TY & GOOD! One limitation of FR is the ability to centralize all data on a subject in one location. BUT, thankfully, there are Freeper Historians & Librarians who know where everything is, so we can collect & investigate.
I had started an Eric Holder thread & and am working on an Arne Duncan thread that I haven’t posted yet, but the Jarrett comment on Van Jones “so happy he is aboard...been watching since Oakland,” coupled with what has already been discovered about her ADVICE sent me over the top...thus the thread.
So many conspirators; so little time
Have you ever visited the ChicaGO Crime Thread?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2151323/posts?q=1&;page=1
Am going through it now collecting VJ stuff....You’re welcome to pull other information on your subject....Hopfully I’ll get it indexed soon, but I do have a general idea where certain materials are so if you’re looking for a specific subject ask.
This is going to sound strange, Maxine Box says, but 50 years later, she cant forget it: Barack Obamas mother used to crack her knuckles...
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2004164387_brodeur05m.html
Local News | Memories of Obamas mother | Seattle Times Newspaper
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Friday, October 17, 2008
Obama File 38 Barack Obama, Frank Marshall Davis, Vernon Jarrett-One Degree of Seperation
Obama File 37 here
Why did Barack Obama move to Chicago? Why did he choose a city famous for its corruption and distrust of outsiders as a launching pad for his political career?
Did Obamas boyhood mentor, life long communist Frank Marshall Davis influence that choice?
Obama admits he was inspired to first move to Chicago in 1983 by the election of the citys first black mayor Harold washington. Obama even unsuccessfully wrote away for a job in Washingtons administration.
Frank Marshall Davis had lived in Chicago for many years until moving to Hawaii in 1948. He had been active in Chicagos post War Communist Party while Harold Washington was a left leaning young law student. Had the two ever met?
Possibly not, but there was only one degree of seperation.
Frank Marshall Davis was involved in Chicagos South Side Community Art Center a meeting place for young African American writers and artists during the 1940s. An outgrowth of the Federal Art Project, the Art Center was a hangout for Communist Party members and sympathisers including Richard Wright, Margaret Burroughs, Marion Perkins and Arna Bontemps.
Another center regular was a young journalist named Vernon Jarrett. (((Valerie Jarretts father)))
Davis and Jarrett also worked together on the black run newspaper, the Chicago Defender.
MORE HERE
http://newzeal.blogspot.com/2008/10/obama-file-38-barack-obama-frank.html
ANY REAL ESTATE CONNECTION WITH THIS COMPANY?
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FROM:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2160366/posts
The body of Steven L. Good was found in his Jaguar on Monday. The car was spotted in a parking lot of a wildlife preserve in Kane County, Illinois, just outside Chicago, authorities said.
No note was found, and police say they do not know how long the 52-year-old had been in the vehicle.
Good was the chairman and chief executive officer of Sheldon Good & Co., a major U.S. real estate auction company.
... In his role as chairman of the Realtors Commercial Alliance Committee,
Distributed by Press Release EMAIL ARTICLEPRINT ARTICLE
CHICAGO (Map) - CHICAGO, Oct. 24 /PRNewswire/ The auction is going global in commercial real estate sales. Sheldon Good & Company Auctions International (www.sheldongood.com), the world’s largest real estate auction company, and its Chairman and CEO, Steven L. Good, today announced the first of a series of auctions to be conducted under a five-year agreement between Sheldon Good & Company and the Urban Land Institute. The total auction series is slated to generate $100 million in sales.
The Urban Land Institute, or ULI, is a non-profit organization with offices in Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, and London. Its stated mission is to provide leadership in the responsible use of land and in creating and sustaining thriving communities worldwide. ULI advocates progressive development, covering topics such as sustainability, smart growth, compact development, place making, and workforce housing.
The ULI was founded in 1936 and currently has over 39,000 members. More than 20% of the members work in government, academia, or public-private partnerships. Most of the rest are involved in the real estate and urban development industries.
The organization makes several awards annually, including the ULI Awards for Excellence, the Gerald D. Hines Urban Design Student Competition, the J. C. Nichols Prize for Visionaries in Urban Development, and the ULI-Kenneth M. Good Graduate Student Fellowship