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Always FREE!
Your source for local news and entertainment
INSIDE...
By Jay Mejia, Special News
Correspondent
Vintage Ford pickup trucks of
the 1940s and ‘50s and beyond
will be rolling into Branson Friday
and Saturday July 10-11.
Ford aficionados can take a
Nurses Achieve:
With a little help from
their friends. Page 2
first hand feel, smell the fumes
and sneak a peak under the hood
of flaired, tricked out and souped
up Ford trucks at the annual Ozark
Mountain Run.
‘It’s fun for the whole family
and a great ride through the past,”
said Daryl Weather of Branson
News and Weather, sponsor ot this
year’s run.
This year’s two-day event will
be held in and around the park between
the 12 Oaks Inn and Spinning
Wheel Inn, host hotel, located
at 205 and 235 Scaefer St., respectively
in Branson.
“You won’t want to miss this
show if you’re interested in the
preservation of the old Ford
trucks,” Weather said. “Or just
come as a spectator you’re guarJuly
8-9, 2020 • Vol. 1, Issue 107
Free Ford truck festival returns this weekend
anteed to have a good time.”
The registration tent will be set
up in the park area. Registration
will be $25. There will be shirts
available at the registration booth
as well. Only registered trucks will
be allowed to park in the show
area.
There are still a few rooms available
at the hotel, Weather said.
Patrons are asked to call 417334-7340
to book rooms today.
Vendors are always welcome
whether it be truck parts or crafts,
Weather said.
“We just ask that everyone respect
the City of Branson rules by
obtaining a temporary business
license,” he added. “Anyone selling
out of their trucks without a
license will be asked to leave.
For information about the show,
people are asked to call Jim or
Margie Wagner at (918) 542-6496.
Here is the show schedule:
Friday, July 10, 2020
Meet & Greet Day
SEE FORD TRUCKS, PAGE 3
Explore at Home:
Check out beautiful
Hollister! Page 8
Deal is Done:
Read the detail$ about
KC deal Page 16
WEATHER...page 11
Highs in the mid 90s with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms
this week.
The annual Ozark Mountain Run, featuring vintage Ford pickups and panel trucks, takes place July 10 - 11. (Submitted to Branson Globe)
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LOCAL
Submitted to Branson Globe
Many people aspire to receive
Cardiac and Pulmonary Rehab
Center in Branson.
a master’s degree. For three Branson
nurses, they are doing just
that, together, despite challenges
and losses along the way.
“We’ve really had to rely on
each other,” said Martha Whitson,
who is an RN at CoxHealth’s
Whitson has been working in
Cardiac and Pulmonary Rehab
for the past 22 years and in December
she completed her master’s
in nursing. In May of this
year, her co-worker Hollie Holderfield
completed her master’s in
nursing. Not far behind is Wendy
Michel who is less than a year out
from completing her master’s in
leadership and management degree.
to
school, I started with the bachelor’s
program because CoxHealth
offered tuition reimbursement,”
Whitson said.
Before the tuition reimbursement
was available, she said the
program was cost prohibitive.
Scholarships from Skaggs Foundation
also helped alleviate the
financial strain. While the foundation
helped with funding, the
co-workers leaned on each other
for support and encouragement.
“I graduated with my bachelor’s
degree and a week later my
husband passed,” Whitson said.
“My work family got me through
the last three years. I needed them
for emotional support and school
helped distract me.”
Holderfield, the nurse manager
Nurses, from left, Martha Whitson, Hollie Holderfield and Wendy
Michel received support from each other and Skaggs Foundation to
further their education. (Submitted to Branson Globe)
at Cardiac and Pulmonary rehab,
worked on her bachelor’s degree
with Whitson. Before she and
CONFIRMED POSITIVE CASES
TANEY COUNTY
97
STONE COUNTY
12
RECOVERED CASES
TANEY COUNTY
31
STONE COUNTY
8
Whitson completed that program
they made the decision to continue
their education.
“We both felt like we weren’t
bransonglobe.com
Nurses find support, encouragement to achieve master’s degree together
fore.
“When I originally went back
done,” Holderfield said. “Learning
is something you always need
to do and I want to continue to
grow my knowledge.”
Like Whitson, Holderfield’s
journey wasn’t without devastation.
In
September 2018, Holderfield’s
husband Marc was diagnosed
with glioblastoma, an
aggressive form of brain cancer.
When her husband’s illness worsened,
Hollie Holderfield took a
leave of absence from school to
focus on her husband’s care.
“He supported me through the
entire thing,” Hollie Holderfield
said. “I was grateful for the support
I had from my co-workers,
not only through my schooling
but through his illness.”
Marc Holderfield passed in October
of 2019. A few months later,
Hollie Holderfield returned to
class to complete the degree she
started working on four years beShe
said having someone to
lean on was vital to her success in
the classroom.
“We’d lean on each other’s
strengths and weaknesses and
we supported each other,” Holderfield
said. “We made a good
team.”
Now that Holderfield has completed
her master’s degree, her
patients will be happy to hear she
has no plans to leave the rehab
center.
“I love where I’m at and I love
my patients and I love my staff,”
she said. “I feel this is where I
need to be.”
Michel is set to complete her
master’s degree next spring, yet,
she actually was the first of the
three to begin making plans to go
back to school.
As Michel was about to start
classes, her husband suffered a
heart attack, putting the skids on
everything. And while her husband’s
heart attack may have
slowed down her progress, she
SEE NURSES, PAGE 5
COVID-19 in Stone and Taney counties, by the numbers: (As of 7/06/2020. Data provided by TCHD and SCHD websites)
DEATHS
TANEY COUNTY
2
STONE COUNTY
0
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LOCAL
More COVID-19 cases active in Taney County
Staff Reports
COVID-19 continues plaguing
Taney County with the number
of cases at 97 at press time. As
always, TCHD is investigating
the cases, and will release more
information as it becomes available.
