Statue of Liberty

Letter to the Editor

January 19, 2018

The Oregonian

Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

“This is the often-quoted phrase engraved on the base of the Statue of Liberty. For more than a century, the statue with its inscription has been a beacon of hope for immigrants — many without “merit” — who have fled to our shores, seeking a better life in our country.

We would do well to reflect on what this inscription means to us and what the Statue of Liberty represents before we give our assent to building walls, limiting immigration to favored foreigners and kicking Dreamers out of our country.”

Mike Kane, Wilsonville

1.18.19

Freedom.

August 6, 2017

“Ciccio, look! Look at that! That’s the greatest light since the star of Bethlehem! That’s the light of freedom! Remember that. Freedom”

[Film creator Frank Capra immigrated to the United States when he was five-years-old, 1903. “Capra remembers the ship’s arrival in New York Harbor, where he saw ‘a statue of a great lady, taller than a church steeple, holding a torch above the land we were about to enter’, recalling his father’s exclamation at the sight.]

Some of Capra’s films include:

It’s a Wonderful Life

It Happened One Night

You Can’t Take It With You

︶⁀°• •° ⁀︶

From the Newseum Institute

First Amendment Receives a C+ in Quarterly ‘Report Card’

Clean Web Design