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Mar 29, 2024
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well, he opened the first art gallery in kansas city. and what happened was nelson went on a trip to the to europe do one of these grand tours in the 1890s and he bought lot of reproductions of works of the old masters to bring back to kansas city and open a gallery. well, harry truman, you know, when he was growing in kansas city, there really was no art gallery here to speak of. and so this was nelson's attempt to to bring some kind of art museum to kansas city. well, here, i'll show you these the kinds of pictures that that he brought back. now, this is a reproduction of don't me say his name, bartholomaeus van der hulst. but these are the kinds of pictur tt william rock bill nelson brought back for the nelson gallery, which was a two rooms on the second floor of the public library. and this, i believe, was harry first exposure to art was pictures like this. they're very realistic, right? i mean, you can really i mean, you can almost feel the breath when you're up close to them. and this is ginormous. it's like 12 feet across. so the
well, he opened the first art gallery in kansas city. and what happened was nelson went on a trip to the to europe do one of these grand tours in the 1890s and he bought lot of reproductions of works of the old masters to bring back to kansas city and open a gallery. well, harry truman, you know, when he was growing in kansas city, there really was no art gallery here to speak of. and so this was nelson's attempt to to bring some kind of art museum to kansas city. well, here, i'll show you...
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Mar 4, 2024
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again, we've got kansas, california and nebraska. there's more informational things, debates in congress. but there's also now some international press coverage, particularly preprint reprints of articles from ireland and new zealand where they were and where in new zealand they were in talks to figure out how they could do their own land giveaway. and in ireland it was from a labor perspective, how this this equity, the sharing of was maybe a first step for the working man towards some sort of upward mobility, but only the first step. there was more that needed to be done. oh, the boosterism here centered a great deal on the international labor press coverage, which was positive on land ownership. and i thought it was interesting. and it was it's something i'd like to tease out a little bit more how often these articles equated land ownership with wealth and upward mobility. i'm wondering if that's one of those things that is sort of an american take it for granted hegemonic thing, but it's sort of just underscore as all of this, th
again, we've got kansas, california and nebraska. there's more informational things, debates in congress. but there's also now some international press coverage, particularly preprint reprints of articles from ireland and new zealand where they were and where in new zealand they were in talks to figure out how they could do their own land giveaway. and in ireland it was from a labor perspective, how this this equity, the sharing of was maybe a first step for the working man towards some sort of...
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Mar 26, 2024
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all of this to get to their promised land, kansas. now that should spark a couple questions for your family. why? why are these 300 folks going to kansas? well, there are push and pull factors going on here. right. these folks these folks experienced what john was talking about they experienced the hard work of emancipation the excitement of the jubilee after emancipation, promise of reconstruction by 1877. a lot of that had turned to ashen anguish and. the biggest frustration or one of the largest frustrations was the failure of land reform that the million acres that had been confiscated from, confederate traitors, had been given back to them by lincoln's worst decision. andrew johnson. and so land reform failed in the south. and that's a part of the push factor and the pull factor is the homestead act, which lincoln signed 1862, which offered americans and, immigrants who maintain that they would become citizens of 160 acres of land if they stayed on it for five years or ahead of a household and made improvements on the land and fo
all of this to get to their promised land, kansas. now that should spark a couple questions for your family. why? why are these 300 folks going to kansas? well, there are push and pull factors going on here. right. these folks these folks experienced what john was talking about they experienced the hard work of emancipation the excitement of the jubilee after emancipation, promise of reconstruction by 1877. a lot of that had turned to ashen anguish and. the biggest frustration or one of the...
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Mar 31, 2024
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and we're back with professor sean lee alexander of the university, kansas. professor, you mentioned this a little bit earlier, but how extensive was the news coverage and the public reaction to these kkk hearings? the news coverage is extensive. the newspapers are covering it. republican newspapers, newspapers at the time were very potilly affiliated. republican newspapers are covering it extensively and trying to show e olence that's occurring. democratic newspapers are covering it and trying to do the opposi, ow that these are a farce. public reaction is mixed. again, public reaction is, you know, someone most people in republicans and a number of people in the north are horrified by that. that action, it's trying very much to the old idea of the abolitionist that this is moral suasion. we're trying to bring, convince people that this is morally wrong and we must do something. unfortunately, it doesn't have a lasting impact on the community and it will go, you know, in a very short order. it will disappear from a lot of people's public imagination and real
and we're back with professor sean lee alexander of the university, kansas. professor, you mentioned this a little bit earlier, but how extensive was the news coverage and the public reaction to these kkk hearings? the news coverage is extensive. the newspapers are covering it. republican newspapers, newspapers at the time were very potilly affiliated. republican newspapers are covering it extensively and trying to show e olence that's occurring. democratic newspapers are covering it and trying...