Many
of these cases are community
spread. There have been 2
deaths, and 31 recovered.
Last week was a particularly
active week, with the department
confirming 12 new COVID-19
cases in just 24 hours.
Prior to being diagnosed, these
12 cases are known to have visited
the following locations:
SATURDAY, JUNE 27TH
10:30 am – 7:30 pm Smith
Creek Moonshine at Tanger Outlet
Mall (masked)
Submitted to Branson Globe
The American Red Cross has
scheduled a blood drive at Our
Lady of the Lake Parish Center,
202 Vaughn Drive, Branson on
July 24 from noon until 5 p.m.
The blood drive is sponsored
by the Knights of Columbus at
Our Lady of the Lake Catholic
Church.
There is a critical shortage of
all blood types and blood products,
and all eligible donors are
SUNDAY, JUNE 28TH
Morning Walmart Super Center
at Branson Hills (masked)
MONDAY, JUNE 29TH
4:45 am – 2:45 pm Scooters in
Forsyth (masked)
10:30 am – 4:00 pm Smith
Creek Moonshine at Tanger Outlet
Mall (masked)
4:00 pm – 4:30 pm Walmart
Super Center at Branson Hills
(unmasked)
5:00 pm – 5:30 pm Walmart
Super Center at Branson Hills
(masked)
TUESDAY, JUNE 30TH
4:45 am – 7:30 am Scooters in
Forsyth (masked)
12:30 pm – 12:40 pm Walmart
on Hwy 76 (masked)
Early afternoon Pancho Villa,
Branson (unmasked)
encouraged to give.
If you are at least 18 years old,
weigh at least 110 lbs., and are in
good health, you may be eligible
to donate.
To donate, bring a valid photo
I.D. and/or a Red Cross donor
card.
For the safety of donors, volunteers
and collection staff, all
health precautions will be enforced.
Temperatures will be
checked at the door. Wear a
Afternoon YMCA, Hollister
(unmasked)
WEDNESDAY, JULY 1ST
9:00 am – 5:00 pm Smith Creek
Moonshine at Branson Landing
(masked)
If you were at any of these locations
during this time, please monitor for
symptoms. If symptoms do develop,
please notify your healthcare provider
for further consultation.
Taney County Health department
is asking that everyone wear a face
covering or mask, follow social distancing
guidelines and stay home if
you are sick.
For more information contact the
Taney County Health Department at
417-334-4544, visit our website at
www.taneycohealth.org, or like our
FaceBook, Instagram and Pinterest
pages.
American Red Cross blood drive scheduled July 24
mask; if you don’t have a mask,
one will be provided for you.
And, as always, if you are not
feeling well, please stay home.
Appointments to donate are
recommended. Go to www.redcrossblood.org
to schedule your
appointment.
Support Our
Local Veterans!
July 8-9, 2020 • 3
City requires face coverings
in city facilities; offers virtual
alternatives for doing business
Submitted to Branson Globe
BRANSON, Mo – Starting
Wednesday, July 8, 2020, at 8 a.m.
the City of Branson will require
anyone entering a City facility to
wear a face-covering to help slow
the spread of COVID-19.
This includes the Branson Parks
& Recreation’s RecPlex, the Branson
Police Department and City
Hall. In addition, anyone who attends
Municipal Court at City Hall
will also be required to wear a face
covering.
The city also remind citizens to
use the city website – www.bransonmo.gov
– to take care of almost
everything that would typically be
handled in person at city offices.
Utilities and tickets can be paid
• FORD TRUCKS
Continued from page 1
9 AM – 3 PM - Registration
Saturday, July 11, 2020
9 AM Flag/Remembrance Ceremony
Following
Ceremony – Noon
Registration
9 AM – 4 PM Live DJ “Wildman”
1:30
PM - Games (Weather Permitting)
online
at bransonmo.gov/308/Online-Payments.
Payments can also
be mailed, or patrons can utilize
the dropbox located on the south
side of City Hall near the Police
Department.
Business and liquor licensing
and tourism tax payments can be
done electronically as well, or can
also be dropped in the City Hall
dropbox. More detailed payment
instructions can be found at http://
bransonmo.gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=1065.
It
is also possible to report an
incident to the Branson Police Department
and request records virtually.
Find more detailed information
about that at http://bransonmo.
gov/CivicAlerts.aspx?AID=1076.
4:00 PM - Trophies
“There are plenty of shade
trees to sit under so bring your
lawn chairs,” Weather suggested,
adding “ but don’t be surprised if
you don’t sit in them much. Come
expecting to have lots of fun and
make friends that will last a lifetime.”
Show
organizers ask the public
to practice Social Distancing and
wear face masks if that makes
them feel comfortable.
Meet Hachi,
Our July
Pet of the Month
www.turtlecreekbranson.com
Hachi is a great dog and an
emotional support animal.
He's unique when it's time
to work. He is very
energetic when it's time to
play. He brings peace and
happiness to his owner's
home.
info@turtlecreekbranson.com
_ۮmIc_ۮmIc
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͠_ۮmIcנ_ۮmIc A̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc ߁̑9ׁHhttp://BransonGlobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc :ˁ̼9ׁHmailto:info@BransonGlobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc g̌9ׁHhttp://BransonGlobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc Q̺9ׁHmailto:robd@bransonglobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc m̀9ׁHmailto:itcdls@gmail.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc S̵9ׁHmailto:info@BransonGlobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc ]K̡9ׁHmailto:lkimrohde@yahoo.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc XJ9ׁHhttp://skaggs.netׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc b9ׁHhttp://Grace.NaׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc dA̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈ׉E>4 • July 8-9, 2020
OPINION
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
itcdls@gmail.com
Gary Groman,
a.k.a. The Ole Seagull
Columnist Emeritus
Rob Doherty
Account Representative
& Distribution Manager
(504) 583-8907
robd@bransonglobe.com
Karen Halfpop
Digital/Production Director
production@
BransonGlobe.com
Submit a letter to the editor:
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sent via e-mail and are fewer
than 400 words are given
preference. Published or unpublished
letters become the
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and will not be returned. All letters
must include name, address,
and verifiable phone number.
