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INSIDE...
Aug 2 - 4 , 2020 • Vol. 1, Issue 117
Elevate Branson
displays the first
tiny home of new
5-acre community
By K.D. Michaels
Staff Writer
75 Years in Branson:
Central Bank, local chambers
celebrate. Page 3
Vote August 4:
See county ballots in our
special insert.
Silver Dollar City
is best of the best
Outlaw Run at Silver Dollar City ranked in the Top 10 of USA Today’s Best Roller Coaster poll. (Courtesty
Herschend Family Entertainment)
Special to Branson Globe
BRANSON, MISSOURI – A
60th Anniversary Diamond Jubilee
comes with a great big bow
as Silver Dollar City in Branson,
Missouri takes the crown for #1
Amusement Park in all the land
by 10 Best/USAToday Readers’
Choice Awards.
Bird-friendly yard:
MDC shows you how in
online class. Page 12
WEATHER...page 13
Highs in the 80s, with some
periodic clouds and shower.s
In total, Silver Dollar City is
awarded three amusement-related
awards in this nationwide poll of
USA TODAY readers. The two
additional awards go to the 2015
Guinness World Record-holding
wooden roller coaster, Outlaw
Run, ranks in the Top 10 Best
Roller Coaster poll (#10) and
Buckshot Annie’s, home of the
City’s favorite skillet meals, ranks
as the #5 Best Restaurant.
This news is during a season
when the 1880s-themed park
opens a historic ride and an allnew
area. Mystic River Falls,
considered an engineering marvel
in the global attractions industry,
includes a rotating 4-platform,
8-story lift and massive waterfall
drop – creating an only-of-its-kind
water ride, rightfully claiming
“The Tallest Drop on a Water Raft
Ride in the Western Hemisphere.”
“The roaring river experience,
the adventure of the lift, the moments
spent in the elevated channel
and then the climax of the final
drop combine to make this a
unique experience only found at
Silver Dollar City,”
according to
Brad Thomas, President of Silver
Dollar City Attractions. “Mystic
River Falls is a family thrill ride,
and joins our strong roster of
award-winning family fun rides –
from our famed coasters Outlaw
Run and Time Traveler to a “City”
filled with legendary adventures
for the entire family,” Thomas
said.
As for Buckshot Annie’s, many
loyal Silver Dollar City guests
will tell you the massive skilSEE
SDC, PAGE 2
Elevate Branson is one step
closer to developing a tiny
house community after a 400
square foot tiny home was delivered
to their Gretna Road
campus on Wednesday. The
prefabricated house, complete
with living room, kitchen, one
bedroom, bathroom and a front
porch, is on loan from Eden
Village of Springfield for the
next 60 days, so that members
of our community can get a first
hand view of how the planned
affordable housing community
will look.
“We wanted our friends and
neighbors to see exactly what
we are planning for this tiny
house development,” explained
Bryan Stallings, who along
with wife, Amy, founded Elevate
Branson. “The homes are
small, but they are well made,
and stylish.
These are places
folks can be proud to call
home.”
A total of 48 tiny homes will
be placed on individual lots on
a 5 acre plot of land near Elevate
Branson, to be known as
Elevate Community.
The land
was donated by an anonymous
benefactor.
In addition to affordable
housing, Elevate ComSEE
TINY HOME, PAGE 2
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LOCAL
• TINY HOME
Continued from page 1
munity will also offer work, apprenticeships,
and a variety of
support services.
To reside in Elevate Community,
an applicant must meet
financial guidelines for low income
housing. Occupants will
be responsible for monthly rent,
and proper care and upkeep of
their home, as well as following
a set of rules for personal
conduct.
Another stipulation
of becoming a part of this new
development is residency. Each
applicant must prove that he or
she has been a resident of Taney
County for at least 12 months
prior to occupying a home in
Elevate Community.
Elevate Branson founders Bryan and Amy Stallings pose on the front porch of the first of 48 tiny homes to
be built in Elevate Community. (Special to Branson Globe)
Stallings explained that the
tiny house will be on display
at Elevate Branson for the next
60 days, and interested persons
can tour the home on an appointment
basis. Businesses,
organizations and individuals
can sponsor one or more of the
tiny homes. Depending on their
level of sponsorship, they could
CONFIRMED POSITIVE CASES
TANEY COUNTY
329
STONE COUNTY
84
RECOVERED CASES
TANEY COUNTY
103
STONE COUNTY
49
bransonglobe.com
name their home, choose paint
colors for inside and outside,
and can provide care and support
for the future occupant of
the home they sponsor.
“We aren’t just building
houses. We’re building community,”
Stalling emphasized.
“Our mission is to empower our
neighbors to reach their full potential.”
While
Elevate Branson works
diligently to provide basic
needs for many in our community,
Stallings noted that those
needs go beyond the basics of
food and affordable housing ,
adding “It must include meaningful
work, positive relationships,
hope, dignity, and purpose
to create real and lasting
change.”
To set up an appointment to
tour the tiny home, or to learn
more about sponsorship opportunities,
call Elevate Branson
at 417-294-1300.
Support Our
Local Veterans!
COVID-19 in Stone and Taney counties, by the numbers: (As of 7/31/2020. Data provided by TCHD and SCHD websites)
DEATHS
TANEY COUNTY
4
STONE COUNTY
1
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bransonglobe.com
LOCAL
Chambers of commerce celebrate 70th
anniversary of Central Bank in Branson
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 3
Buckshot Annie’s succotash recipe is awarding-winning. (Photo
courtesty of Herschend Family Entertainment.)
• SDC
Continued from page 1
let-created meals are a “must-do”
during a visit to the park.
The Hollister Area Chamber of Commerce joined forces with the Branson Chamber of Commerce to
celebrate the 70th Anniversary of Central Bank of Branson. Although, the festivities were dampened
not only by the weather, but also limitations due to Covid-19, spirits were high as those in attendance
shared in this major milestone of our long time member and community supporter, Central Bank of
Branson. Holding the scissors are Case Whitaker, left, and Mike Booth, both of Central Bank. (Photo
courtesy of the Hollister Chamber of Commerce)
Resolution to close Branson Recycle Center fails
A resolution to permanently
close the Branson Recycle Center
was voted down by aldermen at
their board meeting Tuesday night.
Information had been presented
to aldermen several weeks ago on
the costs of the center to the city.
According to the report, it would
cost the City around $265,000 annually
to reopen the center and operate
it as before.
Many individuals spoke out in
opposition to the closing and therresolution
was eventually voted
down by all five aldermen.
It was also announced that Taney
County officials are looking into the
possibility of taking over the program
and are expected to discuss it
at next week’s County Commission
meeting.
The
original succotash recipe is one
of a long-time employee whose
grandmother taught how to throw
together most vegetables in the
garden (and then some), all presented
today at the park on a grill
in a 6-foot skillet.
“These awards highlight the
world-class offerings at Silver
Dollar City,” said Brad Thomas,
President of Silver Dollar City
Attractions. “Our guests come
from all over America’s heartland.
The Silver Dollar City team
strives hard every day to ensure
these families can escape the concerns
and worries of today to enjoy
our crafts, our rides, our food,
our shows and festivals. We appreciate
these guests for believing in
us and supporting us for over 60
years, and certainly for voting for
us in this poll.”
The internationally acclaimed
1880s-style Silver Dollar City was
chosen as a nominee by a panel of
amusement and theme park experts
consisting of USA TODAY
editors, 10Best.com editors and
additional influencers from around
the country.
Silver Dollar City is currently
presenting Moonlight Madness,
presented by Humana®, through
August 9 with park hours extended
until 10 p.m. and fireworks
nightly.
