to strip naked. One by one. And you didn't know what happened to the other person. That took me back to Germany. And Mississippi, it was a state-run operation. It was sovereign state of Mississippi, and we didn't know what sovereignty they had and what they would do to people. I grew up in Tampa, Florida, and I had a lot of Jewish friends. In fact, I was driving at age 14. I was driving a car with a license because this Jewish family took me in and I used to work in their grocery store. They wanted me to drive the truck and deliver groceries. So they took me out on Sundays and trained me how to drive. I had my driver's license at 14. So I had a lot of contact, and therefore I had a lot of exposure to what some

13 PAGE 13 of those situations were like. And that's when I was wondering whether or not there was going to be a repeat. CALLIE CROSSLEY: John Lewis says in the film that all of you were never the same after this experience. Do you agree? And if you were changed in some way, what way was it? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Well, I know that when I returned to Nashville, I didn't stop. Freedom Rides are over or about to be over; I continued to work. The young lady, Pauline Knight, that said, "I'm going on a Freedom Ride and no one's going to stop me," well, we worked together after we were released, on Kroger and HG Hill, on desegregating those two big food stores. Shortly after that, I was asked to come to New York and to be a fundraiser for CORE, for the Freedom Rides, and I did that for a year. I got away from the Movement for a while, and everything kind of went to sleep. Then when I moved back to Nashville in 1991, I read a newspaper article about myself. They said that "he was back in town." No, first of all, they called me and I said, "Well, how do they know that I'm back in Nashville?" And then the Tennessean, they asked to come over and do an interview. And they did. I said, "Well, I'm back. I'm back home where it all started and I'm ready to get started again." Since 1991, when Bernard called me and we did a retracing of the Freedom Rides with two busloads from eight to 81, or eight to 98. So I've been active ever since. CALLIE CROSSLEY: I should have said this is really a two-part question, because you gave me a beautiful recitation of what you've doing. What I want to know is have you been changed emotionally? Were you changed emotionally from that experience? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Yes, I was changed emotionally from that experience. And you see the change sitting right across from you. It wasn't too much of a change; I

14 PAGE 14 didn't have to make much of a change. I've always been, as Clark Kent would say, I'm the mild-mannered person that I've always been. [Laughter] And I was never a violent person as a young person. So I guess I was meant to be just that nonviolent person. My mother, as she grew older, she would worry about things. I said, "Mom, worrying is going to take you away from here." I don't worry about things, because that works on your whole body. Being a part of the Freedom Rides, I didn't worry about it. I knew that I would be safe. One way or the other, I was going to be safe. I knew that I was going to make it through that because of my experience in Nashville with the sit-in. And I knew I had people like John Lewis and Bernard and Bevel and Diane and I could go on and on and on behind me. And they knew that I had their backs because that's the way we did it in Nashville. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Genevieve, were you changed, as John Lewis said? And if so, how? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Remember, I was a municipal bond analyst. You couldn't go through that without changing a lot. [Laughter] He's looking at me like, "Really?" [Laughter] So yes I was changed. I became a social activist, and it moved out into many different areas. It wasn't all interracial, but all of it was aimed at social change. Practically all of it, let's say. So yes. I was never happier than when I was busy in the Civil Rights Movement. I felt like I was three feet off the ground. I was so happy just to be doing that. It seems strange, but I guess it was a really new experience and it was morally good. There weren't all these ambiguities that are in the rest of life. But this seemed to me to be just about perfect. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Bernard LaFayette? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Well, once we were in jail in Jackson, Mississippi, the Governor, Ross Barnett, came out in the front page of the newspaper congratulating the

15 PAGE 15 people from Mississippi for not getting involved with these Northern outside agitators. And that was an insult. So when Jim Bevel and I got out of jail, we set up shop and started training folk from Jackson, Mississippi. It was Medgar Evers who gave us the opportunity and found a place on Lynn Street for us to have. Tom Gaither and I -- we shared an office with him -- he was the kind of a coordinator for CORE and over the period of about two weeks, we were able to get 42 people from Jackson, Mississippi on the Freedom Rides. They didn't have to get on the bus, they just walked into the bus station and it didn't cost any money. But here's what we did. We trained them in a very intense way when we had learned about nonviolence, because we didn't want them to get in there, in jail, and then all of a sudden tell the folk that we duped them, we tricked them. So Jim Bevel was the more persuasive of the two of us. I would tell them all the reasons they should go on the Freedom Rides, and Bevel would tell them all the reasons they shouldn't. He was from Mississippi. He made a very strong case. Your life was not going to be the same. You're not going to have certain opportunities in Mississippi. Your family might be affected by that. You might not get a job in the future because you're an embarrassment to the State of Mississippi, and all that. All the reason they shouldn't. Then, if they showed up 6:00 a.m. the next morning to go to jail, they could get in. If they were 15 minutes late, they had to wait till the next day. because we had to have some standards and criteria. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: For going to jail. BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Right. So people from Mississippi had a little more difficulty passing the course. But when we took them down, not one turned around. There was no turning around with them. Lawanne Brown, I can name all of them. Jimmy Travis, all those people in Mississippi who ended up there.

16 PAGE 16 There are two other things I want to say about Nashville. Because of the training and that's what I emphasize, that's the thing that made the difference in my life, that training you had more people on Martin Luther King's executive staff of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference from Mississippi, and all the other states, and that kind of thing, you had more from Nashville than any other place, that came out of the Nashville movement. Jim Bevel, Diane Nash, who was on the staff, the executive staff of Martin Luther King; Paul Brooks, he was one of those other guys with the hat on because I had my hat on. Go down the list. And myself. Every campaign that Martin Luther King had southern Alabama, there were folks from Nashville. Harbinger, Georgia, Nashville. Chicago, Harbinger, Georgia. Poor People's Campaign? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Don't forget Memphis. BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Memphis, Nashville. So the point I'm making is that it was the West Point of the nonviolent movement. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: All right. I'm reminded that Ray Arsenault, who is the author of this fine book, says that you all were the shock troops for the rest of the Civil Rights Movement, and I just wanted to read this piece from his book, which talks about the impact of the Rides beyond just the removing of the signs, but really the impact on shaping a nation: Indeed, the Freedom Rides exerted an impact that transcended tangible, quantifiable changes in institutional behavior or public policy. Within six months of the first Ride, travelers of all races were sitting side by side on buses and trains all across the nation without fear of arrest, the WHITE and COLORED signs that had blighted the walls of Southern bus and train stations for decades were gone, the nation's major civil rights

17 PAGE 17 organizations had undergone significant transformations, and the Justice Department had been pushed into a deepening engagement in civil rights matters. But even this impressive list of accomplishments does not capture the full effect of the Freedom Rides. The most important and lasting consequence the one that confirmed the Rides' status as the pivotal moment in American history was a revolutionary change in the character of citizen politics. In the course of six months, the nation's first mobile, nonviolent army expanded the realm of the possible in American political and social insurgency, redefining the limits of dissent and setting the stage for the escalating demands and rising expectations of the mid- and late 1960s. And the part that I wanted to focus on was the increase in citizen engagement. We talk so much about that now, the civic engagement. You all were right at the forefront of all of this. What do you say to young people now who are looking at you as role models? You had your grandmother, you had Nashville, you had other people that you worked with that were role models for you even as you were being the shock troopers, as it were. So now, when young people look at you and they're looking for examples of civic engagement from you, what do you say to them? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Well, where I live we have a bunch of high school students. They didn't engage in any cross-racial activities, but they were aware that the levees on the Mississippi River were so weak that if there was a heavy rain, they would be swept away. So these kids went out and monitored the levees and then they went and talked to Congressmen. They got Jerry Costello interested. And these were just high school kids. Of course, they had a teacher who was urging them on, but I don't think she was doing it all. The only thing I regret is that she didn't stay in the background more and let these kids develop their own program.