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and entertainment
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right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.
info@BransonGlobe.com • Phone: (417) 334-9100 • Fax: (417) 334-3767 • 1447 US Hwy. 248, Suite EE, Branson, MO 65616
BransonGlobe.com
My husband and I have been
surprised on many occasions to
note that many children do not
know how to say the pledge of
allegiance correctly. I have noted
children who do not know
which hand to use. Many young
men do not know to remove their
caps when the pledge is said. I
dare say that many probably
do not know what the words
“pledge” and “allegiance” truly
mean. Also, many children do
not know what our national anthem
is. There are many adults,
as well as children, who think
“America, the Beautiful” is the
national anthem. Children need
to be taught these things. It
might help develop their respect
for our flag if they knew the story
of how our national anthem,
the “Star Spangled Banner”, was
written.
Our national anthem was written
by Francis Scott Key.
He
was born in 1779 in western
Maryland, just a few years after
our Declaration of Independence
was signed. His family was very
wealthy and owned an estate
called “Terra Rubra”. When he
was ten years old, his parents
sent him to a grammar school
in Annapolis, Maryland, and he
graduated at age 17. He then
studied to be a lawyer. He was
a deeply religious man and was
active in the Episcopal Church.
He was asked to help negotiate
the release of a prisoner from the
British during the war of 1812.
1931 that it became the national
anthem.
After the war, Francis Scott
Key continued to live a very religious
life. Because of his religion,
he had been against the
war of 1812, but he did serve in
the war in the Georgetown artillery
in 1813 because he loved his
country so much. On January 11,
1843, while visiting his daughter
in Baltimore, he died of pleurisy.
There are monuments to him
bransonglobe.com
Train Up a Child: Teaching children to respect ‘Old Glory’
By Pat Lamb
at Ft. McHenry, the Presidio in
San Francisco, in Baltimore and
Frederick, Maryland.
If children can be helped to understand
the love that Francis Scott
Key had for our country and our
flag, they will better love and respect
them both. There are many
good books in public libraries that
can be checked out to give more information
about our flag and country.
It is worth the time and effort to
use these with children.
Pat Lamb. (FILE)
He was actually on a ship headed
back for Maryland with the released
prisoner when the British
attacked Ft. McHenry. The ship
was stopped until the end of the
attack on the fort and from the
ship, the attack was observed. It
was from this ship that Francis
Scott Key looked to see if our
American flag was still standing
after the British withdrew the attack.
He was happy to see the
flag was still there and he took
pen and paper and wrote the
poem that became the words to
the national anthem.
The British had bombarded Ft.
McHenry for 25 hours and finally
decided they could not capture it
and withdrew. The poem written
by Francis Scott Key was originally
named “The Defense of Ft.
McHenry”. It was handed out
as a handbill and the public fell
in love with it. It was renamed
“The Star Spangled Banner” and
became a song. It wasn’t until
Teach children about the pledge of allegiance and the Star Spangled
Banner. (Shutterstock photo)
@BransonGlobe
BransonGlobe
@BransonGlobe #Branson Globe
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LOCAL
• NURSES
Continued from page 2
continues to focus on her dreams.
“Next year, I’ll have been a
nurse for 40 years,” she said. “You
are never too old to keep learning.
It’s really baby steps. One foot in
front of the other, that’s how you
get to where you need to go.”
Through it all, Michel, Whitson
and Holderfield have had each
other to lean on, and the financial
support of Skaggs Foundation.
Michel, Whitson and Holderfield
each received numerous scholarships
throughout their years in
school.
“It was great getting the help
from Skaggs Foundation,” Whitson
said. “It was a huge help.”
“My husband is now retired
and so it takes some of that financial
strain off my family,”
Michel added. “It has been a
blessing.”
Since its inception in 2002,
Skaggs Foundation has awarded
$419,450 in scholarships to
students pursuing or advancing
careers in healthcare. In 2020,
47 scholarships were awarded
for a total of $35,000. Scholarship
funds are made available
annually from interest earned
from two permanently restricted
scholarship endowments.
To learn more about Skaggs
Foundation’s scholarship program,
visit SkaggsFoundaiton.
org or email Grace.Nash@
skaggs.net
July 8-9, 2020 • 5
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bransonglobe.com
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*bransonglobe.com
LOCAL
Missouri State debate
students are National
Grand Prix champions
Submitted to Branson Globe
Missouri State University students
claimed two major wins
at the National Grand Prix debate
tournament June 6-7. The
students are part of the Holt V.
Spicer Debate Forum, which
has regularly competed against
schools such as Harvard University
and Dartmouth College.
The Grand Prix, hosted by
MSU and originally scheduled
for March 14-15, took place online
June 6-7 due to COVID-19.
Gabe Morrison graduated in
May just before the tournament
occurred. He was still eligible
to compete, however, and Morrison
won the final debate of the
National Forensics Association
Lincoln Douglas Debate Grand
Prix.
“In the last debate, I defended
an unconventional measure:
federally-funded climate or environmental
aesthetics workshops,”
Morrison said.
Morrison said climate change
is a problem with such a massive
scale, it is difficult to imagine
how individuals, or even larger
communities, could meaningfully
contribute to a sustainable
future.
“My research suggested that
sustainability became much
more conceivable after environmental
workshops are dispensed
through hands-on, collaborative
experience,” Morrison said.
“Winning the final round was a
little jarring. I didn’t fully process
what happened until the
next morning.”
Energy and climate policy are
two of Morrison’s favorite areas
of research.
