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BOONVILLE -- Three bankers were named to the Committee of Public Safety, the body organized to keep the peace by making prominent citizens personally liable for damages caused by guerrilla raids. The committee president was James Nelson, a secessionist and one of Boonville's wealthiest residents and a trustee of the Bank of St. Louis Boonville branch. William Gibson, another secessionist, also was named to the committee, as were William Trigg, a Unionist and a prominent businessman and banker; Isaac Lienburger, a Unionist, and William Burr, a Unionist and cashier of the Bank of Boonville.
FMCSA announces that MCSAC will hold a meeting on Monday- Thursday, December 5-8, 2011, which will include a joint meeting on Wednesday, December 7, 2011, with the MRB. All four days of the meeting will be open to the public for their duration.
FMCSA announces that MCSAC and MRB will hold a joint subcommittee meeting on Wednesday- Thursday, January 4-5, 2012. Both days of the meeting will be open to the public. Time and Dates: The joint MCSAC-MRB subcommittee meeting will be held on Wednesday-Thursday, January 4-5, 2012, from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Eastern Time (E.T.). The meeting will be held at the Hilton Alexandria Old Town, 1767 King Street, Alexandria, VA 22314 in the Washington and Jefferson Rooms on the 2nd floor. The Hilton Alexandria Old Town is located across the street from the King Street Metro station. Matters To Be Considered: The MCSAC-MRB subcommittee will consider ideas and concepts the Agency should consider for potential regulatory changes to the current physical qualifications standards to address the medical...
The PSA and its supporters asked all senators to work cooperatively with Sen. John "Jay" Rockefeller IV, as chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee, and to cosponsor his bill, S.28, The Public Safety Spectrum and Wireless Innovation Act of 2011.
FULTON -- The Committee of Public Safety for Callaway County included a prominent hotel owner, a successful merchant and the owner of the land where Union troops were ambushed in July. The committee, named by Maj. William Goddard of the 15th Illinois Infantry, was to be held personally liable for damages suffered by Unionists or injuries to Union soldiers in Callaway County.
Charleston's fire chief hopes officials can answer several questions he has regarding a recent study of his department during a committee meeting today at City Hall. Members of the Public Safety Committee will discuss the study with officials from System Planning Corp.'s TriData Division, the company that compiled the study. The meeting begins at 5:30 p.m. and is open to the public.
Grassroots Photo Campaign Targets L.A. Public Safety Committee LOS ANGELES, Jan. 5, 2012 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Armed with smart phones, members of the Coalition to Ban Alcohol Ads on Public Property in Los Angeles and hundreds of community supporters launched a grassroots City-wide campaign today to document the over- proliferation of alcohol ads on public property. Activists are canvassing neighborhoods and contributing photos of ads in this first-ever mobile phone texting campaign designed to wake-up members of the Los Angeles Public Safety Committee to the public health threat of over-exposing vulnerable populations to seductive alcohol advertising.
MEXICO, Mo. -- Col. Ulysses S. Grant appointed Absalom Hicks, well known as a secessionist from northern Boone County, as a member of the Committee of Public Safety for Audrain County. Hicks was the son of a Santa Fe trader, the late Young Ewing Hicks, whose family had been virtually bankrupted by bad investments in the North Missouri Railroad that culminated in a forced sale of the family estate in May. Hicks, an 1852 graduate of the University of Missouri, was commissioned as a captain by Gov. Claiborne Fox Jackson when he led a company calling itself the "Sturgeon Invincibles" to Jefferson City after the May 10 Camp Jackson Affair.
PASADENA - A bill authored by Assemblyman Roger Hern?ndez (D - West Covina) aimed at cracking down on the "sexting" phenomenon among minors passed today in the state's Assembly Committee on Public Safety. AB321 would stiffen penalties for the malicious dissemination of electronic images of minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct and allow schools to provide instruction regarding the risks and consequences of sexting.
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