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Mar 29, 2024
03/24
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celebrate in topeka, kansas, for the brown v board of education decision. she gave a speech to the three public high schools in topeka and she reminded them of how much work there still was to be done. that brown v board was not the end. it was simply the beginning of what needed to be done, not just for equality in education, but throughout the country. so this is the past and where some of our first ladies fit in, some of whom contributed to institutional racism in this country, but others who brought us forward and made the cause for civil rights and equal rights for all people in this country. so thank you again for joining us, and i'm looking forward to your questions as. thank you so much for that presentation. dr. carlin. i'm sure we've all heard a lot and learned a lot. i can see that our chat is already very active with some reactions to the information that you shared with us. so now i'm going to move us into the q&a portion of our program this evening before i start asking the questions, i want to remind our wonderful viewers that if you have a q
celebrate in topeka, kansas, for the brown v board of education decision. she gave a speech to the three public high schools in topeka and she reminded them of how much work there still was to be done. that brown v board was not the end. it was simply the beginning of what needed to be done, not just for equality in education, but throughout the country. so this is the past and where some of our first ladies fit in, some of whom contributed to institutional racism in this country, but others...
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Mar 21, 2024
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it is hard sometimes when i represented ifsouth-central kansas. it's hard to appreciate when you go about your life and you find it hard to appreciate there's evil in the world that is a staggering competition to our way of life. i spent time with secretary pineda and these folks want bad things for us. they want to undermine freedom here at home and we have a responsibility to get it right economically, dramatically, and we need to make sure that we have a strong military to defend those. >> i appreciate you and i agree with you greatly. i appreciate both of you. i think we all agreed that we have a serious problem and it is our job to rally or friends t around this and colleagues to support these things in the world. thank you so much for coming here and showing a determination. with that, i yield back. >>ia thank you. mr. auchincloss. >> mr. chairman, this is the opportunity -- you cite a lack of decency and respect for the institution of culture. t a nation and society intent on despising and destroying itself will not prevail. it is a worthy
it is hard sometimes when i represented ifsouth-central kansas. it's hard to appreciate when you go about your life and you find it hard to appreciate there's evil in the world that is a staggering competition to our way of life. i spent time with secretary pineda and these folks want bad things for us. they want to undermine freedom here at home and we have a responsibility to get it right economically, dramatically, and we need to make sure that we have a strong military to defend those....
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Mar 31, 2024
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he was a university of kansas dropout and was an inveterate adventurer. he'd participated in expeditions to climatic extremes, both in death valley and in the yukon. for 17 months, he was an artillery officer with the cuban revolutionaries fighting against spain for independence. when the military buildup the spanish-american war began, he was appointed as the commanding as the commander regimental commander of the 20th kansas, and the 20th. kansas went to fill the philippines, but it arrived too late for the war with spain. but soon fight found itself fighting the americans former allies. the philippine independence forces under emilio aguinaldo both funston and the 20 of kansas proved particularly adept at combat. in fact funston was awarded a medal of honor for bold cross river attack that turned the enemy flank during a particularly significant campaign. so funston hey, send the courier that was carrying this correspondence along that correspondence to my headquarters in san jose, drew. and so here is one of the letters that that courier was carrying.
he was a university of kansas dropout and was an inveterate adventurer. he'd participated in expeditions to climatic extremes, both in death valley and in the yukon. for 17 months, he was an artillery officer with the cuban revolutionaries fighting against spain for independence. when the military buildup the spanish-american war began, he was appointed as the commanding as the commander regimental commander of the 20th kansas, and the 20th. kansas went to fill the philippines, but it arrived...