18 PAGE 18 But I think that it's feasible for high school kids to look around and see something that they feel is wrong and involve themselves in it. They can use nonviolence there, too. And I find that very inspiring, at this late date, that these kids would get out there and do that. They haven't won yet, but I think they will. And that's the Army Corps of Engineers, a really tough outfit [laughter] that doesn't want to do anything. CALLIE CROSSLEY: So what lesson do you want them to take from your example, if any? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: What do I want them to take? CALLIE CROSSLEY: Um hmm, from your example. GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: Well, I want them to not demand. I want them to be courteous. I want them to communicate with the people they're dealing with. I don't want them marching up and down demanding this and that and the other, at least until it's hopeless [laughter], if it should ever get to be that. But I want them to learn that if they're determined and civil, they may get what they're trying to get. And mind you, there's no money for this. This is not something you can just reach out and say, "Corps of Engineers, take care of this." It's a very, very expensive thing. We've already had one flood about, I think it was 1996, maybe, and it wiped out all kinds of things -- not whole towns in most cases but in some cases it did wipe out whole towns. They had to move them up on cliffs. So I want young people to feel that they can affect things and for people to help them. I'm not saying grade school people. I'm talking about people who are capable analyzing things and can do it without getting so emotionally involved that they contradict themselves, shall we say. I think there's a lot of that that needs to be done because essentially our politicians have deserted us. They're out there working away to enrich a

19 PAGE 19 lot of people who are already enriched. It takes a lot to get them to adopt something and follow through on it. This is a terrible time in politics, I think. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Thank you. Rip? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I was in Memphis about three or four weeks ago and talked to about 600 junior high/high school students. And when it came to the Q&A portion of the program, there were a lot of questions but there was one that stood out to me. The mic was out and they would walk up to the mic. It was a young lady sitting over on this side of the room and she walked past the mic, came down to the foot of the stage and she said, "I want to do something. I don't know what I want to do, but I want to do something. I want to make a change." And I said to her, "Really think about what it is you want to do. What is it that you're passionate about?" I said, "Do you have any friends?" And her whole class stood up and applauded to let me know that they were her friends. I said, "Okay, find somebody in your class that is as passionate about what it is that you want to do and then go to your teacher, go to an advisor, go to your parents and talk about it and then find some civic leader that is passionate about it." One of the things that was going on was with the teachers. They're trying to get the older teachers to retire so they could bring new teachers in at a lower rate. But we need those older teachers who have been there for a long time. I told them that. I said, "When the board of education has this meeting about the teachers," I said, "you can have the blue flu as a student, or students." And I explained to them about the blue flu. I said, "That simply means that you're sick that day and you can't go to school. But you can fill up the board of education's lobby and take your signs, but be quiet and orderly and let them know that you're in favor of the teachers and you want to keep your teachers." But then when I drove back to Nashville, I caught the very end of a news report. And it was a young man who was with one of the organizations. I don't know if it was the Lions Club or the Elks or who it was, because I caught the last of it. What he was doing was he

20 PAGE 20 had a program called the Saturday and Sunday Breakfasts. And he would have Ziploc bags with enough breakfast in it for school kids. They were fed Monday through Friday in school, but they didn't have the opportunity to have breakfast on Saturday and Sunday. So I said I need to find out about that program, take it back to Memphis, talk to this young lady, see if that's something that would interest her because children will help other children. I don't think they think about, "Well, you live up here and I'm down here." I think they meet, especially when it comes to helping each other. So that's a project that I'm working on, that I'm going to take as soon as I get all the information. If that's not going on in Memphis, I'm going to take that back to that young lady in Memphis and to see what I can do if that's something that she would want to do. CALLIE CROSSLEY: So the lesson you want students or young people to take from you is, do something. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Do something. And the other thing, I don't just talk about, when I speak to young people, about what they can do. In a sense, it is what they can do. Usually you hear about our young men being placed in prisons and the downside of young men and the sagging, and what have you. I talk to the young ladies about respect. I say, "Now, first of all, you need to respect yourself. And if a young man doesn't treat you with respect, it's because you're not respecting yourself. That's what our young ladies have to do first is respect themselves. And if this young man doesn't respect you, let him go. Eventually, if he cares for you, he'll get his pants up off the ground." [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: So you got a whole program going, along with social activism. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Yes. I want to cover it all. CALLIE CROSSLEY: It's holistic in your approach.

21 PAGE 21 ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I don't want a young man in a picket line showing his underwear. [Laughter] CALLIE CROSSLEY: Okay, we got you! ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I don't want a young lady showing all of this. Because when you look at this documentary, this was our normal dress. I went to school with a shirt and tie on. The only time I didn't have a shirt and tie on was when it was band rehearsal. Then I had to put on jeans to get out on the field and learn the formation, and all that. But otherwise, it was a sport coat, a nice shirt and a tie. And that was just normal. CALLIE CROSSLEY: Okay. Bernard LaFayette, what do you want young people to take away from your example of civic engagement? BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: I want them to feel empowered. I want them to feel that they don't have to wait until they become voting age. I don't want them to have to think that they have to get grown before they can do something about the problem. So what I like to see people do -- and let's start in Massachusetts since it's one of the colonies, right? [Laughter] This'll be good. I'll come back next year and do a check and see what you've done. What I want you to do is to go to every school and organize a political structure, because each school is in a Congressional district. So let's start with the 12-year-olds to those who are 17. Let's have a junior political structure where they learn how to register to vote and they elect for themselves their representatives. They actually have a voting. Some of them have student body presidents. Well, let's expand it and make it real so they can actually present bills before their youth legislature. And then they can look at what the adults are doing there in Boston at the capital, and then they could look at those bills and decide how they want to vote on those

22 PAGE 22 bills. In fact, what they can do is actually vote on the candidates. They're ages 12 to 17, so the junior legislature and the junior voters can vote first on the candidates, so you can see what their values and their standards will be. So they have their own representatives and they can vote on new representatives and if bills come through the state legislature, they can vote on those bills while the other folks are making up their minds. And if they want to close down the government and the state legislature, the youth can vote to open it up and keep it going. So my point is if you're going to drive a car, you take driver's education. If you're going to lead the community, then they need to have practice voting and participation in government. So what we were doing, actually, in the Movement was participating in government. There were some laws and practices that we wanted to change, and so we went about, since we couldn't actually I couldn't vote, because in those days you had to be 21 unless you were in Kentucky or Texas. So we had to assert ourselves. Now, I want to make it very clear in terms of breaking the law. Civil disobedience is different from breaking the law. Civil disobedience means you respect the law to the point where you are completing the process. Each law has a rule and then if you break that rule, they have a consequence. So that's why we accepted the consequence. We didn't break the law and then run some place and try to avoid it. We accepted the punishment. We willingly went to jail. But we were breaking the law in order to change the law. So we had respect for law, but those particular ones we wanted to change that practice. So I would like to see us form youth legislatures and elections and that sort of thing in every state. Then we could bring them together in a convention and they can decide on which candidates they really want for themselves, for their legislature and then vote on the adults' legislature and the bills, and that sort of thing. Then you know what you can do? You can predict what's going to happen next because you've got that next generation. They're voting at 17 in the youth legislature, and guess what they're doing at 18?