“I suppose that didn’t hurt,” he
said.
Morrison majored in philosophy
with a minor in English.
He is confident his debate skills
could help him succeed in a variety
of fields, including public
policy, public relations and advertising.
Freshmen
Brenden Lucas won
the junior varsity division of
the tournament, though Dr. Eric
Morris, director of the Spicer
Debate Fourm, says the division
was additionally championed by
junior Chase Coger.
“The common practice is not
to hold a final round when the
competitors are from the same
school, even though Brenden
was higher seeded coming into
finals,” Morris said.
Morris said three other Missouri
State Students also qualified
for elimination rounds in
an open division: freshman Sam
Cade and sophomores Peyton
Reeves and Michael Waggoner.
They were eliminated before the
final round or the seventh elimination.
The
Holt V. Spicer Debate Forum
welcomes all Missouri State
students. To join, students can
enroll in COM 321 or contact
Dr. Morris at ericmorris@missouristate.edu.
Debate students
will begin competing again in
September.
Help Support Branson local businesses
@bransonlocalbusinesses.com
July 8-9, 2020 • 7
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LOCAL
Staff Reports
The railroad is an important part
of Missouri’s rich history. Many
towns across the state exist only
because trains once stopped in their
community. Just like many other
Missouri towns, Hollister sprang
to life in 1906 when the first train
arrived in town. By 1910, the town
had a bustling train depot and the
town of Hollister became incorporated.
By 1910, realtor William
H. Johnson was busy bringing his
dream of turning Hollister into an
English style resort town to reality.
Today, the timber trimmed, cottage-style
buildings are on the National
Register of Historic Places,
and are a great place to hang out for
an afternoon or a weekend.
Welcome to Explore at Home, a
new series looking at interesting spots
around our area you need to visit.
The railroad loved Johnson’s idea
SIZZLING SUMMER SPECIAL!
2 FOR THE PRICE OF
1 thru AUG 31
Not valid with any other offer. Exp. 8/31/20
of an English village, and when the
new depot was opened in 1910, it
also boasted a half-timber style and
beautiful gardens. The depot was
called “the most beautiful station on
the White River line.”
By 1913, Hollister enacted a statute
requiring the buildings in the business
district to be of this same style.
The oldest building still standing
in Hollister is the American House,
a boarding house built in 1904.
Johnson’s Ye English Inn opened
for business in 1912, was expanded
by Johnson’s son Will in 1927.
When passenger train service
stopped in 1961, Hollister’s tourism
industry nearly dried up.
In 1967, Elijah Kirtley formed a
corporation to begin restoration of
downtown, which included paving
Front Street, which was renamed
bransonglobe.com
The little Ozark town that takes you back in time and across the pond
Downing Street. The old English
business district was added to the National
Register of Historic Places.
Then, in 2010, Janet Dailey
bought Ye English Inn and began
renovating. When it was ready to
reopen in 2011, the 21-room inn,
was renamed Ye Olde English Inn,
and includes the Riverstone Restaurant
and Black Horse Pub. All have
a rustic, English pub style atmosphere
that will take you back in
time, and across the pond.
Hollister’s business district then. (Ye Olde English Inn/Facebook)
Showtimes: 3pm or 8pm
1600 West 76 Country Blvd. Branson, MO
Call for Tickets: 877-SIX-SHOW
theSIXshow.com
Ye Olde English Inn today. (Ye Olde English Inn/Facebook)
׉	 7cassandra://ICJ1Jxf_38YKf6I8Y6woBQxnfN2GcYHjcysgbDOtzRM|`  _ۮmIc׉Ebransonglobe.com
LOCAL
Submitted to Branson Globe
SPRINGFIELD — Missouri
State University announced its
campus will full reopen on Aug. 9,
Dorms will be ready for students to
move in.
“Our faculty members will still
offer classes that will educate and
challenge students. Our staff members
will still do everything they
can to help students be successful,”
President Clif Smart said. “We’ll
still have fun events, interesting lectures
and inspiring performances.”
The university will continue to
follow local, state and federal safety
guidelines to make campus as safe
as it can be.
To prepare for the fall reopening,
Missouri State has published a Return
to Campus Guide. It outlines
plans for a smooth and safe return
to campus.
“I hope this guide will answer
many of the questions our students,
their parents and others have about
what’s going to happen,” Smart
said.
The guide highlights:
•
•
•
•
•
Decision-making principles.
Health and safety measures.
• Key information for staff and
faculty.
Plans for academics and student
success.
Plans for housing, dining and
campus life.
Policies for events and gatherings,
including athletic events.
Missouri State will release specific
information about face coverings
and testing (in early August) later in
the summer.
Ozarks Technical Community
College is coping by adjusting its
calendar for the fall semester.
The college will begin the semester
as originally planned on Aug.
24, and the last day of final exams
will be Dec. 18. However, the following
changes have been made to
the academic calendar:
•
Fall Break, scheduled for Oct.
12 and 13, is canceled. Classes
will be in session those days.
•
Thanksgiving Break is extended
from Sunday, Nov.
22 through Sunday, Nov. 29.
Classes scheduled for Saturday,
Nov. 21 will be held as
scheduled.
“These adjustments to the calendar
will allow the college to maximize
in-person class time before
a possible surge in COVID-19
infections could force the college
to adjust class offerings late in the
semester,” said Hal Higdon, OTC
chancellor.
Masks or face coverings will be
required for all students, employees
and visitors when they are in
any common area of the college.
Common areas include, but are not
limited to: classrooms, laboratories,
libraries and large public gathering
spaces (for example, the atrium at
the Springfield campus). Masks
may be removed in private offices,
office clusters or outside. The
college expects students to provide
their own masks. If a student does
not have a mask, they will be provided
with a disposable one.
