The Museum at the Big Horns History After Dark lecture series returned on October 20. Jessica Salzman, Museum Collections Manager, introduced the speakers.
Cynde Georgen, local historian, and her husband Steve Baskin presented "Whiskey Shots and Gunshot Chasers: Thirty Years of Throwin' 'Em Back
with the border, i have an exchange as i left the border region, and that don t know if it is the case up here. adult is, but in our southern border after somebody gets across the border then about 100 miles and there is often a secondary checkpoint. it is to snare those who manage to get across the first time. i came across the rise in the imperial valley. the road was two lanes, no getting around the checkpoint looked like a toll booth at the bottom, and that is where i encountered the border patrol. good morning. how re you doing today. it was border patrolmen martino. i could tell he had his name right here. doing great, i said. how about yourself. good. thanks. he identified himself. unisys border patrol. you both u.s. citizens? yes, agreed to greek american, my friend. have a good day. he dismisses. all right. i wanted to talk with them. no traffic. he must ve been lonely in this isolated post. to chat with them would do have some good and we might learn something. but
paul: this week on the journal editorial report. the government moves to cut compensation at all banks, whether or not they were bailed out. will they soon be setting wages for all of us? and the white house picks another target. move over, fox news. the u.s. chamber of commerce is the latest group to find itself in the administration s cross hairs. plus a special election in new york is pitting prominent republicans against each other and raising doubt about the party strategy to take back the house in 2010. welcome to the the journal editorial report. i m paul gigot. white house pay czar kenneth feinberg announced plans this week to drastically cut the salaries of the highest paid employees at the seven companies that receive the biggest taxpayer bail-out. the cash portion of their salaries will be slashed an average of 90% over last year. the federal reserve proposed a new pay guidelines for all banks it regulates, whether or not they were bailed out. president oba