23 PAGE 23 CALLIE CROSSLEY: All right, so I'm about to open up the floor to questions for our wonderful panelists here. Approach the microphone. Say your name, ask your question, and they'll be happy to answer. QUESTON: Good evening. As a former student, I want to thank you all for being here, and also want to say that, leaving the institution not too long ago, that we still are indoctrinated in the reverence of the spirit of the sit-ins and also the Freedom Rides. But I had a question. While I was there at Fisk, when they were telling us about the Freedom Rides and the sit-ins, they also expressed to us, some professors, the extent that race may not be our issue as though it was yours in this time. I want to find out if you agree with that. And if you disagree with that, what do you think the injustice of this time would be? There were statements made focusing on socioeconomic status rather than race will be more of our issue. Is race moot? Should we just let that go and focus on something else? GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: I'll take a shot. I don't think concentrating entirely on racial issues is too productive, because we now have some really devastating issues that have to be addressed and one is poor people and their economy. Unless poor people can work, they're out of the system. There's nothing for them. And as far as I'm concerned, there are plenty of black poor people and there's plenty of white poor people. It would be very good for them to work together, because I don't think you can win if you allow yourself as poor people to be divided and just beat up on each other and there are people around who would love that. BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: I have to respond to that because we never talked about this. Race was never a problem. What race? As the song said, the white folks were treated just like the black folks were treated. The poor whites, they didn't have anything either. In some places, they don't allow them to have unions. What's the Third World? What kind of world is that? No, no, no, this whole business of looking at color and

24 PAGE 24 ethnicity was an artificial barrier, line of demarcation to determine who was going to be poor and those who were going to be rich and those are a few people. They're not all white. So we've got to get rid of this myth. The race becomes a convenient way to determine who is going to have nothing, who's going to have need, and who's going to have greed. Nigeria? Our oil, we got oil coming in from Nigeria. How is it that the Nigerians are on the bottom and they are suffering? In the places where I've been, they don't have schools, they don't have roads. These people here are angry, that's why they've got guns and that's why they're arming themselves and shooting and kidnapping people. That has nothing to do with race. That has to do with some people manipulating other folk. The reason they didn't want black and whites to sit together, it wasn't about race; they didn't want them to start talking to each other and finding out what happened in Cullman, Alabama. They wanted to keep us separated from each other. Most of your segregation was actually horizontal, not vertical. They didn't want you to sit down together. Sitting on the bus, sitting on the plane, sitting in the park, sitting at the lunch counter folks start talking and they start finding out they've got more in common than the things they have different. So the point is, they use this race stuff as a smokescreen to exploit all of us. That's what's happening. So they put us against each other. What happened to the Chinese who were here? We know what they did to the Japanese during World War II. We know what they did to the Native Americans. So the point I'm making is, let's cut it in terms of a reality. So what happened is the same issues we were dealing with, you're dealing with them today. And that's what she's saying. So what we've got to do is really look at how we can change the distribution of the resources that we have. And the jobs she's talking about, you know where they're going if they don't have a job? Jail. They got money for jail. And

25 PAGE 25 the folks who are going to get jobs are the folks who are going to help keep folks in jail. That's what guarantees the job, isn't it? Correction officers. GENEVIEVE HUGHES HOUGHTON: We have a lot of them down where I come from. BERNARD LAFAYETTE JR.: Yeah, and lawyers. QUESTION: Thank you for your response. CALLIE CROSSLEY: This is our last question, I'm told. KENNETH HOLMES: First, I want to say thank you all very much. My name is Kenneth Holmes. I just want to say that I'm from Mississippi. I was ten years old when you guys were down there. I know Parchman very well. I know Ross Barnett very well. I knew all of those people very well. I grew up in Mississippi. But I was listening to the two answers and I actually believe that there are a lot of things that we need to address. But I would like to ask Mr. Patton, Rip over here, this question because I've heard two answers are you telling me that in America today, if two men walk into an office and both have on a suit, there are no issues between the black man and the white man who might get that job. I want to hear from someone else. I've heard sort of that. Are you saying that there's no longer an issue like that today? ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I didn't say that. KENNETH HOLMES: No, I know you didn't, I want to hear your answer to that. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: I think there's still an issue. Even not only walking into an office and trying to secure a job. If you put in an application for a home, over the

26 PAGE 26 phone or on the Internet, and you go down to the actual office, there's a possibility that that home has already been sold. And then, for example, say our cameraman goes down to that same office, he can get that home. I think that still exists. KENNETH HOLMES: Thank you very much. I thought you had more to say. I want to make sure that I did understand. I understand that very well. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: Did I? KENNETH HOLMES: Yes, you did, you did answer that. I wanted to make sure that there are a lot of issues that are there, but that issue is still very prevalent in America, and I just wanted to make sure. ERNEST "RIP" PATTON JR.: And let me add one thing. It has nothing to do with homes. I was speaking at our state university about three weeks ago, and a young lady walked up to me and she had some connections with Mississippi. I don't remember the town that was in Mississippi, but she said that a friend of hers wrote to her and there is a chicken farm in this town where blacks work at a minimal wage. Mexican Americans are moving into this town. They are firing the blacks, hiring Mexican Americans at even a lower rate of pay. I don't have a problem with Mexican Americans moving anywhere they want to move. The problem is I think that the Mexican Americans should demand equal pay, if not more. So hopefully, when we have our reunion in Chicago that will be addressed. I know that Diane Nash, C.T. Vivian, Reverend Lawson are working in some of the counties in Mississippi. And that's something that will be addressed, about wages and equal pay. So when we have our reunion, there are a lot of things that are going to happen that we're going to talk about immediately after the Oprah show.

27 PAGE 27 CALLIE CROSSLEY: So 50 years ago, 20-year-old Bernard LaFayette said he could not live his life with segregation. Twenty-eight-year-old Genevieve Houghton said, "I've never felt so good as doing this work, and it's morally correct." And 21-year-old Ernest "Rip" Patton said, "I will not be moved and I will have a commitment that will be a lifetime commitment." They are Freedom Riders. Give them a hand. [Applause] THE END

Interview with DAISY BATES. September 7, 1990

Interview with DAISY BATES. September 7, 1990 A-3+1 Interview number A-0349 in the Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007) at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC-Chapel Hill. Interview

More information

Maurice Bessinger Interview

Maurice Bessinger Interview Interview number A-0264 in the Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007) at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC-Chapel Hill. Maurice Bessinger

More information

From Chapter Ten, Charisma (pp ) Selections from The Long Haul An Autobiography. By Myles Horton with Judith Kohl & Herbert Kohl

From Chapter Ten, Charisma (pp ) Selections from The Long Haul An Autobiography. By Myles Horton with Judith Kohl & Herbert Kohl Selections from The Long Haul An Autobiography From Chapter Ten, Charisma (pp. 120-125) While some of the goals of the civil rights movement were not realized, many were. But the civil rights movement

More information

Podcast 06: Joe Gauld: Unique Potential, Destiny, and Parents

Podcast 06: Joe Gauld: Unique Potential, Destiny, and Parents Podcast 06: Unique Potential, Destiny, and Parents Hello, today's interview is with Joe Gauld, founder of the Hyde School. I've known Joe for 29 years and I'm very excited to be talking with him today.