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Mar 22, 2024
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secretary pompeo was secretary of state and 4th district in kansas from 2011-2017. secretary pompeo was director of the cia as well as secretary of defense under president barack obama, and chief of staff for former president bill clinton and best job, apparently, as a member of congress from california from 1977 to 1993. we thank both of you for making time out of our busy schedules to be here. if you could please stand and raise your right hand, i will now swear you in. do you swear or affirm under penalty of perjury that the testimony you're about to give is true and correct to the best of your knowledge, information and belief so help you god? let the record show the witnesses answered in the affirmative, you may be seated. thank you, secretary pompeo, you're recognized for your opening remarks. >> thank you, mr. chairman and thank you ranking member, it's great to be here. i started my career canon 107 so feels like home very much. it's a real privilege to be in front of this particular committee. you all are doing important, remarkable, bipartisan work and i w
secretary pompeo was secretary of state and 4th district in kansas from 2011-2017. secretary pompeo was director of the cia as well as secretary of defense under president barack obama, and chief of staff for former president bill clinton and best job, apparently, as a member of congress from california from 1977 to 1993. we thank both of you for making time out of our busy schedules to be here. if you could please stand and raise your right hand, i will now swear you in. do you swear or affirm...
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Mar 28, 2024
03/24
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recently radio reporters in mobile units their lives in dallas, in kansas, in missouri, going out into the raging storm storm. they reported practically every twist turn of the tornado. they warned people out of its path. during the floods of california, oregon and connecticut. radio stations turned over their facilities for search and rescue work. radio helped with cleanup and relief operations. fire down town. radio is on hand with its mobile unit. the studio on wheels, as a neighborhood radio to be present at practice. any news event from a political to a fire like this. the radio reporter broadcasts right from the sea, giving his listeners an on the spot account of the fire. the fight to keep it from spreading. the injuries. the damage. when the fire is under control. a firsthand report from the chief. from a fire to a chat with some interesting neighbors. with its speed and flexible, a radio has become an integral of the community, which means being active in it. local radio station, for instance works with the police to help locate missing persons to reunite separated families. b
recently radio reporters in mobile units their lives in dallas, in kansas, in missouri, going out into the raging storm storm. they reported practically every twist turn of the tornado. they warned people out of its path. during the floods of california, oregon and connecticut. radio stations turned over their facilities for search and rescue work. radio helped with cleanup and relief operations. fire down town. radio is on hand with its mobile unit. the studio on wheels, as a neighborhood...
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Mar 29, 2024
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she said, i'm a true blue kansas democrat. i watch show, but i'm a true blue kansas democrat. and i said, well, first of all, thanks for watching and second of all, that's good because i'm a news guy trying to write a history book. and i think about it as being a reporter of not a historian, really a reporter of history. and i want to write it in a way that is really readable for people, especially my generation and younger. i want my kids one day in a class to read this book and read and enjoy it. and so started this process. and she did find these nuggets each time that had not been uncovered at. the eisenhower book reagan library. i worked with people in russia for stalin, for churchill's. i mean, we found these nuggets that had been uncovered and. catherine and i worked as like pieces a quilt and put it together as real time. i mean, this is history but it is in a narrative form that reflects back to quotes and diaries and other people. reflecting on these moments, it was tougher when you went back to washington because there were there were notes and there were diaries an
she said, i'm a true blue kansas democrat. i watch show, but i'm a true blue kansas democrat. and i said, well, first of all, thanks for watching and second of all, that's good because i'm a news guy trying to write a history book. and i think about it as being a reporter of not a historian, really a reporter of history. and i want to write it in a way that is really readable for people, especially my generation and younger. i want my kids one day in a class to read this book and read and enjoy...
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Mar 24, 2024
03/24
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oh, that's the university of kansas. that folks, because of the land grant act and others created these institutions 150 years ago, you keep going a little bit farther again. you're in the middle of farmland but what rises off to the right in manhattan kansas kansas state right these incredible and the thing is like you cannot just make out of whole cloth 150 year old institutions. no one ever holds harvard 380 years or something. you can't just make new 380 year institutions. and so part of being a conservative, what rick will, do great things, talking about all the new things we need to create. but you can't just abandon those types of places and it will be difficult. and it's an uphill battle and you're outnumbered and all of those that are true. but there's certain facets of that and there's certain capital that exists. deep wells that have been dug over hundreds years that you can't just start. so those you our land grant universities and others are such a great testament to american ingenuity. and many of the great
oh, that's the university of kansas. that folks, because of the land grant act and others created these institutions 150 years ago, you keep going a little bit farther again. you're in the middle of farmland but what rises off to the right in manhattan kansas kansas state right these incredible and the thing is like you cannot just make out of whole cloth 150 year old institutions. no one ever holds harvard 380 years or something. you can't just make new 380 year institutions. and so part of...
