The sidelines . Reporter both the white house and democrats say they are trying to reach a deal. Today Key Information came out about exactly how far apart they are on the issues. At friday evenings news conference, President Trump set a deal was still possible for another coronavirus release build. My administration continues to work in good faith to reach an agreement with democrats in congress that will extend unemployment benefits, provide protections against evictions. Reporter President Trump lamed democrats for the stalled talks and said he is prepared to sign executive orders for a payroll tax cut, an extension of unemployment and if its and an Eviction Moratorium through the end of the year. It came to be by the end of the week. Reporter democrats say republicans in the white house negotiators are the one dragging their feet. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi sent a letter to democrats with the biggest differences. Republicans say 15 billion should be spent on testing and contact tra
Notorious incidents, he also mentioned the followup and i probably will not have time to get to that. But i will have copies of both books for anybody interested. As the name suggests, the book is about murders and shootouts and anything notorious that happened in the ozarks. In some cases, slightly outside the ozarks. The timeframe is from the and of the civil war up through the gangster era of the 1920s and 1930s, with one exception about the very last story of something that happened in 1950. But it covers the gangster era. I would like to say, if there is any other thing that i tried to develop in the theory is something jeremy touched on. The idea is that the old west was not just kansas and arizona territory and places like that, particularly in the years immediately after the civil war, like from 18651875 and 1880. There was a lot of things that happened in missouri and the ozarks and we were very much part of the wild west. The first chapter in my book is about while bill hanco
Notorious incidents, he also mentioned the followup and i probably will not have time to get to that. But i will have copies of both books for anybody interested. As the name suggests, the book is about murders and shootouts and anything notorious that happened in the ozarks. In some cases, slightly outside the ozarks. The timeframe is from the and of the civil war up through the gangster era of the 1920s and 1930s, with one exception about the very last story of something that happened in 1950. But it covers the gangster era. I would like to say, if there is any other thing that i tried to develop in the theory is something jeremy touched on. The idea is that the old west was not just kansas and arizona territory and places like that, particularly in the years immediately after the civil war, like from 18651875 and 1880. There was a lot of things that happened in missouri and the ozarks and we were very much part of the wild west. The first chapter in my book is about while bill hanco
Bill hickok to bonnie and clyde. The Kansas City Library hosted the event. Welcome. Welcome everyone. My name is jeremy and i had up the Missouri Valley special collection which is the local regional and History Department of the library. Our Research Room and heart and archives are located across the hall. In the Missouri Valley room you will find books, articles, and manuscripts documenting kansas as it rowdy, violent past evolved from a western cowtown to a bustling metropolis. Our history includes bloody border fighting during the civil war, notorious outlaws and prostitutes, rampant illegal gambling and bootlegging during prohibition, and gangland violence and assassinations including one infamous massacre from 1933. Perhaps there is no more widespread lawlessness, violence, and mayhem in missouri in the decades following the civil war and well into the 20th century than in the ozark region. Here today to talk about the notorious characters and sensational events of that. Times aw
Then upon her death left. It was opened as a Public Museum in 1963. We are now more than 50 years as an institution in washington, d. C. It is good to see all of you here tonight. Our program is entitled smile while you kiss me sad adieu. World war i songs. Let me introduce our speaker quickly. We like to remind people here that president wilson imagines a world at peace and proposed a plan to achieve that vision. That is a remarkable accomplishment when we take about it from the Vantage Point of our lives 100 years later. It is more remarkable if we transport ourselves back to his time and think about the world in which he lived and the ideas that were abroad at the time and the remarkable accomplishment that it was for him in the middle of a world war to imagine what the world ought to look like at peace and propose that that should be our default position, that there ought to be a league of nations and nations ought not to engage in aggressive war. This house allows us to take that