The college will also employ
enhanced cleaning protocols, including
the use of unique disinfectants
that continue to disinfect for
July 8-9, 2020 • 9
MSU, OTC announce return to campus plans for fall
several hours, even after contact by
multiple people. Hand sanitizer and
disinfecting wipes will be available
in every classroom for students and
employees.
A masked student works at the Missouri State University Welcome
Center. (Submitted to Branson Globe)
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 Ncd9ׁHmailto:info@bransonglobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc	 (A̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc с̟9ׁHhttp://news.missouristate.eduׁׁЈנ_ۮmIc eA̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈ׉E10 • July 8-9, 2020
LOCAL
bransonglobe.com
Missouri State remembers
Mary Jean (Price) Walls
Submitted to Branson Globe
In 1950, Mary Jean (Price)
Walls was the first African American
student to apply to Missouri
State University. Though she was
qualified – she was salutatorian of
her class – she was denied admission.
In
2010, Missouri State awarded
her an honorary bachelor’s degree,
and in 2016 the Mary Jean Price
Walls Multicultural Resource Center
Annex was named in her honor.
Walls died on July 6, 2020. She
had eight children and she retired
from the workforce in 2009 after
serving as a janitor at a local science
center.
“I was saddened to learn of the
passing of Mary Jean Price Walls
this week,” said Missouri State
President Clif Smart. “She was
denied admission to the university
in 1950 because of the color of
her skin. She is a reminder of our
history of discrimination which we
continue to work to overcome.”
Walls’ son, Terry, uncovered his
mother’s story when he was a student
at Missouri State. He graduated
with a criminology degree in
2012.
“In 2016, the MSU Multicultural
Resource Center Annex was
proudly named in recognition of
Mary Jean Price Walls,” said Dr.
Dee Siscoe, vice president for student
affairs. “I was sad to hear of
her passing. I believe her legacy
will live on through the vast number
of students who will benefit
from the MRC Annex.”
Have a news tip? Send it to
us at
info@bransonglobe.com
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LOCAL
University Communications
Office
SPRINGFIELD — The Missouri
State University Ad Team took
first place in the McCain Institute’s
Peer-to-Peer Protective campaign
in a virtual competition June 23.
Teams originally planned to present
their campaigns in person, but
concerns surrounding COVID-19
changed the competition circumstances.
Instead,
MSU was one of three
universities to participate in a virtual
presentation via Zoom. While
this presented team members with
new challenges, they pressed forward
with the campaign and finished
strong.
MSU’s Ad Team has earned eight
national titles since 2008.
The team was tasked with creating
a campaign that aims to address
the topic of targeted violence in the
community.
Team members used skills they
learned in the classroom, practical
experience, outside research and
insight from advisors to create a
campaign that builds emotional intelligence,
positive self-image and
resilience in youth.
Their efforts resulted in the Kindness
Empowers Youth, or K.E.Y.,
program, to counter the spread of
Incel communities and targeted violence.
Incel
is short for “Involuntary
Celibate.” They are an online community
of predominately heterosexual
men whose self-worth is defined
by perceived physical and sexual
inadequacy.
The program aims to help children
in grades 3-5 build emotional
intelligence and a healthy self-concept
to make the right choices in
tough situations.
This opportunity is already opening
doors for the students to continue
the KEY campaign and launch
their professional careers.
“Competing on a national stage
allows graduates to connect with
a broader network and I’m excited
WED
93
Chance For a
Isolated
Showers &
T-Storms
72
that some of the team is already in
contact with high-profile organizations
following the win,” said Ad
Team instructor Samantha Francka.
EdVentures Partners facilitated
the competition. EdVentures is an
organization that focuses on developing
partnerships for students to
apply their skills and gain valuable,
real-world experience.
“The MSU Ad Team always assembles
a magical blend of student
talent that is creative, dedicated and
hard working,” said Tony Sgro,
CEO of EdVentures. “Not only
has their legacy been firmly established
based upon all the previous
campaigns they have won, but also
today, which is impressive given
the extremely competitive talent
landscape we see with participating
university teams.”
The 2020 team includes the following
students:
• Toni Buffa, St. Peters
• Hayden Ferguson, Lee Summit
Jordan
Galkowski, St. Charles
• Morgan George, St. Charles
•
Members of MSU Ad Team competed virtually. (Courtesy news.missouristate.edu)
Your Branson Area Weather Source
Loving The Ozarks
Branson Area 5 Day Outlook
THU
FRI
• Taylor Howard, Manchester
•
Lauren Kerr, Wichita
• Kennedy Kuhlmann, Wildwood
•
•
•
Lauren
McCracken, Cadet
Jordan Moore, Wildwood
Katie Novak, Chesterfield
• Tara Orr, Blue Springs
• Megan O’Shea, Wentzville
•
July 8-9, 2020 • 11
MSU Ad Team competes virtually and wins national competition
Students in MKT 480 (AdverSarah
Thomas, Jefferson City
Ad Team is a for-credit course
for students interested in pursuing
careers in the marketing field. Students
from all majors are welcome.
tising Campaigns) participate in
hands-on experiences that provide
an opportunity to work closely
with a real client who expects
campaign implementation and data-driven
results.
SAT
SUN
94 95 95 90
Chance For
Showers
& T-Storms
70
Scattered
showers &
thunderstorms
70
Mostly sunny
Possible late
night showers
or
Storms
73
Partly Cloudy
Possible
morning
showers or
storms
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STATE
bransonglobe.com
MDC taking applications for next
conservation agent training academy
By Joe Jerek, Missouri Dept.
of Conservation
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. –
Want to become a steward of
conservation, help people, and
protect nature by serving as a
conservation agent? The Missouri
Department of Conservation
(MDC) announces it is
taking applications during July
for up to 16 participants for its
2021 conservation agent training
academy, which will begin
April 1, 2021.
Selected candidates will undergo
26 weeks of intense training
in all facets of law enforcement
and resource management.