For more information,
call 800-831-4FUN(386) or visit
www.silverdollarcity.com
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COUNTY BALLOTS
TANEY COUNTY REPUBLICAN BALLOT
bransonglobe.com
TANEY COUNTY DEMOCRATIC BALLOT
Where to vote in Taney County
United Methodist Church, 1208
Bradleyville School, 16474 N
State Hwy 125, Bradleyville
Branson 1
Branson Community Building,
201 Compton, Branson
Branson 2
First Presbyterian Church of
Branson, 420 W Main St, Branson
Branson 3
W Hwy 76 Branson
Cedar Creek
Cedar Creek Fire Department,
6981 Hwy M, Cedar Creek
Forsyth 1
Forsyth
Municipal
Building,
15405 Hwy 160, Forsyth
Forsyth 2
Forsyth First Baptist Church,
10000 Hwy 76, Forsyth
Forsyth-Taneyville
New Vision Baptist Church, 179
Boston Center
Boston Center Community
Building, 7829 Hwy 248, Branson
Bradleyville
Church Camp Rd, Taneyville
Hollister 1
Hollister City Hall, 312 Esplanade
St., Hollister
Hollister 2
Hollister Middle School, 1798
St Hwy BB, Hollister
Hollister 3
Oakmont Community Building,
2308 Hwy 86, Ridgedale
Kirbyville
Kirbyville Middle School, 6225
Hwy 76E, Kirbyville
Merriam Woods
Merriam Woods Del Showers
Community Building, 4385 Hwy
176, Merriam Woods
Mark Twain
Mark Twain School, 37707 US
Hwy 160, Rueter
Mt. Branson
Tantone Industies, 1629 State
Hwy 76, Branson
North Branson
Branson High School, 935 Buchanan
Rd, Branson
Rockaway Beach
Bridge of Faith Church, 296
Lake St., Rockaway Beach
Skyline
Skyline Baptist Church, 949
State Hwy 165, Branson
Walnut Shade
Brookeside Church, 10123 US
Hwy 160, Merriam Woods
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COUNTY BALLOTS
STONE COUNTY COMBINED BALLOT
REPUBLICAN PARTY
FOR GOVERNOR
Vote For One
RALEIGH RITTER
MIKE PARSON
JAMES W. (JIM) NEELY
SAUNDRA McDOWELL
FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Vote For One
ARNIE C. AC DIENOFF
MIKE KEHOE
AARON T WISDOM
MIKE CARTER
FOR SECRETARY OF STATE
Vote For One
JOHN R. (JAY) ASHCROFT
FOR STATE TREASURER
Vote For One
SCOTT FITZPATRICK
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
Vote For One
ERIC SCHMITT
FOR UNITED STATES
REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 7
Vote For One
ERIC HARLEMAN
KEVIN VanSTORY
STEVE CHENTNIK
BILLY LONG
CAMILLE LOMBARDI-OLIVE
FOR STATE SENATOR
DISTRICT 29
Vote For One
MIKE MOON
DAVID COLE
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 138
Vote For One
BRAD HUDSON
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 158
Vote For One
SCOTT CUPPS
FOR NORTHERN ASSOCIATE
COMMISSIONER
Vote For One
WAYNE BLADES
FOR SOUTHERN ASSOCIATE
COMMISSIONER
Vote For One
HANK SMYTHE
MIKE COOPER
FOR SHERIFF
Vote For One
JOHN P. ELMORE
DOUG RADER
FOR ASSESSOR
Vote For One
MATT DAUGHERTY
FOR CORONER
Vote For One
JOHN CUNNYNGHAM
FOR PUBLIC ADMINISTRATOR
Vote For One
GLENDA "WENDY" METCALF
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
FOR GOVERNOR
Vote For One
NICOLE GALLOWAY
JIMMIE MATTHEWS
ANTOIN JOHNSON
ERIC MORRISON
ROBIN JOHN DANIEL VAN
QUAETHEM
FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Vote For One
GREGORY A UPCHURCH
ALISSIA CANADY
FOR SECRETARY OF STATE
Vote For One
YINKA FALETI
FOR STATE TREASURER
Vote For One
VICKI LORENZ ENGLUND
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
Vote For One
RICH FINNERAN
ELAD GROSS
FOR UNITED STATES
REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 7
Vote For One
TERESA MONTSENY
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 158
Vote For One
BRENDA McKINNEY
LIBERTARIAN PARTY
FOR GOVERNOR
Vote For One
RIK COMBS
FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
Vote For One
BILL SLANTZ
FOR SECRETARY OF STATE
Vote For One
CARL HERMAN FREESE
FOR STATE TREASURER
Vote For One
NICHOLAS (NICK) KASOFF
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL
Vote For One
KEVIN C BABCOCK
FOR UNITED STATES
REPRESENTATIVE
DISTRICT 7
Vote For One
KEVIN CRAIG
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • SPECIAL INSERT
Where to vote in Stone
County
Union
Union City Community Church
3886 State Hwy K. Billings
Williams
Shell Knob Shrine Club. 28149
Big Rock Rd, Shell Knob
Washington
Stone County Library/Galena,
322 State Hwy 248, Galena
Ruth C Rural/Sunset Cove
Indian Point Municipal Center,
957 Indian Point Rd, Branson
Ruth C
Lakewood Church, 119585
State Hwy 413, Branson West
Ruth B Rural
St Andrew Presbyterian Church,
30 James River Road, Kimberling
City
Ruth B
Kimberling Area Library, 45
Kimberling Blvd, Kimberling City
Ruth A
Reeds Spring High School Band
Rm, 20277 A State Hwy 413,
Reeds Spring
Pine B
South Road & Bridge Shop, 203
County Shop Road, Lampe
‘Why should I vote?’ Five great
reasons from iVoterGuide.com
WHY you should vote? Who
says so? Does it make a difference?
What if you don’t like the
choice
of candidates,
should
you still vote?
Here are five great reasons
you should go to the polls on
Tuesday from iVoterGuide.
com. We’re listing the reasons
here, but you’ll want to go to
their site to read more about
each one.
Reason #1:
The Bible is clear that we
should care about who governs,
obey legitimate authority, and
be salt and light in a world of
darkness.
Reason #2:
We are to be good stewards of
all that God has given us – including
our citizenship.
Reason #3:
Elected officials determine
laws that affect us – whether
we vote or not, and those laws
affect our ability to live out our
beliefs.
Reason #4:
Every vote matters.
Reason #5:
We impact future generations.
VOTE ON AUGUST 4!
Pine A
Blue Eye Lions Community
Bldg, 138 State Hwy EE, Blue Eye
Pierce/Grant
Christian Church Comm. Center,
104 E. Edgewood, Crane
McKinley/Ponce De Leon
Abesville Elementary, 54 Medical
Springs Rd, Galena
Lincoln
Elsey First Baptist Church,
36534 State Hwy 413, Crane
Hurley
Hurley City Hall, 202 S Walnut,
Hurley
Flat Creek A/Flat Creek B
Cape Fair Community Building,
8627 W State Hwy 76, Suite
B, Cape Fair
Cass
Jamesville Southern Missionary
Baptist Church, 213 Riverview
Rd. Clever
Alpine
VFW Post #2203, 24204 State
Hwy 39, Shell Knob
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LOCAL
bransonglobe.com
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LOCAL
SMAC Youth Exhibit
to begin in August
Submitted to Branson Globe
Hollister, MO—The Southern
Missouri
Arts
Connection
(SMAC)
will host Creative Expressions
Youth Exhibit, August
7-31 at its Branson Underground
Gallery, 7 Downing Street in historic
downtown Hollister. A Gallery
Night reception will be held
August 7, 6-9 p.m., during the
First Friday Art Walk. Admission
is free and open to the public.
Pablo Picasso once said, “Every
child is an artist. The problem
is how to remain an artist once
he grows up.” Many artists have
long tried to recapture the wonder
and freedom of expression
of their childhood only to find it
a never-ending battle to discard
the rules of nature and art. Youth
are not bound by those rules yet
learned, and let their imaginations
sore. Through the Creative Expressions
Youth Exhibit, SMAC
examines the uninhibited artistry
of youth and celebrates childhood
play and creativity. Come view
the world through the art of area
youth—a world filled with wonder
and infinite possibilities.
Southern Missouri Arts Connection
(SMAC),
a 501C3
non-profit local center of creativity,
art education, innovation, and
community partnership,
strives
to improve the quality of life in
southern Missouri by connecting
individuals with the arts, for the
benefit of all.
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 5
SMAC Creative Expressions Youth Exhibit will be August 7 - 31 at the
Branson Underground Gallery. (Submitted to Branson Globe)
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OPINION
Dear Branson Community,
Thank You all for your input
and for caring about our community.
