Edward R. Murrow and Julius Caesar: This Date in History

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Speaking of Politics...

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The clipping here is from April 19, 1978 and refers to the votes on the Panama Canal Treaty by North Carolina’s two U.S. Senators - Democrat Robert Morgan, a Yes, and Republican Jesse Helms, No. That April ‘78 vote assured the neutrality of the canal and pledged that the U.S. would not interfere in the internal affairs of the nation of Panama.

The day of that vote I had a Political Science seminar taught by Professor Federico Gil. I was a junior struggling to keep up in the heady stuff being discussed in that class. UNC was a leader globally at the time in Latin American Studies. Very specifically the course was ‘Latin America in World Affairs.” Most of y’all must have been acquainted with the college lore of the late instructor, i.e., students wait 5 minutes for a tardy graduate teaching assistant, 10 for an assistant prof, 15 for an associate, and 20 for a full professor.

That day, Dr. Gil was still not there at the 20 minute mark. So respected was he that no one left. His expertise in international relations was globally renowned and smart, open-minded public servants, business people, and other scholars sought out his counsel. Expertise was many years away from the shunning currently the standard operating procedure among modern Conservative politicians. Professor Gil was the very definition of erudite. His classes were brilliantly executed and every student, even those ‘in-over-their-heads’ such as I, worked our hardest to keep up.

When he did arrive, over half an hour late, he apologized and thanked us for staying. He explained that he had been delayed by a phone call from a North Carolina Senator seeking advice on the Panama Canal vote. Which of our two had sought out the expert needed no explanation.
 
Speaking of Politics...

IMG_4570.jpeg


The clipping here is from April 19, 1978 and refers to the votes on the Panama Canal Treaty by North Carolina’s two U.S. Senators - Democrat Robert Morgan, a Yes, and Republican Jesse Helms, No. That April ‘78 vote assured the neutrality of the canal and pledged that the U.S. would not interfere in the internal affairs of the nation of Panama.

The day of that vote I had a Political Science seminar taught by Professor Federico Gil. I was a junior struggling to keep up in the heady stuff being discussed in that class. UNC was a leader globally at the time in Latin American Studies. Very specifically the course was ‘Latin America in World Affairs.” Most of y’all must have been acquainted with the college lore of the late instructor, i.e., students wait 5 minutes for a tardy graduate teaching assistant, 10 for an assistant prof, 15 for an associate, and 20 for a full professor.

That day, Dr. Gil was still not there at the 20 minute mark. So respected was he that no one left. His expertise in international relations was globally renowned and smart, open-minded public servants, business people, and other scholars sought out his counsel. Expertise was many years away from the shunning currently the standard operating procedure among modern Conservative politicians. Professor Gil was the very definition of erudite. His classes were brilliantly executed and every student, even those ‘in-over-their-heads’ such as I, worked our hardest to keep up.

When he did arrive, over half an hour late, he apologized and thanked us for staying. He explained that he had been delayed by a phone call from a North Carolina Senator seeking advice on the Panama Canal vote. Which of our two had sought out the expert needed no explanation.
Robert “Too Liberal for North Carolina” Morgan
 
The Voice. (hear it at the link below) I have only heard in retrospectives but I remember him spoken of with reverence by my father who was very pro-democracy and even more anti-authoritarian like so many in his now-forgotten generation—the one that wrestled fascist dictators to the ground and crushed them in Germany and Italy. In our most recent times some brave members of a much maligned profession have followed along his path. We should be thankful for for journalists like this and recognize their work in a measure based on the ire they draw from the shysters, seditionists, and nattering anti-democracy nabobs of our time. Edward R. Murrow seems to have been hated by just the right folks. A hit dog does yell the loudest. #OTD (April 24) in 1908 Edward R. Murrow was born near Greensboro. He grew up in Washington state. His WW2 CBS radio reports from Europe were historic. On his ‘50s TV program ‘See It Now’ he brought down Red-baiting GOP Sen.McCarthy in ‘54.
Please watch that moment at this link:




Read more here: Edward R. Murrow, Legendary Journalist

“Men at some time are masters of their fates: The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, But in ourselves…” Act 1, Scene 2, “Julius Caesar”
 
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