Pages
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Title
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Camden Point Military Institute
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Description
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Article about a military institute founded at Camden Point, Platte County, Missouri in 1892.
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Date
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2020
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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Post-World War I Military Parade
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Description
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Uniformed members of the 140th Infantry, 35th Division, marching northward on Grand at 15th.
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Date
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2019-05-10
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Object Type
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Photograph
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Title
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Cerner Gets Defense Deal
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Description
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Article is about a new deal for "Cerner, Kansas City's fastest-growing large company and one of the top health information technology firms in the country."
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Date
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2015-07-30
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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SC125 David H. Perkins Papers Finding Aid
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Description
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The David H. Perkins Papers contain correspondence, publications, writings, photographs, artwork, and ephemera created and collected by David H. Perkins over the course of his life. A life-long Kansas City area resident, Perkins was a writer, editor, teacher, critic, and activist with interests in literature, art, politics, and urban and housing development projects. The collection consists of professional and personal materials.
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Date
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2014-10
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Object Type
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Finding Aid
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Title
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Tank Rolls through History
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Description
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Article focuses upon the Renault FT17 tank on display at the National World War I Museum in Kansas City, Missouri. Senior Curator, Doran Cart is interviewed and provides details concerning the tank's story. A general history of the development of the tank as an instrument of war is included. The author states that the museum's FT17 tank was shipped to the United States for a July 1919 bond drive, was later added to the collection of the M. H. de Young Museum in San Francisco, changed hands several times, and was eventually sold to the museum by the Hayes Otoupalik Collection in 2007.
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Date
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2014-05-25
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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Steve Rigazzi: A Jam Q&A
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Description
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An interview with local bassist Steve Rigazzi. A native of Oklahoma, Rigazzi came from a musical family and later learned to play the string bass while performing with a military band. Some of the topics discussed in the interview include his time spent in Italy playing with a NATO band, relocating to Kansas City in 1997, collaborations with other musicians and entertainers, and venues where he has performed.
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Date
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2013-06
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Title
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Following Grant
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Description
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Article highlights eight Missouri locales along the "U.S. Grant Trail," where Ulysses S. Grant traveled during his military career. Also included is a map of all 25 Civil War sites on the trail.
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Date
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2013-04
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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Herosim Recalled
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Description
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Article profiles WWII veteran Bob Motley, who is among 20,000 black marines who trained at Montfort Point at North Carolina's Camp Lejeune. The 200 surviving Montfort marines, including Motley, will be awarded the Congressional Gold Medal on June 27. Motley was previously awarded a Purple Heart. He is also known locally for umpiring in the Negro Leagues and helping to found the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum.
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Date
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2012-06-11
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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First of Its Kind, St. Michael's Center Will Serve Homeless Military Veterans
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Description
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The St. Michael's Center for Veterans, "to be located on 22 acres near the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Kansas City, will provide 'one-stop' services to turn homeless veterans back into productive members of society." The Center will be managed by Catholic Charities of Kansas City-St. Joseph.
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Date
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2011-11-18
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Object Type
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Newspaper Article
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Title
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To Garry Owen in Glory
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Description
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Short article about early military bands, especially those in the West. Lists some of the tunes or songs in the usual repertorires of the bands. Includes several pictures of military bands and a sidebar with statistics for Regular Army Regimental Bands in the infantry, cavalry, and artillery as of July 13, 1861.
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Date
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2011-07
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Object Type
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Magazine Article
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Title
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Interview with Michael Lerner
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Description
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Interview with Michael Lerner about the Kansas City garment industry and his family's company, King Louie. He recounts his father Morris and uncles founding the Lerner Cap Company, later changing the name to Lerner Brothers Manufacturing and going into production of military clothing at the start of World War II. After the war they shifted to sportswear, and later, to bowling shirts under the name King Louie, as his uncle Victor Lerner was a professional bowler. He discusses how the company grew to encompass bowling alleys and other businesses, shifting to overseas manufacturing and imports, and eventually buying back the brand from a venture capital firm in 2006 and re-establishing the business as an American-made, union labor firm that manufactures uniforms and promotional garments.
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Date
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2011-03-07
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Object Type
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Video Recording
Pages