The
Branson Board of Aldermen
and I have received hundreds
upon hundreds of e-mails,
texts, social media comments
and messages, and telephone
calls regarding COVID-19 and
face coverings. I have responded
to as many as I could. The majority
of the feedback I have received
has been from those who
recognize that face coverings
are the best option. I am proud
of our Board of Aldermen who
took action to slow the spread of
Kim Rohde
Publisher
(417) 872-2951
lkimrohde@yahoo.com
Brenda Meadows
Editor & Staff Writer
(417) 231-7601
info@BransonGlobe.com
David Stoltz
News Correspondent
(228) 355-2900
ltcdls@gmail.com
Gary Groman,
a.k.a. The Ole Seagull
Columnist Emeritus
KD Michaels
Staff Writer
(417) 251-2776
kdmichaelsbranson1@gmail.com
Rob Doherty
Account Representative
& Distribution Manager
(504) 583-8907
robd@bransonglobe.com
Karen Halfpop
Digital/Production Director
production@
BransonGlobe.com
Letters to the editor that are sent
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words are given preference. Published
or unpublished letters become
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and verifiable phone number.
LETTERS
Who represents the people?
Does the current Board of
Aldermen represent people &
businesses in Branson or their
own personal interest?
Prior to our last Aldermen
election in Branson, we had a
divided board. There seemed to
be three conservatives and three
liberals.
They couldn’t agree
and it seemed like every vote
was a 3-3 tie; and the Mayor
would side with the liberals.
With changes in Board of Alderman
chairs, the board seems
overwhelmingly in the control
of the Mayor now. Larry Milton
appears to be the only Alderman
who has steadfastly
held and debated conservative
Sadly, Branson has been singled
out in headlines recently as a
“hot spot” for COVID-19. While
the numbers of COVID-19 cases
in Taney County are rising, I do
not agree with this assessment.
Media outlets use percentages
based on the population of our
area and fail to add in the thousands
of visitors that are continuing
to come to our City to the
total baseline.
If you’ve been around town
Edd Akers. (FILE)
COVID-19 rather than do nothing.
Our mandate runs to September
8th, 2020, and will be
continually reviewed.
principles!
His campaign was
to “bring reason, logic and common
sense to the table” and he
has done it with great character,
against great frustration.
In regard to Mandatory
Masks, Milton was the only
Alderman to vote against it. In
regard to the Abstention Ordinance,
again Milton stood firm.
How about the ordinance to
prevent City Staff from talking
to Board Members about grievances?
Yes, Mr. Milton was the
only Alderman to vote “no”
and protect the rights of Staff
to have protection against City
Administrators that offend
them.
So again: Does the current
lately, you know, our visitor traffic
is steady and getting better.
This, combined with the passage
of the face covering ordinance
and the swift action our City Hall
Board of Aldermen represent
the people of Branson?
Are
they prepared to listen to the
businesses who are working
hard to create a sustainable
economy?
Their campaign slogans
boasted “the city needs someone
who can communicate and
bring people together for the
citizens of Branson”, “we need
to draw people here with new
attractions”, “get the city back
to work.” Rubbish. Empty
promises.
Mayor Akers probably put it
best when he promised, “I think
we’ll see a different City of
Branson over the next 2 years.”
Boy, is it different.
bransonglobe.com
Mayor’s Moment: A message to the community from Mayor Edd Akers
Administration took in March to
revise the budget accordingly, is
a positive sign for our community.
I am encouraged by where we
are currently and will continue
to keep the health and safety of
our community a priority while
keeping our economy strong.
For those who pray, I solicit
your prayers for discernment and
the wisdom of all city employees
and elected officials so that we
may keep the people we serve in
the center of our focus.
Thank you for letting me serve
you,
Mayor Edd Akers
You have not listened to the
people who are on the front
lines of the economy. You have
listened to people who work
in medicine and make money
through illness. You have listened
to departments and interest
groups that have enormous
job security. You have cowered
to social media lizards who prey
on hard-working people from
the comfort of their screens.
You have become emotionally
engaged with very fearful people.
We
are on the ground: we talk
to our customers every day and
ask their opinions. We might
SEE LETTERS, PAGE 7
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OPINION
• LETTERS
Continued from page 6
not be the best source of scientific
surveys but over 80% of
our guests want the freedom to
choose masks and other PPE.
They want the government to
stand down. They didn’t come
here to bring us disease but to
be refreshed and recharged from
their own seasons of despair.
Over 85% of our customers
are guests. Mayor Best knew
that 70% of the people who
come to Branson come for the
shows. We’re all about shows,
rollercoasters and entertainment.
What an honor! That’s
what drives our economy! We
make a sandwich and remind
people to head out to Silver
Dollar City or catch a show at
the Clay Cooper Theater.
The
money we make lets up shop for
groceries at Natures Wonders,
have our oil changed at Pennzoil
and get our hair cut at Fat
Donny’s. Can you imagine the
ripple-effect when theaters are
empty and 100’s of employees
are without work?
We love our local patrons
but we require our out-oftown
guests to remain afloat.
We’re a hospitality community.
We’ve talked to the Aldermen
and Mayor over and over
how the majority of our guests
have no desire to be mandated
where to sit, what to wear and
how to think about their health.
We have such amazing veterans
who know what freedom costs.
The majority of the Aldermen
and the Mayor have been deaf
to our cries.
They mock our
misery with sarcasm like “Encourage
you to work on a plan
B”. I have no Plan B. My plan
is to keep my employees paid
so they can care for themselves
and their families. My plan is
to greet every guest that comes
through our door with the energy
and enthusiasm of a town
that wants them here. My plan
is to honor all the entertainers
and hospitality businesses that
are standing strong. My plan is
to keep my doors open as long
as I can endure so my employees
are provided for.
The Aldermen acted like this
Mask Mandate had a 50:50
community survey result. They
felt, again, the need to break the
tie in their liberal fashion.
Thank your Mr. Milton for
your outstanding character
and your understanding of the
Branson travel industry and the
plight of small businesses in
Branson.
It’s been said, “The coronavirus
will come and go but the
government will never forget
how easy it was to take control
of your life; to control every
sporting event, classroom,
restaurant table and church
pew.”
Darin S. Frantz
Owner, Schlotzsky’s - Branson,
MO and Owasso, OK
Goggles anyone?
Dear Editor,
Now Dr. Fauci thinks it
would be good for people to
wear goggles to battle to prevent
the spread of the Chinese
Virus. So I’m sure the Taney
County Health Department and
the Branson City Council will
most likely want to adopt an ordinance
for mandatory goggles
in the city. Probably William
Mahoney has already contacted
the Mayor to discuss this important
matter.
James Plummer
Branson
Help Support Branson local businesses
@bransonlocalbusinesses.com
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 7
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STATE
bransonglobe.com
Missouri voters to
decide on Medicaid
expansion Tuesday
By Nadia Ramlagan
Public NewsService
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. -- Missouri
voters will have a chance to
decide whether the state should expand
Medicaid in Tuesday, August
4 primary election.
Amendment 2 would modify the
Missouri Constitution to extend
Medicaid coverage to adults ages
19 to 64, with incomes at or below
133% of the federal poverty level.
Emily Kalmer, Missouri government
relations director for the
American Cancer Society Cancer
Action Network, said the amendment
would benefit cancer patients
and people with chronic health conditions
who may have lost jobs in
the COVID-19 crisis.
She pointed out lower-income
Missourians would also be able to
access early detection and diagnostic
tests through Medicaid.
“So, one good example of that
is colorectal cancer,” Kalmer said.
“We know Medicaid expansion
increases colorectal cancer screening.
Here in Missouri, the screening
rate for the uninsured is about 35%,
compared to 69% overall.”
She added the earlier a cancer
is detected, the more opportunities
there are for treatment.
Missouri’s Medicaid program
doesn’t cover most adults without
children, and the eligible income
threshold is among the lowest in
the nation. Opponents of expansion
include the Missouri Farm
Bureau, which has said it will
“cripple” the state budget.
Kalmer said Medicaid expansion
also would allow cancer patients
to take part in the monitoring
and follow-up care they need
to remain cancer free.
“We know it’ll help reduce the
number of uninsured Missourians
across the state,” she said.
“And when more Missourians
have access to health insurance,
they have more access to things
like doctors’ visits and cancer
treatment; all the things we know
help cancer patients have a better
chance in their fight.”
