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Mar 23, 2024
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[applause] >> key the economic growth in virginia is the fact that virginia's power demand is growing at a rate 5 times that of our neighbors. the simple fact is that if we don't build capacity right now, virginia will not grow. invasion and base load power are key and are all the above, all american plan embraces everything. america's largest offshore wind development project, solar, hydrogen, nuclear, carbon capture and natural gas. this is an issue that we cannot turn away from, so let's work together to keep costs down and keep the lights on. [applause] >> virginians are in charge of our destiny, no one else and that means we also put power where it belongs with the people. we must reject the current misguided law that the allows california to dictate our vehicle laws. [applause] >> not only does it defy common sense, virginians should decide for virginians and with this misguided law in place the regulator process is starting this year meaning more and more virginians will see higher costs and fewer choices. the fastest way to fix this is for virginia's general assembly allowing
[applause] >> key the economic growth in virginia is the fact that virginia's power demand is growing at a rate 5 times that of our neighbors. the simple fact is that if we don't build capacity right now, virginia will not grow. invasion and base load power are key and are all the above, all american plan embraces everything. america's largest offshore wind development project, solar, hydrogen, nuclear, carbon capture and natural gas. this is an issue that we cannot turn away from, so...
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Mar 20, 2024
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our families, our freedoms, we stood tall and west virginia and west virginia strong we were through covid, fires, floods, and storms. the world to sing that west virginia grit that we have got. now i'm going to lay aside what we have done. because my dad will say to me over and over and over, at one time believe it or not i was skinny and had brown hair i was a hottie toddy golfer. i went our state junior abbot are a couple times but all over the place playing in tournament after tournament was sams' made, it. he actually thought i was a pretty good player. with all of that being said, my dad said to me 1000, 1000 times son, the only shot in golf that matters is the next shot. your last shot went dead in the middle of the swamp, what can you do about it? if the last shot was a hole in one, what does it matter? the only shot in life and many situations is the next shot. and so with that being said i would say to you, we are a long way summing done and west virginia. we have got jobs to create, schools to enhance and schools to lift. let's make this laster that i have in the decades t
our families, our freedoms, we stood tall and west virginia and west virginia strong we were through covid, fires, floods, and storms. the world to sing that west virginia grit that we have got. now i'm going to lay aside what we have done. because my dad will say to me over and over and over, at one time believe it or not i was skinny and had brown hair i was a hottie toddy golfer. i went our state junior abbot are a couple times but all over the place playing in tournament after tournament...
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Mar 19, 2024
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why did they pick rather west virginia? i will tell you why they picked west virginia. they picked west virginia because there is no personal income tax on their pensions. there is absolutely because they see us on a pathway to irrat making more and more moves, they chose us. they could have gone anywhere. absolutely as they have this message through all of the grapevines, it brings more and more super qualified people to us. our veterans, wherever you, please stand. [ applause ] are,less stand. are,less [applause] >> i'm going i am going to stick with the veterans. i am going to go quickly. i am going to stick with the veterans for a minute. i am announcing a bill tonight that i am -- i am sorry, to give all of our veterans -- nobody is going to pay out of state tuition. we are going to pay in-state tuition in the state of west virginia, in addition to that, two more initiatives, i want to spend $5 million to super charge the ascend program in west virginia and $2.5 million from a joint initiative recruitment of our big bases all across the land to bring more veterans
why did they pick rather west virginia? i will tell you why they picked west virginia. they picked west virginia because there is no personal income tax on their pensions. there is absolutely because they see us on a pathway to irrat making more and more moves, they chose us. they could have gone anywhere. absolutely as they have this message through all of the grapevines, it brings more and more super qualified people to us. our veterans, wherever you, please stand. [ applause ] are,less...
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Mar 19, 2024
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i did they pick, rather, west virginia? i will tell you why they picked west virginia. they picked west virginia because there's no personal income tax on pensions, there's absolutely a pathway to eradicating the income tax on them. we have made a big move at 21 1/4. we need to continue to make more and more and more moves. and they chose us. they could've gone anywhere. absolutely, as they propagate this message to all the great finds, it brings more and more super qualified people to us, our veterans. jamie and --, wherever you are, please stand. i'm going to stick with the veterans and go quickly. i'm going to stick with the veterans here in a minute. for a minute. i am announcing a bill tonight, to give free -- i'm sorry, to give all of our veterans, nobody is going to pay out-of- state tuition. we are going to pay in-state tuition in the state of west virginia. in addition to that, two more initiatives. i want to spend $5 million to supercharge the ascend program in west virginia. and $2.5 million for the joint initiative recruitment of our big bases all across the
i did they pick, rather, west virginia? i will tell you why they picked west virginia. they picked west virginia because there's no personal income tax on pensions, there's absolutely a pathway to eradicating the income tax on them. we have made a big move at 21 1/4. we need to continue to make more and more and more moves. and they chose us. they could've gone anywhere. absolutely, as they propagate this message to all the great finds, it brings more and more super qualified people to us, our...