More information

DREAM KEEPERS WORKSHOP

DREAM KEEPERS WORKSHOP Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. DREAM KEEPERS WORKSHOP Southeast District First Episcopal District CME CHURCH MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 2017 Reverend Ronald M. Powe, Ed.D. Presiding Elder Bishop Henry M.

More information

FAITHFUL ATTENDANCE. by Raymond T. Exum Crystal Lake Church of Christ, Crystal Lake, Illinois Oct. 27, 1996

FAITHFUL ATTENDANCE. by Raymond T. Exum Crystal Lake Church of Christ, Crystal Lake, Illinois Oct. 27, 1996 FAITHFUL ATTENDANCE by Raymond T. Exum Crystal Lake Church of Christ, Crystal Lake, Illinois Oct. 27, 1996 This morning I would appreciate it if you would look with me at the book of Colossians in the

More information

Pastor's Notes. Hello

Pastor's Notes. Hello Pastor's Notes Hello We're looking at the ways you need to see God's mercy in your life. There are three emotions; shame, anger, and fear. God does not want you living your life filled with shame from

More information

FILED: ONONDAGA COUNTY CLERK 09/30/ :09 PM INDEX NO. 2014EF5188 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 55 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/30/2015 OCHIBIT "0"

FILED: ONONDAGA COUNTY CLERK 09/30/ :09 PM INDEX NO. 2014EF5188 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 55 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/30/2015 OCHIBIT 0 FILED: ONONDAGA COUNTY CLERK 09/30/2015 10:09 PM INDEX NO. 2014EF5188 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 55 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/30/2015 OCHIBIT "0" TRANSCRIPT OF TAPE OF MIKE MARSTON NEW CALL @September 2007 Grady Floyd:

More information

INTERVIEWER: NOW WE RE DOING THE FIRST THING WHICH IS

INTERVIEWER: NOW WE RE DOING THE FIRST THING WHICH IS Interview with Diane Nash November 12, 1985 Chicago, Illinois Production Team: B Camera Rolls: 353-359 Sound Rolls: 1323-1325 Interview gathered as part of Eyes on the Prize: America's Civil Rights Years

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER THOMAS ORLANDO Interview Date: January 18, 2002 Transcribed by Laurie A.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER THOMAS ORLANDO Interview Date: January 18, 2002 Transcribed by Laurie A. File No. 9110473 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER THOMAS ORLANDO Interview Date: January 18, 2002 Transcribed by Laurie A. Collins T. ORLANDO 2 CHIEF CONGIUSTA: Today is January 18th,

More information

U.S. Senator John Edwards

U.S. Senator John Edwards U.S. Senator John Edwards Prince George s Community College Largo, Maryland February 20, 2004 Thank you. Thank you. Thank you all so much. Do you think we could get a few more people in this room? What

More information

INTERVIEWER: Okay, Mr. Stokes, would you like to tell me some things about you currently that's going on in your life?

INTERVIEWER: Okay, Mr. Stokes, would you like to tell me some things about you currently that's going on in your life? U-03H% INTERVIEWER: NICHOLE GIBBS INTERVIEWEE: ROOSEVELT STOKES, JR. I'm Nichole Gibbs. I'm the interviewer for preserving the Pamlico County African-American History. I'm at the Pamlico County Library

More information

+TRANSCRIPT MELVIN MARLEY. MM: The protest was organized. A guy named Blow, who was one of the guys that led

+TRANSCRIPT MELVIN MARLEY. MM: The protest was organized. A guy named Blow, who was one of the guys that led u-^oo +TRANSCRIPT MELVIN MARLEY Interviewee: MELVIN MARLEY Interviewer: Sarah McNulty Interview Date: March 8, 2008 Location: Asheboro, NC Length: 1 Tape; approximately 1.5 hours MM: The protest was organized.

More information

Transcript excerpt from : Fox News Network - September 29, 2009 Tuesday - Hannity Show (9PM EST) (Sean Hannity).

Transcript excerpt from : Fox News Network - September 29, 2009 Tuesday - Hannity Show (9PM EST) (Sean Hannity). Transcript excerpt from : Fox News Network - September 29, 2009 Tuesday - Hannity Show (9PM EST) (Sean Hannity). Conversation Former between Hannity and James Traficant (former Ohio Congressman out of

More information

INTERVIEW WITH JOSH FLEMISTER AND CHRISTINA JANUARY 17, 2001

INTERVIEW WITH JOSH FLEMISTER AND CHRISTINA JANUARY 17, 2001 INTERVIEW WITH JOSH FLEMISTER AND CHRISTINA JANUARY 17, 2001 BILL: Josh, I appreciate you coming in. I know we talked the other night and I was gonna try and get with you the other night.... JOSH: Yeah,

More information

Sid: My guest says when the hidden roots of disease are supernaturally revealed, the ones that no one is looking for, healing is easy.

Sid: My guest says when the hidden roots of disease are supernaturally revealed, the ones that no one is looking for, healing is easy. 1 Sid: My guest says when the hidden roots of disease are supernaturally revealed, the ones that no one is looking for, healing is easy. Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know?

More information

is Jack Bass. The transcriber is Susan Hathaway. Ws- Sy'i/ts

is Jack Bass. The transcriber is Susan Hathaway. Ws- Sy'i/ts Interview number A-0165 in the Southern Oral History Program Collection (#4007) at The Southern Historical Collection, The Louis Round Wilson Special Collections Library, UNC-Chapel Hill. This is an interview

More information

Oral History Interview with John Seigenthaler By Mary Morin

Oral History Interview with John Seigenthaler By Mary Morin 1 Oral History Interview with John Seigenthaler By Mary Morin MORIN: Interviewing John Seigenthaler for the Civil Rights and the Press Symposium. First question: Why do you think the Civil Rights Movement

More information

Project ZION Podcast: Extra Shot Episode 24 Tom Morain

Project ZION Podcast: Extra Shot Episode 24 Tom Morain Project ZION Podcast: Extra Shot Episode 24 Tom Morain Hello, my name is Tom Morain, and for the purposes of this little recording, I think I would like to describe myself as a recovering seeker. I was

More information

Rev Dr. Sampson's statement is in italics below. It is followed by the Roundtable interview.

Rev Dr. Sampson's statement is in italics below. It is followed by the Roundtable interview. Rev. Dr. Albert Sampson, Pastor of Fernwood United Methodist Church Rev. Dr. Albert Sampson is the senior pastor of Fernwood United Methodist Church and presiding elder of the United Methodist South End

More information

>> THE NEXT CASE IS STATE OF FLORIDA VERSUS FLOYD. >> TAKE YOUR TIME. TAKE YOUR TIME. >> THANK YOU, YOUR HONOR. >> WHENEVER YOU'RE READY.