Groups like Families USA
estimate
expanding Medicaid
would give more than 350,000
uninsured Missourians access to
health coverage.
The fate of the expansion of Amendment 2, that would modify the
Missouri Constitution to extend Medicaid coverage to adults ages
19 to 64, will be decided on Tuesday’s August 4 primary election.
(Special to Branson Globe)
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STATE
Missouri’s Hawley says U.S. Senate
has not acted on duck boat legislation
Missouri’s junior senator is calling
on his U.S. Senate colleagues
on Capitol Hill to approve his legislation
aimed at preventing a repeat
of the deadly 2018 duck boat tragedy
on southwest Missouri’s Table
Rock Lake.
Missouri State Highway Patrol
crews assist the U.S. Coast Guard
during the duck boat recovery efforts
on July 23, 2018. Seventeen
people were killed in the incident,
including nine from one family.
The victims drowned when the
vessel sank quickly, during a storm.
The second anniversary of the tragedy
was last week.
U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley (R) says
the Senate has not acted on his bill.
“It is more vital today than ever.
It would help prevent exactly the
kind of tragedy that we saw on Table
Rock Lake,” Hawley says.
Hawley’s legislation would require
amphibious passenger vessels
to be equipped to stay afloat, in the
event of flooding. The legislation
would also require duck boats to remove
canopies, and would require
additional life preservers.
Hawley describes the legislation
as tough and important.
“It would impose new security
requirements on every single duck
boat in our state and nationally. It
would require new inspections, it
would require new reporting efforts
and standards, and put those in
place,” says Hawley.
He says the tragedy never should
have happened, because the National
Transportation Safety Board
(NTSB) made several recommendations
to the U.S. Coast Guard
after a similar 1999 tragedy in Hot
Springs, Arkansas.
Aug 2 - 4 2020 • 9
Thank you for reading the Branson Globe!
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STATE
bransonglobe.com
Arrow Rock, Boone’s Lick
and Sappington Cemetery
state historic sites to host
information meeting Aug. 13
Courtesy of Missouri Department
of Natural Resources
JEFFERSON CITY, – Representatives
from Missouri State Parks
invite the public to attend a combined
informational meeting for
Arrow Rock State Historic Site,
Boone’s Lick State Historic Site
and Sappington Cemetery State
Historic Site on Thursday, Aug. 13
at 6:30 p.m. at Arrow Rock State
Historic Site Visitor Center, 39521
Visitor Center Drive, Arrow Rock,
Missouri.
The public is invited to share
comments about the state historic
sites and their operations. Representatives
from the state historic
sites will be present to provide information
and to answer questions.
Input from the public is important
to Missouri State Parks. These
informational meetings, which held
in all state parks and historic sites,
help create two-way communication
with the public. The meetings
give staff the opportunity to let people
know the status and future plans
for the park or historic site, and
they offer visitors the opportunity
to comment on the facilities. For
a list of scheduled informational
meetings, visit mostateparks.com/
page/66611/informational-meetings.
The
public is strongly encouraged
to follow social-distancing
guidelines and be proactive in protecting
themselves and others amid
ongoing public health concerns.
Come prepared with hand sanitizer
and bottled water, avoid large and
congested crowds, and “please”
stay home if sick. Face coverings
are encouraged when social-distancing
measures are difficult to
maintain and may be required by
local orders.
Arrow Rock State Historic Site,
39521 Visitor Center Drive, Arrow
Rock, west of Columbia. For more
information, contact Arrow Rock
State Historic Site at 660-837-3330.
If you have questions regarding
Missouri State Parks, contact us at
moparks@dnr.mo.gov. Missouri State
Parks is a division of the Missouri Department
of Natural Resources.
A combined informational meeting for Arrow Rock State Historic
Site, Boone’s Lick State Historic Site and Sappington Cemetery State
Historic Site on Thursday, Aug. 13 at 6:30 p.m. at Arrow Rock State
Historic Site Visitor Center, 39521 Visitor Center Drive, Arrow Rock,
Missouri.
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STATE
Submitted by University Communications
Office
Missouri State University’s College
of Education (COE) teacher
candidates will soon connect
with peers as far as North Africa
through a program sponsored by
the U.S. Department of State. The
Virtual Exchange for Teacher Candidates
program is made possible
by a grant from the Stevens Initiative.
“The
Stevens Initiative is an
international effort to build global
competence and career readiness
skills for young people in the
United States and the Middle East
and North Africa by growing and
enhancing the field of virtual exchange,”
a press release states.
Missouri State is one of only 17
grantees to receive funding for a
virtual exchange program.
The Virtual Exchange for Teacher
Candidates, in cooperation with
Moroccan Regional Centers of Education
and Formation, will build
inclusive teacher education curricula
that supports future teachers
from Morocco and the United
States as they learn with and from
each other.
The program will launch during
the fall 2020 semester. The project’s
coordinator is Dr. Jennice
McCafferty-Wright, an assistant
professor in the childhood education
and family studies department.
“The
largest component of the
project, an eight-week series of
student dialogues, will be ready
for
students
in
our
elementary
social studies methods courses in
September,” McCafferty-Wright
said. “Other components of the
exchange, such as an international
colloquium series, will be open for
the entire COE community. We’ll
add more exchange features as the
project grows.”
While traditional, in-person exchange
programs have been canceled,
programs such as MSU’s
will be a sustainable and accessible
global learning tool.
McCafferty-Wright said participating
teacher candidates will
build critical cultural understanding
and literacies, as well as a commitment
to global education. The
program will help students enter
careers with international, professional
relationships to create their
own virtual exchanges.
“Teaching requires an understanding
of the world. Connecting
with teacher candidates in other
parts of the world helps us better
understand ourselves and our place
in the world as educators,” McCafferty-Wright
said. “Additionally,
students with educators who teach
for global understanding are better
prepared for critical civic engageAug
2 - 4, 2020 • 11
MSU receives funding for virtual cultural exchange program
ment in a diverse democracy.”
Created in 2015, the Stevens Initiative
is committed to expanding
the virtual exchange field through
three pillars of work: investing
in promising programs, sharing
knowledge and resources, and
advocating for virtual exchange
adoption.
The
Virtual Exchange for
Teacher Candidates is supported
by the Stevens Initiative, which is
sponsored by the U.S. Department
of State, with funding provided by
the U.S. Government, and is administered
by the Aspen Institute. The
Stevens Initiative is also supported
by the Bezos Family Foundation
and the governments of Morocco
and the United Arab Emirates.
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STATE
By Francis Skalicky, Mo. Dept
of Conservation
JOPLIN, Mo. – Providing good
habitat for birds involves more
than putting water in a birdbath and
hanging a feeder in the backyard.
Having the proper combination of
shrubs, wildflowers and small trees
can attract a variety of birds around
your home for your viewing pleasure.
People can learn more about how
to establish habitat that will attract
a variety of birds at the Missouri
Department of Conservation’s
(MDC) free virtual program “Creating
a Bird Sanctuary.” This online
program will be from 10-11 a.m.
on Aug. 12 and is being put on by
the staff of MDC’s Shoal Creek
Conservation Education Center in
Joplin. This program is open to all
ages. People can register for this
program at: https://mdc-event-web.
s3licensing.com/Event/EventDetails/173879
SIZZLING
SUMMER SPECIAL!
2 FOR THE PRICE OF
1 thru AUG 31
Not valid with any other offer. Exp. 8/31/20
During this program, MDC Conservation
Educator Jeff Cantrell will
cover a variety of species of woody
plants that provide food and cover for
backyard birds. Cantrell will also discuss
what type of native flowers are
best for attracting hummingbirds.
Those wanting to use native
plants to create habitats around their
homes are also reminded that there
will be a native plant pick-up event
Sept. 19 from 1-3 p.m. at the Shoal
Creek Conservation Center. Plants
bransonglobe.com
Learn how to create a bird-friendly yard at Aug. 12 MDC online program
have to be pre-ordered and they will
be able to be picked up from vendors
and paid for at this time. People
can get more details about this
plant pick-up event by contacting
Jeff.Cantrell@mdc.mo.gov (link
sends e-mail) or Kevin.Badgley@
mdc.mo.gov (link sends e-mail).