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Mar 30, 2024
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northern new york, new england and virginia. and he made it much to virginia his advantage, even at that time of the year because. he arrived in northern new york, new england in late may, early june. and he he that the summer in northern new york state, new england was not only hot but quote as hot as could be find and count as could be found in carolina or georgia. i, i suspect, indeed, that heat of northern climates may be more powerful than. those of southern ones in proportion, as they shorter there is as much fever, other bilious complaints on lake champlain as on the swamps of carolina find nothing. nothing anywhere else in point of climate which virginia need envy to any part the world. and i didn't quite feel that yesterday when i got off the plane, it was not quite what was was going on. and jeff well we know what was going on in jefferson's head. of course i do i do have remark that i have some summer neighborhood neighbors and east boothbay, maine, who live a good part the year in virginia not too far from here. but
northern new york, new england and virginia. and he made it much to virginia his advantage, even at that time of the year because. he arrived in northern new york, new england in late may, early june. and he he that the summer in northern new york state, new england was not only hot but quote as hot as could be find and count as could be found in carolina or georgia. i, i suspect, indeed, that heat of northern climates may be more powerful than. those of southern ones in proportion, as they...
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Mar 1, 2024
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pension bureau and former confederate states like virginia. that the last decade or so have really taken with historians. but there's so many that we're only now beginning to mine the gems that that live in these records and also newly master digitized medical journals and newspapers which represent a boon to digital historians. and what i learn from this process was essentially that addiction cost, like alpheus, chappell, everything, it cost their livelihood, their self-esteem, military entitlements like pensions, it cost them their families who abandoned them in many cases. oftentimes it cost them their freedom and even their lives. and so one major reason for this suffering is the cultural perception of opium slavery, addiction was not the word addiction. that is not commonly used until after the year 1900. and so searching for to describe what they experiencing and what they were seeing 19th century americans routinely to opium addiction as slavery to opium. but this this phrase and the lived experience of that phrase defied cultural ideal
pension bureau and former confederate states like virginia. that the last decade or so have really taken with historians. but there's so many that we're only now beginning to mine the gems that that live in these records and also newly master digitized medical journals and newspapers which represent a boon to digital historians. and what i learn from this process was essentially that addiction cost, like alpheus, chappell, everything, it cost their livelihood, their self-esteem, military...
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Mar 23, 2024
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so what we're trying to do in virginia is to get greater transparency. we are trying to very much bring back definitions and an applauding of merit and, saying we are going to start asking our institutions to start using measures of of college readiness. it matters actually, say, and to send a message the system that it hard work matters and excellence matters and achievement matters and that we're going to make. sure, we're signaling that at every single point in working, we also we're going to rethink of our advanced work in gifted and talented programs, following up 40 institutes done with their great work on gifted and talented and making sure that also our colleges are working in partnership with our school divisions to do a better job of identifying students who have traditionally have not identified as being capable of doing more advanced earlier on. so that we make sure that our virginians situations look like virginia. not because we've changed the goalposts. but our students are ready for the rigor of college work. and my last thing i'll say is
so what we're trying to do in virginia is to get greater transparency. we are trying to very much bring back definitions and an applauding of merit and, saying we are going to start asking our institutions to start using measures of of college readiness. it matters actually, say, and to send a message the system that it hard work matters and excellence matters and achievement matters and that we're going to make. sure, we're signaling that at every single point in working, we also we're going...
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Mar 18, 2024
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well, virginia hart we just left the 18th century. you've got modern virginia. you've got arlington cemetery and the lee mansion. more of arlington, the airport and the modern world here. this is a fantastic. it's one of the best years we have here in washington d.c. what is this terrace used for. well, is it's a vital part of the work do on the interior to, open up the doors and allow people to leave the 18th century and walk into something that has a very modern feel and suddenly we are in the nation's capital. now, the state department building itself built 1950s. it was planned the 1950s and opened up in 1960. so all of the work that we've done to our collection has been to the interior of the building, allowing people to walk to the space and suddenly explore. since the 1961 architecture of this building here. and you really do experience. but this this terrace was renovated during the secretary clinton, too, correct? absolutely. what is this wall here? this is the wall of the secretaries of state and. i think we'll see some names that are familiar, secreta
well, virginia hart we just left the 18th century. you've got modern virginia. you've got arlington cemetery and the lee mansion. more of arlington, the airport and the modern world here. this is a fantastic. it's one of the best years we have here in washington d.c. what is this terrace used for. well, is it's a vital part of the work do on the interior to, open up the doors and allow people to leave the 18th century and walk into something that has a very modern feel and suddenly we are in...