>> THE NEXT CASE IS STATE OF FLORIDA VERSUS FLOYD. >> TAKE YOUR TIME. TAKE YOUR TIME. >> THANK YOU, YOUR HONOR. >> WHENEVER YOU'RE READY. >> THE NEXT CASE IS STATE OF FLORIDA VERSUS FLOYD. >> TAKE YOUR TIME. TAKE YOUR TIME. >> THANK YOU, YOUR HONOR. >> WHENEVER YOU'RE READY. >> GOOD MORNING. MAY IT PLEASE THE COURT, ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT GREGG HADALA. Interview Date: October 19, Transcribed by Elisabeth F.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT GREGG HADALA. Interview Date: October 19, Transcribed by Elisabeth F. File No. 9110119 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW LIEUTENANT GREGG HADALA Interview Date: October 19, 2001 Transcribed by Elisabeth F. Nason 2 MR. RADENBERG: Today is October 19, 2001. The time

More information

CHARLES ARES (part 2)

CHARLES ARES (part 2) An Oral History Interview with CHARLES ARES (part 2) Tucson, Arizona conducted by Julie Ferdon June 9, 1998 The Morris K. Udall Oral History Project Univeristy of Arizona Library, Special Collections 8

More information

AN ORAL HISTORY. with WALTER COOK

AN ORAL HISTORY. with WALTER COOK AN ORAL HISTORY with WALTER COOK This is an interview for the Mississippi Oral History Program ofthe University of Southern Mississippi. The interview is with Walter Cook and is taking place on June 10,

More information

TwiceAround Podcast Episode 7: What Are Our Biases Costing Us? Transcript

TwiceAround Podcast Episode 7: What Are Our Biases Costing Us? Transcript TwiceAround Podcast Episode 7: What Are Our Biases Costing Us? Transcript Speaker 1: Speaker 2: Speaker 3: Speaker 4: [00:00:30] Speaker 5: Speaker 6: Speaker 7: Speaker 8: When I hear the word "bias,"

More information

NANCY GREEN: As a Ute, youʼve participated in the Bear Dance, youʼve danced. What is the Bear Dance?

NANCY GREEN: As a Ute, youʼve participated in the Bear Dance, youʼve danced. What is the Bear Dance? INTERVIEW WITH MARIAH CUCH, EDITOR, UTE BULLETIN NANCY GREEN: As a Ute, youʼve participated in the Bear Dance, youʼve danced. What is the Bear Dance? MARIAH CUCH: Well, the basis of the Bear Dance is a

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT DAVID TIMOTHY. Interview Date: October 25, Transcribed by Laurie A.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT DAVID TIMOTHY. Interview Date: October 25, Transcribed by Laurie A. File No. 9110156 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT DAVID TIMOTHY Interview Date: October 25, 2001 Transcribed by Laurie A. Collins D. TIMOTHY 2 MR. RADENBERG: Today is October 25th, 2001. I'm

More information

Vicki Zito Mother of Trafficking Victim

Vicki Zito Mother of Trafficking Victim Vicki Zito Mother of Trafficking Victim Alright, just to get a quick check on a pulse of the room, how many of you are here because you have to be? Honesty is absolutely expected. Okay, that's cool. How

More information

The Story / Grace Gone Viral Chapter 28: "New Beginnings" April 12, 2015

The Story / Grace Gone Viral Chapter 28: New Beginnings April 12, 2015 The Story / Grace Gone Viral Chapter 28: "New Beginnings" April 12, 2015 Sometimes people just change. And sometimes the change happens so fast. Less than two months ago Jesus' disciples were kind of wusses.

More information

We'll be right back to It's Supernatural.

We'll be right back to It's Supernatural. On It's Supernatural: Julie True is releasing the sounds of heaven through the music that God gives her. When people hear Julie's music, they experience peace and rest. The supernatural becomes normal,

More information

OPEN NINTH: CONVERSATIONS BEYOND THE COURTROOM WOMEN IN ROBES EPISODE 21 APRIL 24, 2017 HOSTED BY: FREDERICK J. LAUTEN

OPEN NINTH: CONVERSATIONS BEYOND THE COURTROOM WOMEN IN ROBES EPISODE 21 APRIL 24, 2017 HOSTED BY: FREDERICK J. LAUTEN 0 OPEN NINTH: CONVERSATIONS BEYOND THE COURTROOM WOMEN IN ROBES EPISODE APRIL, HOSTED BY: FREDERICK J. LAUTEN 0 (Music.) >> Welcome to another episode of "Open Ninth: Conversations Beyond the Courtroom"

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW CAPTAIN CHARLES CLARKE. Interview Date: December 6, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW CAPTAIN CHARLES CLARKE. Interview Date: December 6, Transcribed by Nancy Francis File No. 9110250 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW CAPTAIN CHARLES CLARKE Interview Date: December 6, 2001 Transcribed by Nancy Francis 2 BATTALION CHIEF KING: Today's date is December 6, 2001. The

More information

Life Change: Where to Go When Change is Needed Mark 5:21-24, 35-42

Life Change: Where to Go When Change is Needed Mark 5:21-24, 35-42 Life Change: Where to Go When Change is Needed Mark 5:21-24, 35-42 To most people, change is a dirty word. There's just something about 'changing' that doesn't sound appealing to us. Most of the time,

More information

Special Messages of 2017 You Won t to Believe What Happened at Work Last Night! Edited Transcript

Special Messages of 2017 You Won t to Believe What Happened at Work Last Night! Edited Transcript Special Messages of 2017 You Won t to Believe What Happened at Work Last Night! Edited Transcript Brett Clemmer Well, here's our topic for today for this Christmas season. We're going to talk about the

More information

The Gift of the Holy Spirit. 1 Thessalonians 5:23. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill

The Gift of the Holy Spirit. 1 Thessalonians 5:23. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill The Gift of the Holy Spirit 1 Thessalonians 5:23 Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill We've been discussing, loved ones, the question the past few weeks: Why are we alive? The real problem, in trying

More information

Bridging the Divide. One night tested the commitment of two churches - one black, one white to pierce racial barriers

Bridging the Divide. One night tested the commitment of two churches - one black, one white to pierce racial barriers Bridging the Divide One night tested the commitment of two churches - one black, one white to pierce racial barriers By Jennifer Garza December 24, 2006 The Sacramento Bee (www.sacbee.com), reprinted with

More information

MORNING STORIES TRANSCRIPT

MORNING STORIES TRANSCRIPT MORNING STORIES TRANSCRIPT My Friend is Still Not Well: The day Martin Luther King Jr. was shot, Professor Felton Earls was in a soundproof science lab, experimenting on a cat's brain. He tells how the

More information

Twice Around Podcast Episode #2 Is the American Dream Dead? Transcript

Twice Around Podcast Episode #2 Is the American Dream Dead? Transcript Twice Around Podcast Episode #2 Is the American Dream Dead? Transcript Female: [00:00:30] Female: I'd say definitely freedom. To me, that's the American Dream. I don't know. I mean, I never really wanted

More information

Page 1 of 6. Policy 360 Episode 76 Sari Kaufman - Transcript

Page 1 of 6. Policy 360 Episode 76 Sari Kaufman - Transcript Policy 360 Episode 76 Sari Kaufman - Transcript Hello and welcome to Policy 360. I'm your host this time, Gunther Peck. I'm a faculty member at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University, and

More information

SID: So we can say this man was as hopeless as your situation, more hopeless than your situation.

SID: So we can say this man was as hopeless as your situation, more hopeless than your situation. 1 Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know? Is there life after death? Do angels exist? Can our dreams contain messages from Heaven? Can we tap into ancient secrets of the supernatural?

More information

Hi Ellie. Thank you so much for joining us today. Absolutely. I'm thrilled to be here. Thanks for having me.

Hi Ellie. Thank you so much for joining us today. Absolutely. I'm thrilled to be here. Thanks for having me. Thanks for tuning in to the Newborn Promise podcast. A production of Graham Blanchard Incorporated. You are listening to an interview with Ellie Holcomb, called "A Conversation on Music and Motherhood."