Though this program is free, registration
is required to participate
using the link above. Registrants
must provide an e-mail, so a program
link can be sent to them. This
program will include a chat-based
question-and-answer period where
participants can interact with the
presenters.
Using the appropriate plants can turn your yard into bird-friendly
habitat. (MDC Photo)
Showtimes: 3pm or 8pm
1600 West 76 Country Blvd. Branson, MO
Call for Tickets: 877-SIX-SHOW
theSIXshow.com
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STATE
by Jim Salter, Associated Press
O’FALLON, Mo. (AP) — The
popular Missouri tourist town of
Branson will require face coverings
in most public places in an
effort to slow the spread of the
coronavirus, despite the objections
of many, including comedian Yakov
Smirnoff.
Meanwhile, Missouri set another
one-day record Wednesday for new
confirmed cases of the coronavirus,
the 10th time this month that a new
daily record has been reached.
Smirnoff, who operates a successful
theater in Branson, told the
Board of Aldermen Tuesday night
that the mask ordinance would
make his adopted home more like
his native land, Russia, the Springfield
News-Leader reported.
“I’m hoping that you can make
this an island of freedom and choice
in the sea of hatred and fear,”
Smirnoff said, drawing applause
from many in the crowd.
Nevertheless, the board voted 4-1
to approve the ordinance, which
requires face coverings for people
ages 13 and older, with some exceptions.
Missouri
reopened its economy
in mid-June and has seen a big
surge in confirmed coronavirus cases
this month — so much so that a
new federal report lists Missouri as
among 21 states in the “red zone”
for the outbreak. Those states are
reporting more than 100 new cases
per 100,000 people.
Republican Gov. Mike Parson has
refused to issue a statewide mask
mandate, but several jurisdictions
across the state have enacted their
own.
Some places are going even
further. Starting Friday, St. Louis
County is limiting crowd sizes, ordering
bars to close early and getting
tough on businesses that ignore
the guidelines. Kansas City is considering
similar measures.
The state health department reported
1,927 new confirmed cases
of the virus on Wednesday, topping
the daily record of 1,773 set a day
earlier. The state also announced
seven more deaths.
Your Branson Area Weather Source
Loving The Ozarks
KEEP
CALM
AND
WASH
YOUR
HANDS
SUN
82
Afternoon
Showers &
T-Storms
Possible
63
MON
Branson Area 5 Day Outlook
TUE
All
told,
46,750
Missourians
have been diagnosed with
COVID-19, and 1,220 have
died. The number of infections is
thought to be far higher because
many people have not been tested,
and studies suggest people can be
infected with the virus without feeling
sick.
For most people, the new coronavirus
causes mild or moderate
symptoms, such as fever and
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 13
Regional media reports about Branson mask mandate
cough that clear up in two to three
weeks. For some, especially older
adults and people with existing
health problems, it can cause more
severe illness, including pneumonia,
and death.
WED
THU
82 83 82 85
Partly To
Mostly Cloudy
Slight Chance
For A Shower
61
Partly Cloudy
Chance for
Showers &
T-Storms
61
Partly Cloudy
Chance For
An Isolated
Shower or
T-Storms
Partly Cloudy
Chance For An
Isolated
Showers
60
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NATIONAL
‘Rebuilding Paradise’ looks at emotional toll of deadly fire
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) —
Almost two years since a wildfire
swept through his mountain town
and virtually wiped it out, Steve
“Woody” Culleton got to put the
final touches on his new home.
Two redwood trees were planted
in the ground, a new lawn and
stone patio transformed the once
barren yard into a green refuge.
“We’re happy,” he said. “We’re
totally home.”
The landscaping marked the
final chapter of a long ordeal that
was captured in “Rebuilding Paradise,”
a new documentary directed
by Ron Howard about the aftermath
of the most destructive wildfire
in California’s history.
Filmed over the course of a
Steve “Woody” Culleton rebuilding his home in Paradise, Calif., in a
scene from “Rebuilding Paradise.” (National Geographic via AP)
year, the documentary focuses on
the colossal cleanup and rebuilding
efforts after the Nov. 8, 2018,
inferno that killed 85 people and
destroyed some 19,000 buildings.
It follows several wildfire survivors
as they piece their lives back
together and offers signs of the
town’s resilience despite many uncertainties
about its future.
Howard said he had his doubts
when he went to Paradise to witness
the devastation. He knew
the town, having visited a couple
of times when his mother-in-law
lived
bransonglobe.com
Astronauts
face final leg
of SpaceX test
flight: back
down to earth
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)
there, and he was overwhelmed
by what he saw.
“I just thought, ‘Well, how are
they going to come back on this?’
I mean, here’s a region that is just
getting thrown so many body
blows, death blows,” he said.
“How do you respond and recover?
And the idea of rebuilding Paradise
became the question. Can it
even rebuild?”
While it touches upon the failSEE
PARADISE, PAGE 19
— A pair of NASA astronauts face
the final and most important part of
their SpaceX test flight: returning to
Earth with a rare splashdown.
Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken
took part in a farewell ceremony
Saturday at the International Space
Station, several hours ahead of their
planned departure on a SpaceX
Dragon capsule.
Despite approaching Hurricane
Isaias, NASA said the weather looks
favorable for a Sunday afternoon
splashdown in the Gulf of Mexico
near Panama City, Florida. It will be
the first splashdown for astronauts
in 45 years.
The astronauts’ homecoming will
cap a two-month mission that ended a
prolonged launch drought in the U.S.,
which has relied on Russian rockets
to ferry astronauts to the space station
since the end of the shuttle era.
In launching Hurley and Behnken
from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center
on May 30, SpaceX became the
first private company to send people
into orbit. Now SpaceX is on the
verge of becoming the first company
to bring people back from orbit.
“The hardest part was getting us
launched, but the most important is
bringing us home,” Behnken said.
A successful splashdown, Behnken
said, will bring U.S.-crew
launching capability “full circle.”
Space station commander Chris
Cassidy, who will remain on board
with two Russians until October,
presented Hurley with the small
U.S. flag left behind by the previous
astronauts to launch to the space
station from U.S. soil, in July 2011.
Hurley was the pilot of that final
shuttle mission.
The flag — which also flew on
the first shuttle flight in 1981 — beSEE
ASTRONAUTS, PAGE 16
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NATIONAL
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) —
Families trying to squeeze in a
summer vacation before school
starts better do some homework on
COVID-19 restrictions before loading
up the minivan.
The web of state and local quarantines
is growing more tangled by the
day: New York, New Jersey and Connecticut
have ordered visitors from a
whopping 34 states to quarantine for
14 days. Chicago and Washington,
D.C., have each singled out travelers
from about two dozen states. Other
states have their own lists. Some have
an option for visitors to get tested instead.
“Complicated
doesn’t begin to describe
it. I feel sorry for people. They
just want to go to Cape Cod. They
want to go to Vermont. I don’t know
what to tell them. People are pretty
much left on their own to figure out,”
said Kathy Kutrubes, owner of a travel
agency in Boston.
The restrictions — and maybe the
confusion, too — are contributing to a
sharp drop in travel, dealing a blow to
a key industry.
Before the outbreak, Americans
were expected to take 2.3 billion domestic
trips this year, according to the
U.S. Travel Association. But that’s
expected expected to drop about 30%
to 1.6 billion, the lowest level since
1991. Normally nearly a third of domestic
travel happens in the summer.
Abroad, a drop-off in tourism from
U.S. visitors and restrictions on crossing
borders have also led many travel-related
businesses to wonder if they
will survive.
The coronavirus is blamed for more
than 150,000 deaths in the U.S. and
more than a half-million elsewhere
around the world.
When it comes to travel restrictions
in the U.S., the situation varies widely.
Many states have no restrictions whatsoever
for domestic travel. But the
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 15
Road trip? Quarantines mess with Americans’ travel plans
number of states with quarantines is
growing as governors move to protect
residents amid flareups in places such
as Florida, Texas and Arizona.
For example, Maine requires
SEE QUARANTINES, PAGE 21
Iowa state fairgrounds visitors pass a corn dog stand set up for the
Taste of the Fair to be held this weekend in Des Moines, Iowa. (AP
Photo/Charlie Neibergall, File)
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NATIONAL
Comments? Questions? Call the Branson Globe at 417-334-9100
• ASTRONAUTS
Continued from page 14
came a prize for the company that
launched astronauts first.
