Some moments arrive as a flash of inspiration. A flash from the White City nearly blinded Charles Mulford Robinson.
Talent helps lead commission studying terrorismFormer Missouri Sen. Jim Talent finds himself back in the national limelight this week as a leading player in a study that predicts at least one sweeping act of terrorism in the next five years.
Suffer the bailouts, grandkidsCottage industries sustain themselves in large part through sentiment. Tap an emotion and ring a cash register. Aside from the making of soppy movies and greeting cards, no mass manufacturing manages so light a touch.
Rich harvest
Clear days allow the hilltop home of Bill Guinn a westward view to the Atchison, Kan., grain elevators and beyond. It proves a breezy vista.
Soil on his rolling land arrived on unclear days, the loess grains borne by winds thousands of years back and traveling from the river valley to become Missouri cropland. Later times ascertained its productivity.
Mr. Guinn’s grandfather came to this land near DeKalb, Mo., in the 1800s. A Kentuckian, Robert Lee Pierce got off the train in New Market and settled in, probably looking to grow tobacco. Pierce Road runs alongside the home of Bill Guinn, who was born in his grandparents’ house about a quarter of a mile east.
Missouri remains better than the nation overall in the percentage of children without health insurance, said a report released Tuesday. But the numbers show the 135,000 young people in the state without coverage.
Past meets prologue of thanksAmericans threw out Great Britain in a fight for national sovereignty. Once it came time to house their treasured documents of liberty, Americans chose a Brit to explain the objective.
Sizing up an operatic long viewArtistic endeavors seldom make room for words like dodecahedron. Singers find it difficult to roll off the tongue.
Graves questions need for auto bailoutRep. Sam Graves says some in Congress think they can pass legislation that changes the fundamental laws of economics.
Northwestern counties rank high for older workersSeveral Northwest Missouri counties lead the state in the number of older residents in the work force.
Professor digs deep to uncover Missouri’s past
History remains a realm of headstrong governors and foolish disputes, of sovereignty challenged and men ready to do battle with pitchforks.
Thomas Spencer stands hours in courthouse back rooms looking to document long-gone people and events. The historian’s burden brings with it assorted dead ends and some treasured “aha!” moments.
Age recommends the courthouse in Keosauqua, Iowa. Built in 1840, it somehow eluded the infernos that claimed so many other firetrap courthouses in the 19th century. Hence, primary-source records survive, and Dr. Spencer found himself amid them, going through boxes of court cases dating back more than 160 years.
Missouri’s congressional delegation has taken to task a federal agency decision that threatens to alter the retirement status of some state educators.
Kansas governor appoints Democrat to succeed JenkinsThe election of Republican Lynn Jenkins to the Kansas 2nd District congressional seat has led Gov. Kathleen Sebelius to appoint a Democratic lawmaker as the next state treasurer.
Leaders that match U.S. heartAmericans followed their worst moment with some of their best work.
Two-way thinking on economyBad economic news appears so prevalent these days that business publications should come with a box of tissues.
Help wanted?Nobody’s hiring, huh? Tell that to the federal government.
Palin's a star, but don't expect Blunt to disappearMissouri Gov. Matt Blunt's trip to Miami this week, his last as a member of the Republican Governors Association, provides a lesson in the speed of changing political fortunes.
Preserving wartime memories
Warren S. Hinton saw enough of Europe during his first and only trip there.
He saw destruction caused by ancient volcanoes and modern bombs. He stood where citizens watched gladiators battle in Rome and where soldiers, nearly two millennia later, watched countrymen die in Dachau. He explored a temple that survived 2,500 years and witnessed too many young men dying.
Mr. Hinton departed the continent in the fall of 1945 and never went back.
Our culture depends on convenience. We Americans enjoy nothing more than shorthand.
Voting for some sense of fairnessCall it, if you wish, part of the St. Joseph experience. But I guess, with a certain reading of Tuesday’s election result, you could call it part of a broader national experience.