More information

plan and notify the lawyers, the store owners were able to sue them. Two or Three people went out of business so they sued.

plan and notify the lawyers, the store owners were able to sue them. Two or Three people went out of business so they sued. Gr-y^ft Tape Log Interviewer: Will Jones Tape#: 3.5.95-W.W.I Interviewee: Willie Mae Winfield Mono X Stereo: No. of Sides: 2 No. of Tapes: 1 Interview Date: 3/5/95 Location: At home of Mrs. Winfield in

More information

Skits. Come On, Fatima! Six Vignettes about Refugees and Sponsors

Skits. Come On, Fatima! Six Vignettes about Refugees and Sponsors Skits Come On, Fatima! Six Vignettes about Refugees and Sponsors These vignettes are based on a United Church handout which outlined a number of different uncomfortable interactions that refugees (anonymously)

More information

And if you don't mind, could you please tell us where you were born?

And if you don't mind, could you please tell us where you were born? Ann Avery MP3 Page 1 of 10 [0:00:00] Today is June 16 th. On behalf of Crossroads to Freedom, Rhodes College, and Team for Success, we'd like to thank you for agreeing to speak with us today. I am Cedrick

More information

Jesus Unfiltered Session 6: Jesus Knows You

Jesus Unfiltered Session 6: Jesus Knows You Jesus Unfiltered Session 6: Jesus Knows You Unedited Transcript Brett Clemmer All right, well, good morning. We are here, it's the Man in the Mirror Bible study. We're in our Jesus Unfiltered series. And

More information

One Couple s Healing Story

One Couple s Healing Story Tim Tedder, LMHC, NCC Recorded April 10, 2016 AffairHealing.com/podcast A year and a half ago, Tim found out that his wife, Lori, was involved in an affair. That started their journey toward recovery,

More information

BRIAN: No. I'm not, at all. I'm just a skinny man trapped in a fat man's body trying to follow Jesus. If I'm going to be honest.

BRIAN: No. I'm not, at all. I'm just a skinny man trapped in a fat man's body trying to follow Jesus. If I'm going to be honest. Hello, Sid Roth here. Welcome to my world, where it's naturally supernatural. My guest prayed for a woman with no left kidney and the right one working only 2%. Doctor's verified she now has brand new

More information

A Mind Under Government Wayne Matthews Nov. 11, 2017

A Mind Under Government Wayne Matthews Nov. 11, 2017 A Mind Under Government Wayne Matthews Nov. 11, 2017 We can see that the Thunders are picking up around the world, and it's coming to the conclusion that the world is not ready for what is coming, really,

More information

2007, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.

2007, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. 2007, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. PLEASE CREDIT ANY QUOTES OR EXCERPTS FROM THIS CBS TELEVISION PROGRAM TO "CBS NEWS' FACE THE NATION." CBS News FACE THE NATION Sunday, October 21, 2007

More information

Pastor's Notes. Hello

Pastor's Notes. Hello Pastor's Notes Hello We're going to look at an aspect of mercy that promises to bring freedom to every corner of your life. It's the truth that mercy forgives. God's mercy brings forgiveness into your

More information

STATE OF NEVADA OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RENO, NEVADA TRANSCRIPT OF ELECTRONICALLY-RECORDED INTERVIEW JOHN MAYER AUGUST 4, 2014 RENO, NEVADA

STATE OF NEVADA OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RENO, NEVADA TRANSCRIPT OF ELECTRONICALLY-RECORDED INTERVIEW JOHN MAYER AUGUST 4, 2014 RENO, NEVADA STATE OF NEVADA OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL RENO, NEVADA TRANSCRIPT OF ELECTRONICALLY-RECORDED INTERVIEW JOHN MAYER AUGUST, RENO, NEVADA Transcribed and proofread by: CAPITOL REPORTERS BY: Michel Loomis

More information

Ethan: There's a couple of other instances like the huge raft for logs going down river...

Ethan: There's a couple of other instances like the huge raft for logs going down river... Analyzing Complex Text Video Transcript The river doesn't only, like, symbolize, like, freedom for Huck, but it also symbolizes freedom for Jim as well. So and he's also trying to help Jim, as you can

More information

>> Marian Small: I was talking to a grade one teacher yesterday, and she was telling me

>> Marian Small: I was talking to a grade one teacher yesterday, and she was telling me Marian Small transcripts Leadership Matters >> Marian Small: I've been asked by lots of leaders of boards, I've asked by teachers, you know, "What's the most effective thing to help us? Is it -- you know,

More information

Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs

Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs 2018 NCAA Men s Lacrosse Championship Monday, May 28 2018 Boston, Massachusetts Andy Shay Jack Starr Matt Gaudet Ben Reeves Yale Bulldogs Yale - 13, Duke - 11 THE MODERATOR: We have Yale head coach Andy

More information

Interview with Charles Sherrod

Interview with Charles Sherrod Washington University Digital Gateway Texts home Home Search Browse Bookbag Help Interview with Charles Sherrod Table of contents Add to bookbag Interview with Charles Sherrod Production Team: C Interview

More information

HALLELUJAH. Words and Music by Bob Stanhope

HALLELUJAH. Words and Music by Bob Stanhope HALLELUJAH First it wasn't and then it was. And the reason was just because. He spoke the word it all came to be Our response to what we see (should be) Hallelu, Hallelujah The way the world hangs in space

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER ROBERT HUMPHREY. Interview Date: December 13, 2001

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER ROBERT HUMPHREY. Interview Date: December 13, 2001 File No. 9110337 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER ROBERT HUMPHREY Interview Date: December 13, 2001 Transcribed by Maureen McCormick 2 BATTALION CHIEF KEMLY: The date is December 13,

More information

A Broken Spirit Wayne Matthews March 10, Welcome, everybody, to this seventh day Sabbath.

A Broken Spirit Wayne Matthews March 10, Welcome, everybody, to this seventh day Sabbath. A Broken Spirit Wayne Matthews March 10, 2018 Welcome, everybody, to this seventh day Sabbath. When the world talks about a broken heart it is mostly talking about a human condition, a human reasoning

More information

"The terrible thing about labor, many times the history dies with its membership": Interview with Edward Lindsey, May 27, 1989

The terrible thing about labor, many times the history dies with its membership: Interview with Edward Lindsey, May 27, 1989 "The terrible thing about labor, many times the history dies with its membership": Interview with Edward Lindsey, May 27, 1989 A new generation of black workers came into the Firestone plant during its

More information

Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Amen.

Grace and peace to you from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Amen. God s Love Leads Us to Love One Another Sermon Series: Focus: See Clearly Why We re Here Korey Van Kampen Mt. Calvary Lutheran Church (WELS) Flagstaff, AZ September 23, 2018 Grace and peace to you from

More information

DUSTIN: No, I didn't. My discerning spirit kicked in and I thought this is the work of the devil.

DUSTIN: No, I didn't. My discerning spirit kicked in and I thought this is the work of the devil. 1 Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know? Is there life after death? Do angels exist? Can our dreams contain messages from Heaven? Can we tap into ancient secrets of the supernatural?

More information

SUND: We found the getaway car just 30 minutes after the crime took place, a silver Audi A8,

SUND: We found the getaway car just 30 minutes after the crime took place, a silver Audi A8, Forensic psychology Week 4 DS Sund: witness interviews Lila We found the getaway car just 30 minutes after the crime took place, a silver Audi A8, number plate November-Golf-5-8, Victor-X-ray-Whiskey.

More information

Does God really answer prayer?