Elon Musk’s SpaceX easily beat
Boeing, which isn’t expected to
launch its first crew until next year and
will land in the U.S. Southwest. The
flag has one more flight after this one:
to the moon on NASA’s Artemis program
in the next few years.
bransonglobe.com
“We’re a little sad to see them
go,” Cassidy said, “but very excited
for what it means to our international
space program to add this capability”
of commercial crew capsules. The
next SpaceX crew flight is targeted for
the end of September.
Hurley and Behnken also are bringing
back a sparkly blue and purple
dinosaur named Tremor. Their young
sons chose the toy to accompany their
fathers on the historic mission.
From left, front, astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley during an
interview on the International Space Station. (NASA via AP)
׉	 7cassandra://MCPqluccDtiQ1k17TiffdRXZ18rLElcb5ojQLtLbfucy`  _&ɄۮmIec"׉E bransonglobe.com
NATIONAL
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 17
Have a news
tip? Send it
to us at
info@
bransonglobe.com
VOTE
BRIAN
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
CHRISTIAN CONSERVATIVE VETERAN
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NATIONAL
NEW YORK (AP) — Broadway
seamstress Amy Micallef hasn’t put
her talent on hold while theaters are
shut. She’s been making plush toys —
unusual plush toys.
Micallef, who has worked in the
wardrobe departments of “Hamilton,”
“Waitress” and “Frozen,” makes
gleeful representations of COVID-19,
complete with a pair of eyes and faux
fur.
Each one goes for $23 on Etsy and
she encourages buyers to unleash their
anger on her creations — be merciless
against a virus that has caused so
much loss and disruption.
“Sometimes you need to throw
something against the wall, you need
to step on something. Do you want
to run that thing over with your car?
Honey, be my guest,” she said. “Here
is here is your chance for sweet, sweet
vengeance.”
While stages remain dark, Broadway
workers like Micallef are finding
ways to keep the lights on at home
with side hustles. Some teach dance.
Some offer music lessons or acting
tips via Zoom. Some make jewelry or
bransonglobe.com
Plush toys, jewelry, dance lessons — Broadway’s side hustles
prints of their art. Some sell skincare
products or handmade journals.
“Actors’ normal side gigs are catering
and even those jobs don’t exist. No
one’s hosting parties,” said Jeanna de
Waal, who is to play the title role in the
musical “Diana.” “A lot of people are
having to learn new side hustles and
utilize any skill that they’ve got to pay
the bills.”
The survival picture is certain to
get darker when the government’s
SEE BROADWAY, PAGE 20
Amy Micallef posing with her craft creations at her home. (Amy
Micallef via AP)
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NATIONAL
• PARADISE
Continued from page 14
ings of Pacific Gas & Electric
Corp., the utility whose equipment
sparked the wildfire, and
changing climate conditions that
caused the flames to spread at
extreme rates, the documentary
mainly focuses on the emotional
toll of rebuilding.
Howard’s team became close to
displaced families going through
the trauma of losing their homes,
a police officer whose marriage
fell apart under the strain of the
crisis and school workers who
fought to keep classrooms together.
Put
through what he called
a cruel test, Howard said their
struggles became a case study
for “what survival looks like, and
the possibilities for real healing
and also the inevitability of deep
wounds and real pain that can’t be
avoided in every circumstance.”
Michelle
John, the schools
superintendent in Paradise, was
under immediate pressure to
shut the school district and enroll
students elsewhere in the
area after the fire. She worked
with other school districts to find
space for
Paradise
students
to
stick together, and by the end of
the school year she pulled off a
high school graduation ceremony
many thought was impossible six
months before.
“The kids lost everything: their
homes, their sports teams, their
stuffed animals,” she recalled.
“Why would we take away their
teachers and their friends?”
A few days after the graduation,
John’s husband died of a heart attack.
She attributed his death to
the trauma of the fire.
“There’s no doubt in my mind
that the stress of the fire and his
overall sadness about what happened
contributed,” she said.
“His heart was just broken.”
Now retired and living in Reno,
Nevada, she said she still talks
frequently with her former colleagues
to guide them through the
new hurdle: how to help students
amid the coronavirus pandemic.
She bought a new property in
Paradise and plans to live there at
least part time.
“It’s difficult being away because
I want to be there to support
people,” she said. “We have
a shared bond because we went
through this tragedy; the ties cannot
be broken.”
Culleton, the town’s former
mayor and councilman, was one
of the first people in town to rebuild
and moved into his new
home last December. He said he
decided to rebuild several days
after his house burned down and
threw himself into the work to
make it happen.
There was little time to reflect
on the things he lost in the fire.
“Why sit down and think about
it?” he said. “To me, it’s painful
and triggers all kinds of stuff. I
want to move forward.”
More than 260 homes have
been rebuilt and the town has
received some 1,200
building
permit applications. Paradise is
slowly repopulating, a few grocery
stores and hardware stores
have reopened and Culleton believes
the community’s heart and
soul “is still alive and well.”
People came back for Paradise
High School’s football games, he
said, and traditions such as Johnny
Appleseed Days and Gold Nuggets
Day have been kept alive.
Still, his neighbors are gone
and Culleton acknowledges he
may not live to see the town make
a full comeback. He said he hopes
people who watch the documentary
come away with a better appreciation
of how precious and
fragile life is.
“What happened to us on November
8th is that we all thought
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 19
we were going to die,” he said.
“You can lose everything with a
blink of an eye. So I’m trying to
live to the fullest.”
National
Geographic is releasing
“Rebuilding
Paradise”
in select theaters and on-demand
through Laemmle’s and ShowcaseNOW’s
streaming services.
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NATIONAL
• BROADWAY
Continued from page 18
$600-a-week pandemic unemployment
compensation program expires
this month. Unemployment checks in
New York top out at $504 a week but
most people get a fraction of that, not
enough to get by in an expensive city.
The relief group The Actors Fund has
distributed more than $14 million in
assistance to some 12,000 people, but
more is needed.
“I can’t say this any clearer: The
arts and the entertainment sector as a
whole is on the verge of the biggest
existential crisis we’ve ever had,” said
Adam Krauthamer, the president of
Local 802, which represents musicians.
“We’re on the edge of the cliff.”
He said many of his 7,000 members
are taking a hard look at their careers
and may not return to Broadway
orchestra pits or symphony spaces.
Krauthamer warns the sound of New
York may soon be very different without
help.
“If the right politicians and philanthropists
and people who help the arts
are not engaged to put together a program
that will save culture and the arts
in New York City, it’s going to change
as we know it forever.”
Ali Solomon’s career was finally
soaring when the pandemic hit in
mid-March. Like many Broadway
artists, she had a patchwork of jobs:
She was an associate choreographer
for the off-Broadway show “Trevor:
The Musical,” the tour choreographer
for “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory”
and was helping a show in development.
All were stopped — but rent
wasn’t.
“You’re at the top of your game
after working for so many years and
now to go find a job in another industry,
where do you start? You’re at
the bottom of the totem pole. You’re
lucky if you’ll make minimum wage,”
she said.
To make ends meet, she is a skincare
consultant for Rodan and Fields
and teaches — both in-person at a
studio on Long Island and virtually
bransonglobe.com
for PassDoor, an online dance studio
created by Broadway veterans.
“I’m starting to add little bits of income.
None of it will compare to what
I was making before. But it’s something
and luckily I’ve been able to
save. But the fear, though, is that nest
egg that you’ve been saving is quickly
going to diminish because the cost of
living is so high.”
Living with easy access to the
theater district has always been
key to Broadway’s talent pool. But
those apartments often command
the highest rent. So some workers
are letting their leases lapse, moving
out and biding their time to
when the shows restart, raising fears
of a talent drain.
“I already know tons of people
who’ve left the city,” said Solomon.
“It doesn’t mean that they’re never
coming back, but they’ve given up
their homes. And they’re like, ‘Until
we have a reason to come back,
there’s no need to be here.’”
Still, Micallef has faith.
“I have the benefit of knowing
two very important things that I
think most people may not believe
or may not truly understand — No.
1: This will end. It will. I promise it
will,” she said. “And second, there
is good on the other side.”