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Mar 5, 2024
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the strong russian ship between the kansas economy and aviation. there are 91,000 jobs attributed to the aviation industry in my state including 42,000 from the aerospace manufacturing segment. aviation ranked second in economic impact in kansas only to agriculture. for aviation industry to thrive the faa needs a roadmap above data congressional parties to adopt long-overduechanges and regulatory requirements. delays in rulemaking and insufficiencies in the workforce are bottlenecking the industry. it's imperative that congress passes the authorization bill so the ftp aa in the workforce aviation industry are able to address the backlog of concerns that my colleagues and i have been racing for months of the american returns to his gold standard status and aviation. a few questions mr. whitaker. wave heard a lot about the faa rulemaking process and the importance of it for innovation safety and international leadership. what would you do under your tenure to make this process more timely transparent and accountable. >> thank you, sir. i think the tr
the strong russian ship between the kansas economy and aviation. there are 91,000 jobs attributed to the aviation industry in my state including 42,000 from the aerospace manufacturing segment. aviation ranked second in economic impact in kansas only to agriculture. for aviation industry to thrive the faa needs a roadmap above data congressional parties to adopt long-overduechanges and regulatory requirements. delays in rulemaking and insufficiencies in the workforce are bottlenecking the...
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Mar 16, 2024
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, they passed a law to make it to do abortions at the university of kansas hospital where i worked. it was part some complicated rider to get the university hospital out of the you know the purchasing agreement with the government like some financial thing and of course know the dean said oh don't worry, we're going to fight that. and of course they didn't. and you know, abortion guys, you know, and so two weeks later or three weeks later, a month later, i get a call from someone about their very sick patient who needs an abortion. and i'm like well, i didn't see at the meetings about it, so yeah. so i can't help. sorry. and eventually what happened was? you know, i spoke to the politician who wrote the law to get permission, and i've never this. and i was sitting in my basement in johnson county, kansas, and i had i had read every single thing on this complicated medical condition like i was prepared for like an oral boarding. i read every paper and all the quotes. i had it all laid like i was doing some kind of, like, game analysis. and so started to explain. and i'm not kidding.
, they passed a law to make it to do abortions at the university of kansas hospital where i worked. it was part some complicated rider to get the university hospital out of the you know the purchasing agreement with the government like some financial thing and of course know the dean said oh don't worry, we're going to fight that. and of course they didn't. and you know, abortion guys, you know, and so two weeks later or three weeks later, a month later, i get a call from someone about their...
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Mar 20, 2024
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on the second day of the search i happen to be with the agent from kansas city. we drove down highway 20 and we found that sign. it came into focus as we neared the highways and, and as we got closer i could see the hay bale, the hedgerow, the tree. this discovery expedited the 11- year-old victims identification and rescue from ongoing abuse. that very day. from the discovery of the csam on the darknet to the child's rescue, only 13 days had elapsed. during my seven years running the program and lab, i had four personnel can conducting victim identification. it is not nearly enough. as tim stated earlier, there are tens of thousands of unidentified victims out there who are waiting on us to safeguard them. there is already an incredible and successful blueprint to increase victim identification personnel within hsi and support our nation's military veterans at the same time. we need to look no further than the hsi hero program to see the path forward. i submitted a document laying out a viable strategy for consideration. the commodification requires global colla
on the second day of the search i happen to be with the agent from kansas city. we drove down highway 20 and we found that sign. it came into focus as we neared the highways and, and as we got closer i could see the hay bale, the hedgerow, the tree. this discovery expedited the 11- year-old victims identification and rescue from ongoing abuse. that very day. from the discovery of the csam on the darknet to the child's rescue, only 13 days had elapsed. during my seven years running the program...