Does God really answer prayer? Does God really answer prayer? By the Rev. Lillian Daniel General Synod, July 14, 2003 Minneapolis, Minn. This sermon today is for the real world, for those 95 percent of us who struggle with what it means

More information

Ramsey media interview - May 1, 1997

Ramsey media interview - May 1, 1997 Ramsey media interview - May 1, 1997 JOHN RAMSEY: We are pleased to be here this morning. You've been anxious to meet us for some time, and I can tell you why it's taken us so long. We felt there was really

More information

INTERVIEW OF: TIMOTHY DAVIS

INTERVIEW OF: TIMOTHY DAVIS INTERVIEW OF: TIMOTHY DAVIS DATE TAKEN: MARCH, TIME: : A.M. - : A.M. PLACE: HOMEWOOD SUITES BY HILTON BILL FRANCE BOULEVARD DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA APPEARANCES: JONATHAN KANEY, ESQUIRE Kaney & Olivari,

More information

Barack Obama: Victory Speech, November 2012

Barack Obama: Victory Speech, November 2012 Barack Obama: Victory Speech, November 2012 US President Barack Obama addresses his supporters after defeating Mitt Romney and winning a second term as president. The transcript can be downloaded from

More information

GOD BEFORE GOODIES BIBLE STUDY & WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE BLESSED BEYOND WORDS DAY SIXTEEN

GOD BEFORE GOODIES BIBLE STUDY & WEIGHT LOSS CHALLENGE BLESSED BEYOND WORDS DAY SIXTEEN DAY SIXTEEN Daily Bible Reading: Jeremiah 29:11-13 - "For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end. Then shall ye call

More information

Guest Speaker Pastor Dan Hicks December 27 & 28, 2014 Pastor Tim Wimberly, Pastor Dan Hicks

Guest Speaker Pastor Dan Hicks December 27 & 28, 2014 Pastor Tim Wimberly, Pastor Dan Hicks Pastor Tim Wimberly: I'm just thrilled to introduce to you the gentleman that's going to come. Tremendous gift, tremendous friend; a consistent speaker, has been to Living Water multiple times over the

More information

How Skeptics and Believers Can Connect

How Skeptics and Believers Can Connect How Skeptics and Believers Can Connect A Dialogue Sermon between Dean Scotty McLennan and Professor Tanya Luhrmann University Public Worship Stanford Memorial Church April 28, 2013 Dean Scotty McLennan:

More information

The Sheep and the Goats The Future: Don't Miss the Signs >> God, we look forward to that day when we can see You face to face. Thank You for t

The Sheep and the Goats The Future: Don't Miss the Signs >> God, we look forward to that day when we can see You face to face. Thank You for t The Sheep and the Goats The Future: Don't Miss the Signs 7.12.15 >> God, we look forward to that day when we can see You face to face. Thank You for this privilege to be Your sons and daughters. And this

More information

You have the guests, those lucky people who friends invite who are maybe watching for the first time, curious to see what all the hoopla is about.

You have the guests, those lucky people who friends invite who are maybe watching for the first time, curious to see what all the hoopla is about. March 24, 2013 Palm Sunday Matthew 21:1-17 Hosanna! (First read just Mt. 21:1-11) I don't know what a typical Thursday is like for you all, but for me, Thursdays are typically sermon-writing days. There

More information

RYAN: That's right. RYAN: That's right. SID: What did you do?

RYAN: That's right. RYAN: That's right. SID: What did you do? 1 Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know? Is there life after death? Do angels exist? Can our dreams contain messages from Heaven? Can we tap into ancient secrets of the supernatural?

More information

1 Grace Hampton African American Chronicles. Growing up in a Melting Pot

1 Grace Hampton African American Chronicles. Growing up in a Melting Pot 1 GraceHampton AfricanAmericanChronicles Growing up in a Melting Pot I grew up in the inner-city in Chicago and what we call inner-city was referred to some years ago as a ghetto. And I grew up in a very

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW PARAMEDIC ROBERT RUIZ. Interview Date: December 14, Transcribed by Laurie A.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW PARAMEDIC ROBERT RUIZ. Interview Date: December 14, Transcribed by Laurie A. File No. 9110333 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW PARAMEDIC ROBERT RUIZ Interview Date: December 14, 2001 Transcribed by Laurie A. Collins R. RUIZ 2 MR. CUNDARI: Today's date is December 14th, 2001.

More information

Pursuit of Joy Week 2 August 16 th, 2015 Pastor Jon Cobler

Pursuit of Joy Week 2 August 16 th, 2015 Pastor Jon Cobler Oh, how was did you wasn't that great? That was so awesome. I mean I could hear incredible musicians, and expensive instruments. That was so good. Let's do it again. Come on, play it again for us so we

More information

Wise, Foolish, Evil Person John Ortberg & Dr. Henry Cloud

Wise, Foolish, Evil Person John Ortberg & Dr. Henry Cloud Menlo Church 950 Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park, CA 94025 650-323-8600 Series: This Is Us May 7, 2017 Wise, Foolish, Evil Person John Ortberg & Dr. Henry Cloud John Ortberg: I want to say hi to everybody

More information

WITH CYNTHIA PASQUELLA TRANSCRIPT BO EASON CONNECTION: HOW YOUR STORY OF STRUGGLE CAN SET YOU FREE

WITH CYNTHIA PASQUELLA TRANSCRIPT BO EASON CONNECTION: HOW YOUR STORY OF STRUGGLE CAN SET YOU FREE TRANSCRIPT BO EASON CONNECTION: HOW YOUR STORY OF STRUGGLE CAN SET YOU FREE INTRODUCTION Each one of us has a personal story of overcoming struggle. Each one of us has been to hell and back in our own

More information

Bronia and the Bowls of Soup

Bronia and the Bowls of Soup Bronia and the Bowls of Soup Aaron Zerah Page 1 of 10 Bronia and the Bowls of Soup by Aaron Zerah More of Aaron's books can be found at his website: http://www.atozspirit.com/ Published by Free Kids Books

More information

Contact for further information about this collection

Contact for further information about this collection 1 (beep) (Interview with Eta Hecht, Wentworth Films, Kovno Ghetto project, 5-5-97, sound roll 11 continued, camera roll 22 at the head. Eta Hecht spelled E-T-A H-E-C-H- T) (Speed, roll 22, marker 1) SB:

More information

G--\5g. INTERVIEWEE: Cynthia R. Crossen MONO (X) STEREO NO. OF SIDES: 2 NO. OF TAPES: 1 of 1 INTERVIEW DATE: 3/15/95

G--\5g. INTERVIEWEE: Cynthia R. Crossen MONO (X) STEREO NO. OF SIDES: 2 NO. OF TAPES: 1 of 1 INTERVIEW DATE: 3/15/95 INTERVIEWER: Kelly M. Pattison G--\5g TAPE NO.: 3.15.95 -CC INTERVIEWEE: Cynthia R. Crossen MONO (X) STEREO NO. OF SIDES: 2 NO. OF TAPES: 1 of 1 INTERVIEW DATE: 3/15/95 LOCATION: The deck of Cynthia Crossen's

More information

SID: You know Cindy, you're known as an intercessor. But what exactly is an intercessor?

SID: You know Cindy, you're known as an intercessor. But what exactly is an intercessor? 1 SID: Hello. Sid Roth here. Welcome to my world where it's naturally supernatural. My guest says this is your year to possess the gates of your future and she wants you to take it! Is there a supernatural

More information

SID: How would you like God to tell you that, "I can't use you yet." And then two weeks later, God spoke to you again.