׉	 7cassandra://ljeHD7EXH0qwyn79WoxGqra4PWo5V2N9-NtqyGHpwgẁ`  _&ɄۮmIec&׉Ebransonglobe.com
NATIONAL
• QUARATINES
Continued from page 15
Massachusetts visitors to either
quarantine or take a test, but Mainers
may travel freely in Massachusetts.
Chicago’s quarantine order
includes neighboring Wisconsin.
But people who cross the state line
for work are exempted.
In Connecticut, Paula Simchock
and her husband are planning to
hit the beaches in Delaware with
their daughter en route to dropping
her off at college in South Carolina.
But because both of those
states are on Connecticut’s quarantine
list, they expect to have to
isolate upon returning home.
“We’re definitely stir crazy. So
we’re really looking forward to getting
down to Delaware and enjoying
our favorite restaurants and surf
shop. We’re really excited about it,”
Simchock said. “To see that it’s on
the Connecticut hot spot list is disappointing.”
The
U.S. Travel Association believes
that with proper precautions
— masks, hand-washing, and proper
sanitation — people can travel safely.
More than a third of jobs lost
during the pandemic are in the travel
and tourism industry, said Tori
Emerson Barnes, spokeswoman for
the association.
“Really and truly, the only way
that we can have a sustained economic
rebound is to have people
moving again,” she said.
Mike Stumpf and his wife, who
live outside Philadelphia, were supposed
to take a cruise in Alaska in
June. Then a trip to Colorado was
canceled this week. A fall cruise to
Europe was delayed this fall, and
they bagged their annual trip to
Florida.
Between different state regulations
and health concerns, there’s
just too much uncertainty, he said.
“We won’t because it’s not the
worth the risk and every state has
different regulations,” he said.
In New York, Lyndie Callan had
to cancel her 60th birthday celebration
in Spain this summer because
of the country’s restrictions on
U.S. visitors. But even without the
restriction, she wouldn’t have felt
comfortable traveling.
“There’s only one way to get this
virus under control and that’s to behave
responsibly. It starts with me,”
Callan said. “I don’t see that my vacation
plans are all that important.
I’ll go on vacation next year.”
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 21
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HISTORY
bransonglobe.com
Today in History: Movies, sports and more
•
•
•
1838 Apprenticeship system
abolished in most of
the British Empire. Former
slaves no longer indentured
to former owners.
Labourer
1840
slaves
in
most of the British Empire
are emancipated
1842 Rotherhithe Tunnel
under the Thames opens
• 1842 Lombard Street Riot
erupts
• 1855 Castle Clinton in NYC
opens as 1st US receiving
station for immigrants
•
1861 Brazil recognizes Confederacy
•
1863
Battle of Little Rock,
Arkansas; start of Chattanooga
campaign
• 1863 Cavalry action near
Brandy Station-End of Gettysburg
Campaign
• 1867 Blacks vote for 1st
time in a US state election in
the South (Tennessee)
• 1869 1st voyage down Colorado
River
•
1870 Irish Land Act gives
rights to tenants of landlords
in Ireland
• 1876 Colorado becomes
•
•
•
38th state of the Union
1881 US Quarantine Station
authorized for Angel Island,
San Francisco Bay
• 1883 Amsterdam’s Grand
Hotel Krasnapolsky gets
electric lights
•
•
1883 Inland postal service
begins in Great Britain
1886 Great Britain annexes
Kermadec-Island near New
Zealand
1888 The roof of Seville’s
cathedral collapses after an
earthquake
1926 Failed assassination on
•
General Primo de Rivera in
Barcelona
1932 George Washington
quarter goes into circulation
• 1943 Race riot in Harlem,
NYC
Movies & TV
•
1927 Earliest date for a film
to be considered for the
Academy Awards
• 1934 2nd Venice Film Festival
opens
• 1953 KOBI TV channel 5
in Medford, Oregon (NBC)
begins broadcasting
• 1954 WKBT TV channel 8
in La Crosse, WI (CBS) begins
broadcasting
• 1955 WILL TV channel 12
in Urbana-Champaign, Illinois
(PBS) begins broadcasting
•
1956 KRCR TV channel 7
in Redding-Chico, California
(ABC) begins broadcasting
•
1959 WAAY TV channel
31 in Huntsville, AL (ABC/
NBC) begins broadcasting
• 1963 WQAD TV channel
8 in Moline, Illinois (ABC)
begins broadcasting
•
•
•
•
1967 WBRA TV channel 15
in Roanoke, VA (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1968 WXIX TV channel 19
in Cincinnati-Newport, OH
(IND) begins broadcasting
1970 KTSD TV channel 10
in Pierre, SD (PBS) begins
broadcasting
1970 2nd San Diego Comic-Con
International opens
at U.S. Grant Hotel
• 1971 CBS presents Masterpiece
Theatre’s 6 Wives of
Henry VIII
• 1979 12th San Diego Comic-Con
International opens
at U.S. Grant Hotel
• 1981 MTV premieres at
12:01 AM
• 1985 18th San Diego Comic-Con
International opens
at Hotel San Diego
EXP. 8/30/20
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HISTORY
Music
•
•
record and the last ever by a
Brooklyn Dodgers player
1960 Aretha Franklins 1st
recording session
Soul Singer Aretha Franklin
• 1963 Beatles Book is sold
out on its 1st day of sale
• 1964 Beatles’ single “A
Hard Day’s Night” goes #1
& stays #1 for 2 weeks
• 1969 110,000 attend Atlantic
City Pop Festival
• 1971 George Harrison’s
concert for Bangladesh
takes place in NYC
Sports
• 1906 Brooklyn Superbas MLB
pitcher Harry McIntire no-hits
Pittsburgh for 10 2/3 innings
but loses in 13th, 1-0 on an unearned
run
•
1918 Pittsburgh and Boston
Braves play a MLB record 20
scoreless innings before Pirates
win, 2-0 in 21
• 1928 Babe Ruth hits home run
#42 in the Yankees 12-1 win v
St. Louis Browns, takes him 4
weeks ahead of his 1927 pace
• 1933 NY’s future Hall of Fame
pitcher Carl Hubbell sets MLB
record for consecutive scoreless
innings at 45 1/3 as Giants
lose 3-1 v Boston Braves
•
1934 US Amateur Golf Championship
format is changed to
a 6-day event with no 36-hole
stroke-play qualifying, and 36hole
matches for semi-finals
and final
•
ts outfielder Mel Ott hits historic
500th MLB home run
off Braves Johnny Hutchings,
joins Babe Ruth & Jimmy
Foxx as only players to reach
milestone
•
1953 Boston Red Sox pitcher
Ben Flowers sets then MLB
record of 8 consecutive games
in relief
•
1954 Tour de France: Louison
Bobet of France wins by 15’
49” from Ferdinand Kübler,
for the second of his 3 consecutive
wins
• 1957 Gil Hodges hits his 13th
MLB career grand slam, a NL
•
•
1957 Ex MLB outfielder Glen
Gorbous throws a regulation
baseball a record 136m (445’
10”) in a game promotion
1961 Australian cricket captain
Richie Benaud takes 6 for 70
in England’s 2nd innings for
a 54 run 4th Test win at Old
Trafford
• 1963 Arthur Ashe becomes
first African-American tennis
player to be named in the US
Davis Cup team
• 1973 MLB All Star catchers
Thurman Munson of the NY
Yankees and Boston Red Sox’
Carlton Fisk brawl at home
plate Fenway Park; Red Sox
win, 3-2
• 1976 Seattle Seahawks take
the field for the first time in
pre-season game v SF 49ers
at the newly constructed Kingdome
in Seattle
• 1976 Reigning world F1 champion
Niki Lauda of Austria suffers
a near fatal crash during
the German Grand Prix at
Hockenheim
•
1977 San Francisco Giants 1st
baseman Willie McCovey hits
NL record 18th MLB career
grand slam
•
1978 Atlanta Braves trounce
Cincinnati Reds, 16-4 and halt
Pete Rose’s NL record hitting
streak at 44 games
• 1980 Gerd Wessig of East Germany
becomes the first male to
set a high jump world record
at the Olympics (2.36m [7’ 9”]
Moscow)
•
1982 American Greg Louganis
becomes 1st diver to score 700
(752.67) in 11 dives in winning
3m springboard gold, World
Championships in Guayaquil,
Ecuador
• 1982 East German swimmer
Petra Schneider breaks
her own 400m medley world
record by 0:19 (4:36.10) at
the World Championships in
Guayaquil, Ecuador
•
1982 After the first 13 runnings
of the midsummer classic,
Darryl Waltrip becomes the
first driver the win the Talladega
500 twice
Birthdays
• 1770 William Clark, American
explorer, soldier, Indian
agent and territorial governor
who led the Lewis and Clark
Expedition of 1804-06 and
claimed the Pacific Northwest
for the United States, born in
Ladysmith, Virginia (d. 1838)
• 1779 Francis Scott Key,
American lawyer, poet and
composer of the lyrics to
“Star-Spangled Banner”,
born in Carroll County, MaryAug
2 - 4, 2020 • 23
land (d. 1843)
• 1819 Herman Melville,
American author (Moby
Dick, Billy Budd), born in
NYC,
• 1965 J. K. Rowling, English
writer (Harry Potter novels),
born in Yate, Gloucestershire
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CLASSIFIEDS
bransonglobe.com
DEADLINES FOR CLASSIFIEDS
Wednesday’s paper: Tuesday 9 am
Friday’s paper: Thursday 9 am
Sunday’s paper: Friday 11 am
Email: info@bransonglobe.com
Call: (417) 334-9100
NOTICES & MEETINGS
TO ENSURE THE BEST
RESPONSE TO YOUR AD...