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Mar 24, 2024
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that coffee table book started viral, and the virginia museum of arts gift shop, so they ended up me on faculty as an adjunct speaker. and when i've got free time on the weekends, send me around the state to storytelling because all of these beautiful places in virginia, stories behind them, much like you've just heard a lot of the public really enjoys the back story they love the pictures but they want to know there's no closure until they get the back story so i started doing that for the museum wrecking guys, how much the public loved that and then started doing storytelling of abandoned virginia on my own. that started in libraries at into theaters and now i do those at the actual abandoned places themselves so i had approached the owner about that told that i could protect him legally, make him some money to go back into his foundation and then allow the public to come back here to enjoy these. so he allowed me to do that and it's just kind of blossomed ever since here and in other places this is by far the most spectacular that you guys have been. great. any questions? thank yo
that coffee table book started viral, and the virginia museum of arts gift shop, so they ended up me on faculty as an adjunct speaker. and when i've got free time on the weekends, send me around the state to storytelling because all of these beautiful places in virginia, stories behind them, much like you've just heard a lot of the public really enjoys the back story they love the pictures but they want to know there's no closure until they get the back story so i started doing that for the...
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Mar 18, 2024
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but she was born enslaved in virginia in 1818. she suffered all of the horrors of slavery in terms of mental and physical abu buable to use her skills as a seamstress to buy her own freedom and that of her son in the 1850s, after she had ended up in saint louis. and that and then she came to washington, d.c., and got in with the lincoln administration and was an intimate in the lincoln white house after lincoln's death. she was involved in the old clothes scandal with mary lincoln and in 1868, she wrote a book called behind the scenes as a way of telling her story, but also trying to vindicate mary lincoln a bit because as she's said, since she was involved with this, this woman so closely, she needed to show that she was upright in her own activities as well. the problem is, is that she then gave some letters to her editor that were included in the book, and they were very personal about the lincolns. and she essentially became persona non grata with most lincoln people. and most of us now know her because of that lincoln story.
but she was born enslaved in virginia in 1818. she suffered all of the horrors of slavery in terms of mental and physical abu buable to use her skills as a seamstress to buy her own freedom and that of her son in the 1850s, after she had ended up in saint louis. and that and then she came to washington, d.c., and got in with the lincoln administration and was an intimate in the lincoln white house after lincoln's death. she was involved in the old clothes scandal with mary lincoln and in 1868,...
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Mar 26, 2024
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but she was born enslaved in virginia in 1818. she suffered all of the horrors of slavery in terms of mental and physical. was able to use her skills as a seamstress to buy her own freedom and that of her son in the 1850s, after she had ended up in saint louis. and that and then she came to washington, d.c., and got in with the lincoln administration and was an intimate in the lincoln white house after lincoln's death. she was involved in the old clothes scandal with mary lincoln and in 1868, she wrote a book called behind the scenes as a way of telling her story, but also trying to vindicate mary lincoln a bit because as she's said, since she was involved with this, this woman so closely, she needed to show that she was upright in her own activities as well. the problem is, is that she then gave some letters to her editor that were included in the book, and they were very personal about the lincolns. and she essentially became persona non grata with most lincoln people. and most of us now know her because of that lincoln story. s
but she was born enslaved in virginia in 1818. she suffered all of the horrors of slavery in terms of mental and physical. was able to use her skills as a seamstress to buy her own freedom and that of her son in the 1850s, after she had ended up in saint louis. and that and then she came to washington, d.c., and got in with the lincoln administration and was an intimate in the lincoln white house after lincoln's death. she was involved in the old clothes scandal with mary lincoln and in 1868,...