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Mar 6, 2024
03/24
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aviation ranks second in economic impact in kansas only to agriculture. for our aviation industry to thrive faa needs a road map of updated priorities to adopt long overdue policies changes and regulatory requirements. delays in rule making and insufficiencies in the workforce are bottlenecking the industry. it's imperative that congress passes reauthorization bill so faa is workforce and address backlog of concerns that my colleagues and i have been raising for months so america can get to gold standard, status and aviation. a few questions, mr. whitaker. we heard about faa rule-making process and the importance of it for innovation, safety and international leadership. what will you do under your tenure to make this process more timely transparent and accountable. >> thank you, sir. transparency in general needs to be improved and efficiency needs to be improved delivering services, registrations, for example, certification process, so we are working on those issues. rule making is a little different because it's driven by the procedures act and i think
aviation ranks second in economic impact in kansas only to agriculture. for our aviation industry to thrive faa needs a road map of updated priorities to adopt long overdue policies changes and regulatory requirements. delays in rule making and insufficiencies in the workforce are bottlenecking the industry. it's imperative that congress passes reauthorization bill so faa is workforce and address backlog of concerns that my colleagues and i have been raising for months so america can get to...
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Mar 21, 2024
03/24
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mark is in kansas, good morning, mark.>> hello, good morning. i just wanted to say that since this country is so tied to their motor vehicles, let's put a basic civics test on driver's license tests, just a few basic questions. if you don't pass it, you don't get your drivers license. give the answers like you do on a drivers license test, so people are ready for the test. it's not going to solve everything. it's going to reach a lot of people, and at least give them some basic knowledge about how the government works.>> let's let luis respond to that, what do you think of that idea?>> i am less interested in punitive, back to you, how would you train people to do that? you'd have to go state-by- state, you would have to provide a fair amount of support, and if that is the case, i am all in favor of a system in which we raise the level of civic understanding overall. i will say this. there has been a trend of questions around the civics test. the civics test is very basic. you go look at those questions, are there three branches of government? a
mark is in kansas, good morning, mark.>> hello, good morning. i just wanted to say that since this country is so tied to their motor vehicles, let's put a basic civics test on driver's license tests, just a few basic questions. if you don't pass it, you don't get your drivers license. give the answers like you do on a drivers license test, so people are ready for the test. it's not going to solve everything. it's going to reach a lot of people, and at least give them some basic knowledge...
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Mar 10, 2024
03/24
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so go out the south, go across kansas and, colorado and figure out what's going on out there. the problem was there was a lot more trouble with diplomacy that zebulon pike had to run into because that territory that impeded on the louisiana purchase in the southern part of the united states were spanish territory and the spanish didn't really want a bunch of americans showing up in this southwestern part, the united states and the americans don't have any maps to tell them. quite precise, where the american territory the louisiana purchase ends, spanish territory begins. so zebulon accidentally gets himself kidnaped by the spanish because he wanders down south of what is today southern into near santa fe and albuquerque and they take him prisoner all the way down into mexico where they try and figure out what he's doing they take all his documents and journals and go through them and have them translated and they think he's a spy or maybe trying to overthrow the mexican government and so on and then they're finally like, oh, you're literally just a dude drawing plants. you can
so go out the south, go across kansas and, colorado and figure out what's going on out there. the problem was there was a lot more trouble with diplomacy that zebulon pike had to run into because that territory that impeded on the louisiana purchase in the southern part of the united states were spanish territory and the spanish didn't really want a bunch of americans showing up in this southwestern part, the united states and the americans don't have any maps to tell them. quite precise, where...
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Mar 30, 2024
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and in it's either kansas or oklahoma right on the border. there were non profit groups have large areas. they are similar tenuously. you know restoring buffalo, their bison there but also native plants are also in montana the kit fox is coming back they had a i think they had a bear there, a grizzly there, which grizzly on the plains is a big thing. so those things, you know obviously they took millennia for it to become what it became it didn't take that long to undo it it'll take some time and a lot of effort but the the way that they graze and everything on the places doing it they see remarkable rejuvenation of the prairie system. and just picking up on your final comments, what parallels do you see between the story of the buffalo and debates we're having today or energy policy? you know, was a need we learn from that history? well, you know, in the i guess i'm trying to think about in terms of the debate there really wasn't that of a debate. you know, while this was going on, the slaughter, the united states government didn't necessari
and in it's either kansas or oklahoma right on the border. there were non profit groups have large areas. they are similar tenuously. you know restoring buffalo, their bison there but also native plants are also in montana the kit fox is coming back they had a i think they had a bear there, a grizzly there, which grizzly on the plains is a big thing. so those things, you know obviously they took millennia for it to become what it became it didn't take that long to undo it it'll take some time...