-
-
Title
-
The Force Is Strong with the 'Mounties'
-
Description
-
Article about the Kansas City Police Department's Mounted Patrol Section. Currently the patrol has 10 horses and 9 officers. The patrol began as a nonprofit organization in 2003 and was absorbed into the police department in 2006. "With the horses they're able to get to places that the cars cannont get to or even the motorcycles," and people are more likely to approach a patrolman on horseback. The horses are a great public realtions tool as well.
-
Date
-
2009-04-22
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Decades Pass, Struggle Goes On
-
Description
-
Three Kansas Citians, Geneva Morris, Alvin Brooks, and retired Jackson County Circuit Judge Jon Gray, "tell their stories of the civil rights movement and assess the progress."
-
Date
-
2008-01-20
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Downtown in Demand
-
Description
-
Article on the increased demand for downtown housing in Kansas City, but vacancies are scarce. The occupancy rates for downtown apartments are near 95 percent and yet no projects are in the works to increase the housing.
-
Date
-
2012-08-11
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Courthouse Collection
-
Description
-
Article provides details concerning the opening of the Jackson County Museum of Art, located within the historic Truman Courthouse in Independence, Missouri. Some of the items on display, 27 paintings by George Caleb Bingham, are described. Ken McClain, the art collector who owns many of the works on display is interviewed. The museum's organization is discussed.
-
Date
-
2013-09-07
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
He Wants You to Think
-
Description
-
Profile of Kansas City artist Peter Cowdin, known to the arts community as A. Bitterman. The author writes that Bitterman was trained as a printmaker, moved to Kansas City in 1988 where he took a hiatus from making art, and decided to apply to the Avenue of the Arts in 2006. The controversies surrounding Bitterman's works are summarized, including: positioning a Wal-Mart sign against the Nelson Atkins Museum of Fine Art's Bloch Building, his proposal to attach a paper mache banana to the side of the Folly Theater, his billboard depicting himself aiming a gun at The Scout statue in Penn Valley Park, and others. Bitterman is interviewed and discusses his works and future artistic endeavors.
-
Date
-
2014-03-16
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
A Tiny Renoir Began Impressive Obsession
-
Description
-
Article spotlighting the personal collection of French Impressionist paintings of Henry and Marion Bloch. For the last 35 years the Blochs have acquired works from such artists as Manet, Monet, Renior and Degas. Thirty of their paintings will be featured in an exhibit at the new Bloch Buidling of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art titled: "Manet to Matisse: Impressionist Masters From the Marion and Henry Bloch Collection."
-
Date
-
2007-06-03
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Unlocking KC's Secret Files
-
Description
-
Article examines the Kansas City Police Department's system for investigating citizens' complaints against police officers. Grievances are filed with the Office of Community Complaints, a department that critics contend operates in secret and lacks accountability. The Office has come under fire in the past for taking too long to complete its investigations and for the high number of cases that go unresolved. Includes statistical data on complaints filed with the department, as well as comparisons with other metropolitan cities.
-
Date
-
2008-10-26
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Riveted to KC History
-
Description
-
Article focuses upon the experiences of Kansas City women who worked in aviation assembly plants during World War II. Several women are interviewed and describe their lives before, during, and after the war.
-
Date
-
2015-01-18
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
At Age 101-Plus, He's Been a Campaigner All His Life
-
Description
-
Profile on Sam Montague, Kansas City promoter, fundraiser, and civic activist. Among his many projects, Montague worked to pass bonds funding KCI and Truman Medical Center, proposed the "City of Fountains" moniker, pushed "the passage of the public accommodations ordinance that desegregated the city's hotels and restaurants," and was regularly featured in the Kansas City Star's political cartoons in the 1960s.
-
Date
-
2013-12-10
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Land of Big Dreams
-
Description
-
Article reports the increase in the Asian population occurring throughout the Kansas City area. Article includes brief biographical sketches of some outstanding Asian students and information on some of the cultural institutions in the metro. Statistical charts and graphs are included with the article.
-
Date
-
2011-02-06
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
A New Heritage of Frustrations
-
Description
-
Article summarizes the current state of the 18th & Vine Jazz District redevelopment plan and problems that have held back its progress. Emanuel Cleaver, Ollie Gates, Troy Schulte, and other interested parties are interviewed and provide their assessment of the longstanding and troubled project. The author states that a lack of appropriate planning, a lack of sufficient funding, and the existence of two independent agencies that oversee development projects, i.e. the Black Economic Union (BEC) and the Jazz District Redevelopment Council Corporation (JDRC), are the primary factors that have stunted development in the area. Plans to address these concerns from U.S. Representative Emanual Cleaver and Kansas City barbecue icon Ollie Gates are covered.
-
Date
-
2013-11-24
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article
-
-
Title
-
Showing Faith in Kansas City
-
Description
-
Profile of Harvest Church International Outreach and its founder and pastor, Bishop Steve Houpe. Located in the Northland (4300 N. Corrington), the church facility includes a private school (Faith Academy), Sunday school rooms, cafeteria, gymnasium, and bookstore. Houpe moved to Kansas City and established the church in 1986 after earning a Ph.D in theology from Kenneth E. Hagin's Rhema Bible Institute. The work of Houpe and his his wife Donna and the Harvest Church congregation are described in article, as well as the church's development plan, called Project Destiny.
-
Date
-
2014-11-12
-
Object Type
-
Newspaper Article