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Mar 28, 2024
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he learned of virginia's. and one of the more poignant passages douglas southall, freeman's biographer of lee freeman describes how lee underwent agonizing trial when he had to choose between his and his country. according to freeman, lee's up all night, pacing back and forth in his study wracked by doubt, unable to decide where his duty lay. supposedly his wife heard his footsteps back and forth across his study on the wooden floor until he came down in the morning to, tell her that he had decided resign his commission in the united states army and seek service with virginia freeman's chapter on this episode is called the decision he was born to make. well, farragut decision was the one he was born to make. but for him, there was no agonizing easing, no midnight pacing back and forth, no uncertainty. lee's american traced back several generations. farragut was the first of his family to be born in the united states. but from moment he heard of virginia disloyalty, he knew that he was an american first. the mo
he learned of virginia's. and one of the more poignant passages douglas southall, freeman's biographer of lee freeman describes how lee underwent agonizing trial when he had to choose between his and his country. according to freeman, lee's up all night, pacing back and forth in his study wracked by doubt, unable to decide where his duty lay. supposedly his wife heard his footsteps back and forth across his study on the wooden floor until he came down in the morning to, tell her that he had...
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Mar 31, 2024
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what became known as the virginia plan introduced by the delegates from virginia. this is a representation should be based on population. the number of folks to represent me should be based on population. so what does that look. in the real world? wouldn't win if representation is based on population. the more people you have, the more representation have. guess what the smaller states said that he said just because we don't have enough people. so the representatives of the small states, the n jersey plan, said, no, no, no, we need we need representation. that's equal. every state gets, whatever number equal, we on. now, here comes a compromise that says, well, okay, let's let's let's fix it this way. there. because right now this is all about compromise. and they understood that. they understood that i'm not going to get everything i want. but what's most important what's most important is that we have something a document that can serve as the foundation going forward that takes us to the one we the people of the united states. that's what's most important. some
what became known as the virginia plan introduced by the delegates from virginia. this is a representation should be based on population. the number of folks to represent me should be based on population. so what does that look. in the real world? wouldn't win if representation is based on population. the more people you have, the more representation have. guess what the smaller states said that he said just because we don't have enough people. so the representatives of the small states, the n...
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Mar 1, 2024
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in 1866, in virginia, the bar was $30. in virginia before the war. and there's an attempt identify things that are associated with that they see as associated with black and women that take those things for misdemeanor and turn them into felonies. and so that the 14th amendment there attempts the 14th amendment for the states to sort of get the 14th amendment the way they do that constitutionally, we sort of call the supreme court cases the sorry, the supreme court cases, the civil rights cases and those basically say as long as the state doesn't say it's designed to exclude people, it's okay. right. so the 14th amendment still holds as a citizen, you can't deny citizenship based on race, color, previous condition of servitude. but if if a state a law and it doesn't say it's doing that but it has the effect of doing that, then it's perfectly fine. that's what supreme those supreme court court cases do. and so it allows states power to take create white supremacy and basically force black voters out. black people are voting in the 1860s and 1870s afte
in 1866, in virginia, the bar was $30. in virginia before the war. and there's an attempt identify things that are associated with that they see as associated with black and women that take those things for misdemeanor and turn them into felonies. and so that the 14th amendment there attempts the 14th amendment for the states to sort of get the 14th amendment the way they do that constitutionally, we sort of call the supreme court cases the sorry, the supreme court cases, the civil rights cases...
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Mar 29, 2024
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it's going to be somebody over here probably from virginia because virginia is the only state that can produce a president right. there is something, susan, about getting in the game with all of the media. we're, you know, part the deal how we how we cover it that you're in their face, you're in their families. you're in every aspect of their life. you know, a lot of people say, forget it. i'm not doing it. well, there's a scrutiny. but i also there's the ineffectiveness of government. so often the dysfunction of government. i think that's even more description. i think that's why some of our best our most promising political figures choose to run for governor not for senator or the congress. i mean, if you if you're looking for the most interest eating political leaders in the country and the ones who are most skilled at working across lines, it is, i think, by necessity, tends to be governors because, number one, they can't just talk. they got to do things. and number two, in most states they have to deal with somebody from across party lines and along with that, you know, talking ab
it's going to be somebody over here probably from virginia because virginia is the only state that can produce a president right. there is something, susan, about getting in the game with all of the media. we're, you know, part the deal how we how we cover it that you're in their face, you're in their families. you're in every aspect of their life. you know, a lot of people say, forget it. i'm not doing it. well, there's a scrutiny. but i also there's the ineffectiveness of government. so often...