Those who make the grade will
receive county assignments and
become the faces of conservation
in their assigned communities
– educating and enforcing
the Wildlife Code of Missouri
through a community policing
approach, helping the public
with issues such as wildlife
damage and disease, and providing
information for water
and land management.
Get information on essential
job duties, education requirements,
experience and
knowledge needed, required
skills and abilities, physical
abilities required, pay and
benefits, along with additional
details, how to apply, and
conditions of employment online
at jobs.mdc.mo.gov/job/
Conservation-Agent-Trainee-MO/656440900/.
To
learn more about the job,
contact MDC Hiring Supervisor
Cheryl Fey at Cheryl.
Fey@mdc.mo.gov (link sends
e-mail), or at 573-5224115 ext.
3819.
Want to know more about
the work of conservation
agents? Watch these videos
from MDC Conservation
Agent Matt Smith at youtube.
com/watch?v=1856t1GC6OE
and MDC Conservation Agent
Lexis Riter at youtube.com/
watch?v=8Beigpg8I3A.
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bransonglobe.com
STATE
July 8-9, 2020 • 13
Enjoy picking - and eating - the wild fruits of summer
By Peg Craft, Missouri Dept. of
Conservation
If you’re looking for a new adventure
this summer, especially
one that’s healthy, tasty, and can
involve the whole family, berry
picking may be right for you. It’s
a chance to spend time together
outdoors and enjoy the fruits of
your labor.
Wildlife and people enjoy the
tastes of wild fruits in the summer.
They’re also rich in anti-oxidants,
fiber, and vitamins C and
K.
Mulberries are among the first
fruits of the season, ripening from
late May through July. Birds and
squirrels love them so you’ll find
the trees full with fruit and song.
And your kids’ hands and faces
sporting happy blue stains. Mulberries
make fine pies and cobblers.
The trees grow in a wide
variety of places and are common
in cities. The wood of the mulberry
tree has a number of uses,
including fence posts and furniture
because of its density and
decay-resistance.
A fruit that’s often picked when
it’s still green is the gooseberry.
The unripened fruit is tangy and
makes terrific pies. The ripe fruit
is red and sweet and it’s hard to
beat the birds to them. Gooseberries
are found June through September
in open woods and roadsides.
The leaves of gooseberries
can be used raw in a tossed salad
or slaw. They can also be used
to make tea. Another name for
gooseberry is feverberry, because
rumor has it you can crush up the
leaves, add them to hot water and
get a concoction that will break a
fever.
Blackberries are perhaps the
all-time favorite summer wild
fruit for people as well as raccoons,
squirrels, box turtles,
and birds. Ripening in late June
through August, blackberries
taste great fresh, in pies, and as
toppings. Look for their briar
patches in prairies, old fields and
along wooded edges. These berries
are sometimes used in natural
healing
techniques. The leaves
have been known to provide benefits
to those suffering from gum
inflammation and sore throat.
Watch how to make a creamy
blackberry pie video in the gallery
below.
It doesn’t take much prep time
to get started. You’ll need a bucket,
protection from sun and insects,
some old shoes, and long
sleeves and pants as some fruits
will be surrounded by thorns.
Make sure you know exactly
what you are picking before consuming
wild berries. It helps to
start with someone with experience.
Also, ask permission before
berry picking on private property.
It’s a great idea to share some of
your harvest with the landowners
that have granted you permission.
Blackberries are a favorite wild summer fruit. (Photo by MDC Staff,
courtesy Missouri Department of Conservation.)
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LOCAL
NEW YORK (AP) — President
Donald Trump’s niece offers a scathing
portrayal of her uncle in a new
book obtained by The Associated
Press Tuesday that credits a “perfect
storm of catastrophes” for exposing
the president at his worst.
Mary L. Trump, a psychologist,
writes that the coronavirus
pandemic, the possibility
of an economic depression and
deepening social divides have
brought out the “worst effects”
of Donald Trump’s pathologies,
which were less evident when
the country had a stable economy
and the lack of serious crises.
Those
factors, along with
“Donald’s penchant for division,
and uncertainty about our
country’s future have created a
perfect storm of catastrophes
that no one is less equipped
than my uncle to manage,” she
writes in “Too Much and Never
Enough, How My Family Created
The World’s Most Dangerous
Man.”
Mary Trump is the daughter
of Trump’s older brother, Fred
Jr., who died after a struggle
with alcoholism at 42.
In the book, Mary Trump
makes several revelations, including
alleging that the president
paid a friend to take the
SATs — a standardized test
widely used for college admissions
— in his place. She writes
that his sister, Maryanne had
been doing his homework for
him, but she couldn’t take his
tests. Donald Trump worried
that his grade point average,
which put him far from the top
of the class, would “scuttle his
efforts to get accepted” into the
Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania, which he
transferred to after two years
at Fordham University in the
Bronx.
“To hedge his bets he enlisted
Joe Shapiro, a smart kid with a
reputation for being a good test
bransonglobe.com
Mary Trump’s book offers scathing portrayal of president
taker, to take his SATs for him.
That was much easier to pull
off in the days before photo
IDs and computerized records.
Donald, who never lacked for
funds, paid his buddy well.”
And she writes, in awe, of
Trump’s ability to gain the
support of prominent Christians
and White Evangelicals,
saying, “The only time Donald
went to church was when the
cameras were there. It’s mind
boggling. He has no principles.
None!”
Mary Trump traces much of
her pain to the death of her father,
who died when she was
16, and her grandfather Fred’s
penchant, as she describes it, to
sew division in the family.
“The atmosphere of division
my grandfather created in
the Trump family is the water
in which Donald has always
swum, and division continues
to benefit him at the expense
of everybody else. It’s wearing
the country down, just as it did
my father, changing us even as
it leaves Donald unaltered,”
she wrote. “It’s weakening our
ability to be kind or believe in
SEE TRUMP, PAGE 15
Mary Trump’s book on left, Mary Trump on right. (Simon & Schuster,
left, and Peter Serling/Simon & Schuster via AP)
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LOCAL
• TRUMP
Continued from page 14
forgiveness, concepts that have
never had any meaning for
him.”