One of my former neighbors worked at Quaker Oats half of his life, a dedicated guy who rose through the ranks of a company in his hometown. Through circumstances beyond anything that had to do with his considerable abilities, his corporate loyalty and his work ethic, he lost his job.
Office holders offer praise for Roy Blunt
As Missouri Rep. Roy Blunt stepped aside as minority whip, the second-ranking Republican in the U.S. House, politicians weighed in with praise for their long-time colleague.
Region's reps remain solidly conservativeA Republican congressman from Virginia, Tom Davis, made some news last spring by writing a memo suggesting his party needs to "rebrand" itself. It was a soul-searching piece of writing, and a prescient one.
Election evokes history, but governing lies ahead
Bill Caldwell can’t shake the image, a boyhood memory that came to mind as the nation elected its first black president. The Buchanan County Democrat remembers dining at a Morrison’s Cafeteria in Orlando, Fla. African-Americans cooked the food, carried the trays and washed the dishes. But they weren’t allowed to eat in the restaurant. “I asked my dad, ‘How come?’” he said Wednesday. “Being in the Deep South in the 1960s and seeing where we’ve come from in some places, to electing a person of color, I’m very pleased.”
Little bang for the buckIn the end, the sound and fury signified nothing.
Graves turns back Barnes’ challengeKANSAS CITY — Congressman Sam Graves found himself outspent in a year dangerous for Republicans. But he bucked a national trend in winning a fifth term on Tuesday.
The incumbent Republican prevailed in the toughest race since his first election to a U.S. House seat in 2000, beating Democrat Kay Barnes by a 61 to 35 percent margin. With 354 of 450 precincts reporting at 11:15 p.m., Mr. Graves had 128,646 votes compared to the challenger’s 74,198. The lawmaker looked on his way to winning majorities in all 26 counties in the 6th District.
The possibility of a Northwest Missourian taking the state treasurer’s office stood within reach, but both campaigns were hesitant to call the election late Tuesday night as his opponent saw a late boost in votes.
About 55,767 votes separated a Savannah, Mo., Republican and a Florissant, Mo., Democrat at 11:30 p.m.
As a portent of what will be a major story in this election, and as a nice picture of the democratic process, hundreds beat the sunrise in St. Joseph Tuesday morning to cast votes.
Quietness of voting grows loudStuds Terkel died on Friday. A Chicagoan and Pulitzer Prize-winning writer, he stood as one of the nation’s foremost voices when a rabble needed rousing.
Barnes returns to St. Joseph, recollects campaign 'adventure'Party horns, posters and an air of celebration greeted Democratic congressional candidate Kay Barnes as she returned Sunday to the place her campaign began 538 days before.
Barnes wraps up campaign in the place it beganParty horns, posters and an air of celebration greeted Democratic congressional candidate Kay Barnes as she returned Sunday to the place her campaign began 538 days before.
A time to shine for unsureAnyone doubting theories about electoral undecideds has never been in a large group trying to order pizza.
‘A critical moment in our country’James Treu deals in history, not meteorology. But the professor recognizes when political barometers run amok.
So do established politicians, who know the normal legion of voters and stay in close contact with them. But they feel discombobulated in the midst of so many newly registered and first-time voters.
“That really takes them out of their comfort level,” said Dr. Treu, chairman of the history and government department at North Central Missouri College in Trenton. “When you get a year like this, it really kind of blows that out of the water.”
A year like this, indeed. Presidential politics blew in something different in 2008.
Sam Graves and Kay Barnes agree on what they disagree on. Everything.
The candidates for Missouri’s 6th District congressional seat concur that they would represent the region from different outlooks.
The Republican incumbent says he has never had an opponent more liberal. The Democratic challenger says she has never had an opponent with a fuller record of failed incumbency.
Congressman Sam Graves has broadened his lead over challenger Kay Barnes in the 6th District U.S. House race, according to poll released Wednesday.
Election judge appreciates the privileges of Americans
The world’s most populous nation has a political group called the China Democracy Party. The host government considers it a subversive organization.