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Mar 24, 2024
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and you see that happen right after virginia. too late, right but a couple of months into, they leaked the memo and then ever since then, what we've seen is an overperformance. democrats in every election competitive of races where a lot of spending and campaigning effects were you implemented and then in places even really long shot stuff where there was like a token democrat running and there wasn't any money to field a campaign. and if you take all those races after. dobbs prior to dobbs, it's. 8.8. advantage for democrats, eight points. and that may change because, you know, we have more data sets going in. but i mean, new york was ten points, right, the other night. yeah so what that's saying to us is that the enthusiasm, turnout and the independent like the imagistic impression that 15% of the voter pile that's independent still freaked out about maga. donald trump a little bit, right? like it's still this this we were telling this guy's a threat to freedom and there were and then he stole our freedom, right? so it made it
and you see that happen right after virginia. too late, right but a couple of months into, they leaked the memo and then ever since then, what we've seen is an overperformance. democrats in every election competitive of races where a lot of spending and campaigning effects were you implemented and then in places even really long shot stuff where there was like a token democrat running and there wasn't any money to field a campaign. and if you take all those races after. dobbs prior to dobbs,...
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Mar 1, 2024
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and i'd like to thank the virginia center for civil war studies and dr. paul quigley as well, for the invitation to join you all this evening. i really appreciate the virtual welcome from blacksburg, and i'm so glad that so many of you have decided to join us this evening. if i share my screen, i would to begin tonight in camp of the 118th pennsylvania and specific i i'd like to join them along the potomac. in may 1863. this is just days after the union defeat at chancellor and the event is somewhat unrelated. i want to set the scene, but the scene we're going to step into is a party or, a shindig of sorts, hosted a captain dendy sharwood before the war, sherwood had been a hotel owner and he had experience as a caterer because of his line of work and for his shindig, he treated his guests, other fellow officers, to a generous supply of gin, fish house, punch club, punch and ale, and to go along with those beverages, the offers the officers found tubs of cold beef boiled ham, a chicken salad and ham sandwiches. perhaps not surprisingly, the men really enj
and i'd like to thank the virginia center for civil war studies and dr. paul quigley as well, for the invitation to join you all this evening. i really appreciate the virtual welcome from blacksburg, and i'm so glad that so many of you have decided to join us this evening. if i share my screen, i would to begin tonight in camp of the 118th pennsylvania and specific i i'd like to join them along the potomac. in may 1863. this is just days after the union defeat at chancellor and the event is...
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Mar 12, 2024
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sauer: ex parte virginia expressing on the ministerial distinction. what johnson says is it doesn't say, hey, when you were doing these other things they were ministerial. these were not legislative acts. it draws a distinction between legislative and nonlegislative acts. also i think that's the right reading of the ex parte virginia. they go on to say judicial act. the argument that pick ago jury -- i don't believe they use the word to my recollection ministerial. judge henderson: they were criminal acts. pick ago jury based on base is a criminal act. whatever johnson did, i think it was the very same statute fraud against the united states, that is before us today. mr. sauer: the distinction in those cases is between in the judicial case, johnson -- legislative -- it's between legislative acts and nonlegislative acts. the distinction in ex parte virginia is between judicial acts and nonjudicial acts. that phrase is used. here it's presidential acts and nonpresidential acts. and everything in the indictment is a presidential act. >> may i. there are
sauer: ex parte virginia expressing on the ministerial distinction. what johnson says is it doesn't say, hey, when you were doing these other things they were ministerial. these were not legislative acts. it draws a distinction between legislative and nonlegislative acts. also i think that's the right reading of the ex parte virginia. they go on to say judicial act. the argument that pick ago jury -- i don't believe they use the word to my recollection ministerial. judge henderson: they were...
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Mar 30, 2024
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in fact, it would be like a brook, you know, a stream out in northern virginia. they were to imagine that they were commandos and they were going. i had to get the whole across the raging river with a machine and, you know, evade the gestapo was how they assess the men to for leadership with the women. they called all of these really well-educated did really often employed high earning women and and they they gave them a task of filing the memos to to see how well they could create a cross-reference system of filing memos using three by five cards, but to also see how they could put up with being under estimated and underused and discriminated against in spy service because the psychology doing the assessing already saw that that was happening that that was going to to women and they needed to have a particular kind of frustration tolerance in order to make it in the spy service so you can see the amount of paperwork during the war that women had to contend with. this was a mapmaking group of women working for the office of strategic service, as thawa our predece
in fact, it would be like a brook, you know, a stream out in northern virginia. they were to imagine that they were commandos and they were going. i had to get the whole across the raging river with a machine and, you know, evade the gestapo was how they assess the men to for leadership with the women. they called all of these really well-educated did really often employed high earning women and and they they gave them a task of filing the memos to to see how well they could create a...