Trump, who rarely admits regret,
told The Washington Post
last year that he regretted having
tried to pressure his brother
to join the family business —
something Fred, who had long
wanted to be a pilot had no interest
in doing.
“It was just not his thing. . . . I
think the mistake that we made
was we assumed that everybody
would like it. That would be the
biggest mistake. . . . There was
sort of a double pressure put on
him,” Trump told the paper.
Trump has also cited his
brother’s struggle with alcohol
as one of one of the reasons he
doesn’t drink.
Publisher Simon & Schuster
announced Monday that they
would be publishing the book
two weeks early, on July 14,
citing “extraordinary interest.”
The revised date came after
a New York appellate court
cleared the way for the book’s
publication following a legal
challenge.
Robert Trump, the president’s
younger brother, had sued Mary
Trump to block publication of a
book, arguing in legal papers
that Mary Trump was subject
to a 20-year-old agreement between
family members that no
one would publish accounts
involving the core family members
without their approval.
A judge last week left in place
a restraint that blocked Mary
Trump and any agent of hers
from distributing the book, but
the court made clear it was not
considering Simon & Schuster
to be covered by the ruling.
In the book, Mary Trump said
she didn’t take her uncle’s run
for the presidency seriously
when he first ran.
“‘He’s a clown,’ my aunt
Maryanne said during one of
our regular lunches at the time.
‘This will never happen.’”
“I agreed,” Mary Trump
wrote.
She said she declined an invitation
to attend her uncle’s election-night
party in New York
City four years ago, convinced
she “wouldn’t be able to contain
my euphoria when Clinton’s
victory was announced.”
Instead, she found herself
wandering around her house a
few hours after Trump’s victory
was announced, fearful
voters “had chosen to turn this
country into a macro version of
my malignantly dysfunctional
family.”
She writes that current challenges
have weakened the president’s
usual tools for shielding
himself from blame.
“His ability to control unfavorable
situations by lying,
spinning, and obfuscating has
diminished to the point of impotence
in the midst of the tragedies
we are currently facing,”
she writes.
“His egregious and arguably
intentional mishandling of the
current catastrophe has led to
a level of pushback and scrutiny
that he’s never experienced
before, increasing his belligerence
and need for petty revenge
as he withholds vital funding,
personal protective equipment,
and ventilators that your
tax dollars have paid for from
states whose governors don’t
kiss his ass sufficiently,” Mary
Trump wrote.
White House press secretary
Kayleigh McEnany said of the
book: “It’s ridiculous, absurd
accusations that have absolutely
no bearing in truth. I have
yet to see the book, but it is a
July 8-9, 2020 • 15
book of falsehoods.”
White House counselor Kellyanne
Conway said in an interview
with Fox News that “there
are too many books out there
that are never fact checked,”
adding: “I believe family matters
should be family matters.”
_ۮmIc́_ۮmIc́
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SPORTS
(AP) The Kansas City Chiefs
made sure they’ll have Super Bowl
MVP Patrick Mahomes around as
long as possible.
Mahomes agreed to a 10-year
extension worth up to $503 million,
according to his agency, Steinberg
Sports. The deal is worth $477
million in guarantee mechanisms
and includes a no-trade clause and
opt-out clauses if guarantee mechanisms
aren’t met.
It’s the richest contract in professional
sports history, surpassing
Mike Trout’s $426.5 million deal
with the Los Angeles Angels.
“Since he joined the Chiefs just
a few years ago, Patrick has developed
into one of the most prolific
athletes in all of sports,” Chiefs
chairman Clark Hunt said in a statement
about the quarterback who led
them to their first championship in
50 years.
“With his dynamic play and infectious
personality, he is one of the
most recognized and beloved figures
to put on the Chiefs uniform.
He’s an extraordinary leader and a
credit to the Kansas City community,
and I’m delighted that he will
be a member of the Chiefs for many
years to come.”
The Chiefs had the 2018 NFL
MVP under contract for the next
two seasons but that wasn’t nearly
enough.
“Here to stay,” Mahomes wrote
on Twitter.
The contract extension starts
in 2022 when the NFL salary cap
is projected to be $227.5 million.
However, that number could be
lower depending on revenue losses
due to the cornonavirus pandemic
and the possibility any games
played this season won’t have fans.
Still, Mahomes will take up a big
chunk of Kansas City’s cap space,
around 20 percent depending on
the annual contract breakdown
and final cap numbers. That could
potentially make it difficult for the
Chiefs to pay several star players
big contracts.
The Chiefs already had picked
“Here to stay”, Patrick Mahomes inks a huge deal with Kansas City. (AP
FILE)
up their fifth-year option in April
on Mahomes, who had been due
to make $825,000 on the final year
of his rookie contract this season,
to keep him around at least through
2021. General manager Brett Veach
said this deal has been a priority for
quite a while and thanked Mahomes’
agents, Chris Cabott and Leigh Steinberg.
“His
abilities are so rare, and to
couple that with an incredible personality
is outstanding,” Veach said
of Mahomes. “We’re going to continue
to do everything we can to surround
him with talent, and this deal
provides us more flexibility to do
that. He’s obviously an integral part
to our success and we’re thrilled he’s
going to be the quarterback of the
Kansas City Chiefs for a long time.”
Mahomes threw touchdown passfourth-quarter
es
on
consecutive
drives
in rallying the Chiefs to their
first Super Bowl title in 50 years and
the first for coach Andy Reid. That
comeback performance earned Mahomes
the Super Bowl MVP award
and only cemented his status as the
face of the Kansas City franchise.