Carol Burns traveled to China a few years ago as part of the national board of the YWCA. The St. Joseph woman calls it a blessing to have seen other parts of the world, to have witnessed up close the lives of those who lack what her home country provides at its core: the right to vote.
How low will he go, Republicans want to know. Does Barack Obama believe the nation's defense budget should be cut by 25 percent?
Hulshof, trailing in poll, undeterred in governor raceCongressman Kenny Hulshof told a room of less than 20 Republicans who showed for the gubernatorial hopeful’s St. Joseph rally to ignore the polls Tuesday.
Carnahan family hits the road for ObamaTwo Carnahans appear on Missouri ballots next week, but even more of them can be found on the campaign trail for Democrats. Tom Carnahan came to St. Joseph Tuesday evening with a get-out-the-vote message and a pitch for Barack Obama.
Wall becomes a battleground
One of democracy’s small skirmishes played out on Frederick Avenue Monday, with Democrats and Republicans conducting a hearts-and-minds battle for a brick wall.
Campaigns reach far for moneyThey live near and far, and they send money. Collectively, they send lots of money.
Welcome to Crazy SeasonAFTERNOON UPDATE: Welcome to Crazy Season. Expect anything as the campaign enters its last week. Especially sign vandalism.
Common ground hard to come by in Kansas 2nd District raceCandidates in the Kansas 2nd District congressional race — incumbent Nancy Boyda and challenger Lynn Jenkins — identify many things that frustrate them about Washington.
In the home district, the campaigns’ philosophies and tactics provide each with a good measure of frustration as well.
Ms. Boyda, the Democrat who surprised long-time lawmaker Jim Ryun two years ago, worries about the nation’s military readiness as wars in Iraq and Afghanistan spend human and materiel resources.
Rail lines came to Lilbourn before a post office. As workers cleared the cypress swamps of Southeast Missouri, the St. Louis, Memphis and Southwestern Railroad Co. hauled the lumber through this settlement.
Airport issue spills into final debate
Campaign accusations have exceeded the commonplace in Northwest Missouri as the father of one congressional candidate threatened to sue his son’s opponent for defamation. An attorney for Bruce Graves, father of incumbent Rep. Sam Graves, sent a letter to Democrat Kay Barnes objecting to a political ad regarding the family’s relationship to the airport in Tarkio, Mo. The Barnes campaign, which released the letter, continued its assertion that the Graves family got “a sweetheart deal” on access to the airport land and that the facility got $750,000 in taxpayer-funded renovations.
Kansan sees a heritage worth saving
Cedric Priest stands in a Brown County field and points out the spring where settlers watered their animals and the hillside where fires burned clean native grasses, only to have nature renew the growth.
The Kansan knows all that crunches underfoot, the little bluestem and big bluestem, the side-oats gamma and the goosegrass. His botanical education came not from classrooms but from walking this quarter-section, stepping over badger holes and inspecting what man employed and the Almighty created.
Missouri Sen. Christopher Bond found a reason to agree with Joe Biden, his Senate colleague and Democratic vice presidential candidate.
Attacks continue during 6th District congressional debateKANSAS CITY — Sam Graves and Kay Barnes filed this year to run for office, but the congressional candidates accused one another on Tuesday of running from office.
No coattails in the 6th DistrictPresidential campaigns have frequented the region. Missouri has been tagged a battleground state. The question arises about coattails on the state’s down-ticket races.
Questions on health care go beggingStories like this come up every so often. Sometimes, they get framed in the context of famous people having the same troubles as the rest of us.
Jill Biden drops by Democratic HQ
Jill Biden visits St. Joseph Democratic headquarters, Sunday.
Jill Biden rallies Dem volunteers in St. Joseph
Jill Biden told a group of St. Joseph supporters Sunday that she sees the effects of failed economic policies on students in her classroom. A teacher of English composition at Delaware Technical and Community College, she maintains her course schedule four days a week even as her husband, Democrat Joe Biden, runs for vice president. “I’m seeing students who can’t do their homework because they can’t afford the books,” Dr. Biden said. “I’m seeing students who can’t come back for extra help because they can’t afford the gas.”