SID: How would you like God to tell you that, I can't use you yet. And then two weeks later, God spoke to you again. 1 Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know? Is there life after death? Do angels exist? Can our dreams contain messages from Heaven? Can we tap into ancient secrets of the supernatural?

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT PATRICK RICHIUSA. Interview Date: December 13, Transcribed by Nancy Francis

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT PATRICK RICHIUSA. Interview Date: December 13, Transcribed by Nancy Francis File No. 9110305 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW EMT PATRICK RICHIUSA Interview Date: December 13, 2001 Transcribed by Nancy Francis 2 LIEUTENANT McCOURT: The date is December 13, 2001. The time

More information

you get convicted of a crime and that means you are found guilty of having committed that crime.

you get convicted of a crime and that means you are found guilty of having committed that crime. The Book of Acts: A Spirit-Fueled Adventure! Two Portraits of Conviction Sermon on selected verses of Acts 8:4-40 (6/18 & 6/19/16) Pastor Jenny Hallenbeck Orr As I've already said, it's good to be back

More information

Remarks on Trayvon Martin. delivered 19 July 2013

Remarks on Trayvon Martin. delivered 19 July 2013 Barack Obama Remarks on Trayvon Martin delivered 19 July 2013 AUTHENTICITY CERTIFIED: Text version below transcribed directly from audio Well, I - I wanted to come out here, first of all, to tell you that

More information

Ep #130: Lessons from Jack Canfield. Full Episode Transcript. With Your Host. Brooke Castillo. The Life Coach School Podcast with Brooke Castillo

Ep #130: Lessons from Jack Canfield. Full Episode Transcript. With Your Host. Brooke Castillo. The Life Coach School Podcast with Brooke Castillo Ep #130: Lessons from Jack Canfield Full Episode Transcript With Your Host Brooke Castillo Welcome to the Life Coach School Podcast, where it's all about real clients, real problems, and real coaching.

More information

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER JOHN WILSON. Interview Date: December 20, Transcribed by Laurie A.

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER JOHN WILSON. Interview Date: December 20, Transcribed by Laurie A. File No. 9110376 WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FIREFIGHTER JOHN WILSON Interview Date: December 20, 2001 Transcribed by Laurie A. Collins J. WILSON 2 CHIEF KENAHAN: Today is December 20th, 2001.

More information

DAVE: He said, "I want you to pray for your patients. I'm going to show you what's wrong with them. And if you pray for them I'll heal them.

DAVE: He said, I want you to pray for your patients. I'm going to show you what's wrong with them. And if you pray for them I'll heal them. 1 SID: Hello. Sid Roth here. Welcome to my world where it's naturally supernatural. My guest the Praying Medic says if you will do these two things consistently, you will have a steady flow consistently

More information

Pastor's Notes. Hello

Pastor's Notes. Hello Pastor's Notes Hello We're focusing on how we fail in life and the importance of God's mercy in the light of our failures. So we need to understand that all human beings have failures. We like to think,

More information

Sid Sid: Jim: Sid: Jim: Sid: Jim:

Sid Sid: Jim: Sid: Jim: Sid: Jim: 1 Sid: As a new Jewish believer, I met Katherine Kuhlman. She had more miracles than anyone I had ever seen. But she had a secret. It was her relationship with the Holy Spirit. My next guest has the same

More information

Ain't Scared of Your Jails ( ) NARRATOR: February 1st, In Greensboro, North Carolina, four black college students sat down at a lunch

Ain't Scared of Your Jails ( ) NARRATOR: February 1st, In Greensboro, North Carolina, four black college students sat down at a lunch Ain't Scared of Your Jails (1960-1961) NARRATOR: February 1st, 1960. In Greensboro, North Carolina, four black college students sat down at a lunch counter reserved for whites and refused to leave. This

More information

Action News 5 s Justin Hanson interviewed Mary Mayes in prison on November 9, These are his logs from that interview:

Action News 5 s Justin Hanson interviewed Mary Mayes in prison on November 9, These are his logs from that interview: Action News 5 s Justin Hanson interviewed Mary Mayes in prison on November 9, 2013. These are his logs from that interview: MARY FRANCES MAYES: SPENT 50TH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY IN JAIL IN HARDEMAN COUNTY

More information

Uh huh, I see. What was it like living in Granby as a child? Was it very different from living in other Vermont communities?

Uh huh, I see. What was it like living in Granby as a child? Was it very different from living in other Vermont communities? August 7, 1987 Mary Kasamatsu Interviewer This is the 7th of August. This is an interview for Green Mountain Chronicles ~nd I'm in Lunenberg with Mr. Rodney Noble. And this; ~ a way...;~. work ing into

More information

I said to the Lord that I don't know how to preach, I don't even know you, he said I will teach you. Sid: do you remember the first person you prayed

I said to the Lord that I don't know how to preach, I don't even know you, he said I will teach you. Sid: do you remember the first person you prayed On "It's Supernatural," when Loretta was thirteen years old Jesus walked into her bedroom and gave her the gift of miracles. As an adult Loretta had a double heart attack in her doctor's office, she died

More information

Why We Shouldn't Worry. Romans 8:28. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill

Why We Shouldn't Worry. Romans 8:28. Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill Why We Shouldn't Worry Romans 8:28 Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O'Neill Probably anybody could give the introduction to this sermon. We're talking about what Jesus' death achieved for us in this present

More information

NATIONAL COMMUNITY CHURCH July 15, 2018 Crossing Culture Won t You Be My Neighbor Marion Mason

NATIONAL COMMUNITY CHURCH July 15, 2018 Crossing Culture Won t You Be My Neighbor Marion Mason NATIONAL COMMUNITY CHURCH July 15, 2018 Crossing Culture Won t You Be My Neighbor Marion Mason Welcome again to National Community Church and welcome to all of our campuses and those that are on podcast

More information

Solomon s Twelve Secrets Session 12: It All Comes Down to This Edited Transcript

Solomon s Twelve Secrets Session 12: It All Comes Down to This Edited Transcript Solomon s Twelve Secrets Session 12: It All Comes Down to This Edited Transcript Brett Clemmer Good morning. This is great. I am so happy that we're here. Are you guys happy that we're here? Yeah. Me,

More information

Feeling Great About Life Guilt Psalm 51 Pastor Ryan Heller

Feeling Great About Life Guilt Psalm 51 Pastor Ryan Heller 1. ACKNOWLEDGE GOD S CHARACTER Feeling Great About Life Guilt Psalm 51 Pastor Ryan Heller Have mercy on me, O God, according to your unfailing love; according to your great compassion blot out my transgressions.

More information

REMARKS MICHAEL BLAKE DEPUTY ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR WHITE HOUSE OFFICE OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AT THE

REMARKS MICHAEL BLAKE DEPUTY ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR WHITE HOUSE OFFICE OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AT THE REMARKS OF MICHAEL BLAKE DEPUTY ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR WHITE HOUSE OFFICE OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL AFFAIRS AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT AT THE AFSCME NEXT WAVE CONFERENCE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS SUNDAY, JUNE 21, 2009 1 P R

More information

[music] SID: What does a 14-year-old think about words like that?

[music] SID: What does a 14-year-old think about words like that? 1 Is there a supernatural dimension, a world beyond the one we know? Is there life after death? Do angels exist? Can our dreams contain messages from Heaven? Can we tap into ancient secrets of the supernatural?

More information