Please make sure your ad is correct
in the first issue in which it
appears. The Branson Globe is
responsible for one day’s charge
of the space occupied by the error.
If your ad is not correct, call us
immediately to have it corrected.
SERVICES OFFERED
NOTICES & MEETINGS
CELEBRATE RECOVERY is
a place to heal from your hurts,
habits, and hangups. We meet
every Tuesday night at 6:30
PM at Music City Centre. 1839
West 76 Country Blvd., Branson.
For more information call
417–320-2055 See you there!
SERVICES OFFERED
RESIDENTIAL
SERVICES OFFERED
AND
COMMERCIAL service
and installation
0% interest
financing 100% satisfaction
guarantee. GOFF
HVAC and Solar Energy
417-334-3681 goff-hvac.com
08/30
TUTORING LIVE/ONLINE,
doctorate-level
teacher
with
over 30 years experience. Special
Ed Certified Elementary
- High School services. Can implement
and design IEPs. Call
(913) 568-2431.
08/14
DON’T PANIC
... SELL YOUR
STUFF!
HELP WANTED
VENDORS WANTED
VINTAGE CHIC BOUTIQUE
in Forsyth, has booths available,
great store, location, traffic and
rent. Call afternoons Tue-Sat.
417-677-6673
07/31
MISC. FOR SALE
12 CUP COFFEE MAKER,
Bissell
Vacuum Clearview,
2004 Ford Explorer manual/
book, and a cork/metal bulletin
board. Prices range from $10
to $35. Please call or text (217)
774-7816.
08/14
FREE ESTIMATES FROM
ground up remodels roofs, deck,
additions, pole-barns, flooring
and complete build 5yr labor warranty
417-699-1635
08/30
FREE FOOD FOR THOUGHT
about Jesus Food Bank Program.
$10 gas free first visit only. Watch a
40-minute DVD about Jesus, I will
answer any questions you might
have with the Bible truth. Please call
417-337-3772 for an appointment.
2-3 people at a time. 08/30
ACE HOME IMPROVEMENT
Heating & Air HVAC Service &
Repair, Doors, Windows, Decks,
Fences, Pressure Washing, Int &
Ext. Painting, Siding, Roofing,
Flooring, Tile & Drywall.
Handy-man Work!
Call Ryan
417-335-1347
08/30
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CLASSIFIEDS
OFFICE HOURS 9am - 5pm
Monday to Friday
HELP WANTED
CAREGIVER, FORSYTH
AREA. Full or part time, days
and evening shifts, or live-in.
Care for elderly couple, medication
monitoring,
cooking
and light housekeeping.
Call 417-213-1783.
NOW HIRING
DIMITRIS GYROS kitchen
and service help. Apply in
person only. 111 East Main
St., Branson, Mo 65616
Do you love
NATURAL
HEALTHCARE?
Are you a person who has had
a successful career and is ready
for a change?
Or are you great at your job but
would like to own a business
where you can control your
time and the amount of money
you earn?
Are you a self-starter, who loves
to lead and guide others?
Would you like to help others
achieve a lifestyle of wellness
for the rest of their lives?
If this is you, I’m looking for
six individuals to give my
time and resources to help you
live a life you love.
Here’s how to apply
for a place on my
Business Team:
TEXT (417) 294-0805
with your name, cell phone and
email address.
APARTMENTS
HELP WANTED
Sales Position
supervised
With Honey lease shop at
Silver Dollar City.
Sunday - Wednesday on
days when SDC is open.
Call 417-869-0233
or text 417-294-0805
THIS COULD BE
YOUR AD
CALL
417-334-9100
TODAY!
STAY
CALM
AND
PLACE A
CLASSIFIED
AD.
(417)
334-9100
Support Our
Local Veterans!
HELP WANTED
APARTMENTS
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY!
Furnished 1 bed 1.5 bath Apt.
Call for details!
No smoking. No pets.
417-546-3334
Shepherd of the Hills Estates
www.soheapts.com
VEHICLES FOR SALE
RENT TO OWN
AUTOS
1&2 BR
APARTMENTS
1-1/2 BATHS, POOLS,
REC. ROOM
$525 MONTH & UP
Furnished Units Available,
Lakeviews Available
CALL 417-546-3334
Shepherd of the
Hills Estates
www.soheapts.com
LOW Down Payment
NO Initial Taxes & License Fees
NO Credit Check
FREE One Year Waranty on
motor & transmission
RENT TO OWN YOUR
AUTO TODAY
1119 E. State Hwy 76, Branson
417-335-5400
renttoownautosbranson.com
RVS
HOLLISTER-BRANSON
full time or vacation home, 43ft.
RV, 5 slides, large deck, gazebo,
patio, washer/dryer, quiet
area. $39,500. 417-213-1783.
08/14
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 25
Find your next
STAR EMPLOYEE
here!
(417) 334-9100
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WORSHIP
You are encouraged to worship with us!
Worship Directory
To advertise your church on our worship pages, please give us a call at the Branson
Globe: 417-334-9100, or email info@bransonglobe.com.
bransonglobe.com
“For I know the
plans I have for
you,” declares the
Lord, “plans to
prosper you and not
to harm you, plans
to give you hope
and a future.”
(Jeremiah 29:11)
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WORSHIP
Aug 2 - 4, 2020 • 27
Come to Me, all you
who are weary and
burdened, and I will
give you rest. Take My
yoke upon you and
learn from Me; for I
am gentle and humble
in heart, and you
will find rest for your
souls.…
(Matthew 11:28-29)
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bransonglobe.com
Toys with Longevity
B O U N Y S K E E D L E Y E R S K Y
R N E I B R A B A I A S N U G P A C
A D T O S L L A B T O O F N A R L A
B I C Y C L E S N O O L L A B A E B
I H H L E V I E W M A S T E R I
I E
C R A L V K N S S A L A E K I B D C
K A S E E N O R I S L I N K Y K O S
E V K K P E E P L A Y L L O O R S S
V E E N A K L E D N A L Y D N A C E
A R T O C O E R I N L O E A S C O C
B O C E N H U N A O A L D R E S P E
R I H E W M M N M A P Y L N M A E R
A C E T S Y Y Y D C A P B O M B S E
V C O E C E A A L S Y O T M R A F S
O H T H U L A H O O P O U I U G I E
D S C R A B B E S S S K Q S E G Z E
SLINKY
BARBIE
FOOTBALLS
HULA HOOP
CAP GUNS
CANDY LAND
OLD MAID
FARM TOYS
HOT WHEELS
CAP BOMBS
BICYCLES
DRUM SETS
ETCH A SKETCH
SIMON
VIEW MASTER
KALEIDOSCOPE
CHECKERS
GUMBY AND POKEY
YOYO
BALLOONS
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P(,Volume 1, Issue 117 NBranson Globe, Aug. 2 - 4, 2020. Your Source for Local News and Entertainment._&$UR