Reid said the best part is that Mahomes
is still early in his career. Mahomes
won’t turn 25 until Sept. 17.
“He’s a natural leader and always
bransonglobe.com
Chiefs, Mahomes agree to 10-year, $503 million extension
grinding, whether that’s on the field,
in the weight room or watching film,
he wants to be the best,” Reid said.
“He’s a competitor and his teammates
feed off his energy. He makes
us all better as an organization and
we are blessed he’s going to be our
quarterback for years to come.”
The Chiefs traded up to select Mahomes
10th overall in the 2017 draft,
and he spent one season learning the
ropes under Alex Smith before getting
the starting job.
Mahomes proceeded to shatter
just about every franchise passing record
while winning the league MVP
award, and he had the Chiefs within
overtime of landing in the Super
Bowl that season. He also was The
Associated Press NFL Offensive
Player of the Year.
He dealt with numerous injuries
this past season, including a dislocated
kneecap on a seemingly innocent
quarterback sneak that left him sidelined
for a couple of games. He came
back to lead the Chiefs to a long winning
streak that culminated with a series
of come-from-behind wins in the
playoffs, including their second-half
rally in the Super Bowl.
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July 8-9, 2020 • 17
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SPORTS
bransonglobe.com
Knocked out of Brickyard, Johnson
copes at home with coronavirus
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Jimmie
Johnson and his family took
every precaution to avoid the
coronavirus.
They washed their hands freNASCAR
driver Jimmy Johnson. (AP Photo/John Raoux, File)
quently, diligently followed the
face-mask guidelines and even
left their home in Charlotte, North
Carolina, for the less densely populated
Aspen, Colorado.
And yet both Johnson and his
wife still tested positive for the
virus this week — knocking the
seven-time NASCAR champion
out of what was expected to be his
final Brickyard 400.
Johnson is the first NASCAR
driver to test positive for the virus
that causes COVID-19 and it will
end his streak of 663 consecutive
Cup starts. It’s also temporarily
disrupting his family life as he and
wife, Chani, attempt to quarantine
while still raising their two daughters.
Both girls tested negative,
Johnson said.
“We’re being very responsible
in our home and trying to self-isolate,
but at the same time we have
to parent on top of their fears,”
Johnson said Saturday by Zoom
from Colorado.
“So we’re OK, but for a 9-yearold
and 6-year-old, it’s hard. We
SEE JOHNSON, PAGE 19
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SPORTS
• JOHNSON
Continued from page 18
can’t feed them. We’re heartbroken
to see the fear in their eyes.”
Johnson was in Indianapolis on
Wednesday to test on Dallara’s
simulator. He then flew back to
Aspen and was scheduled to return
to Indy for Sunday’s race.
He didn’t have an inkling anything
was wrong until Friday.
Chani Johnson had been experiencing
seasonal allergy symptoms
in the summer mountain
air, and the 44-year-old Johnson
was using a routine prescription
to treat his own seasonal issues.
Chani Johnson, a “rule follower”
her husband said, went
for a coronavirus test because of
the allergies. Her results came
back positive Friday morning
and Johnson and their daughters
immediately went for their own
tests.
“It would be very easy right
now to get bummed out,” said
Johnson, who is stepping away
from full-time NASCAR racing
at the end of the season. “If it
wasn’t for Chani’s diligence to
do the right thing, we’d be going
on with life as normal and who
knows who we could have come
in contact with and infected.”
The good news is doctors believe
Johnson’s wife already endured
the worst of COVID-19.
Johnson said aside from a tickle
in his throat, he’s asymptomatic.
But the ramifications reverberate
around the racing community.
Johnson said he has spoken
with representatives from the
Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention as part of a contact
tracing initiative and continues
to seek out answers to a litany of
questions. One thing he’s not certain
about is a positive test for antibodies
he said he received early
in the pandemic.
“I was warned by my physician
then that although I did test positive
for the antibodies, there’s a
20% chance that it’s incorrect,”
Johnson said. “On top of the fact
that they don’t know what the antibodies
mean. Still today, I don’t
know what they mean.
“Once I clear this and go back
into life, I assume I still need to
be very cautious and I could be
re-infected once again. There are
just so many questions regarding
this virus and what means what.
I still don’t have clarity. The longer
I get into this and the more
issues I deal with, the more questions
I have.”
He can’t return to racing unless
he’s free of symptoms and has
two negative tests in a 24-hour
span. Justin Allgaier will replace
Johnson in Hendrick Motorsports’
No. 48 Chevrolet and one
team member — the mechanic
in charge of Johnson’s cockpit
— has been quarantined because
he’s the only Hendrick employee
to have come into close contact
with the driver.
“Purely out of precaution, the
interior mechanic was the one
person we could identify who
had contact with Jimmie or his
suit or whatever,” said Jeff Andrews,
the team’s vice president
of competition.
A new race strategy also may
be necessary.
Instead of starting fourth, the
position Johnson earned in a random
draw, Allgaier will have to
drop to the back of the field because
of rules regarding driver
changes.
NASCAR President Steve
Phelps said on NBC the series is
hopeful Johnson can be back by
next Sunday at Kentucky Speedway.
The series does not test for
the coronavirus and Phelps did
not indicate Johnson’s positive
result will change that.
“I think the protocols have actually
worked really, really well
for us,” Phelps said in the prerace
show. “Obviously, it is unfortunate
that Jimmie is going to
be out of the car this weekend.
I think if you look at the procedures
that we have in place and
the policies that we have in place,
really, to protect the drivers, the
crews, our own officials and anyone
who is working at the race
track — the number of positive
tests that we’ve had has been so,
so far and few and far between.”
Johnson is the first NASCAR
driver to test positive since the
sport resumed in May. Two teams
have confirmed that shop-based
employees who do not travel to
the track have had positive tests.
NASCAR granted Johnson a
waiver to compete in the playoffs
if he qualifies. Johnson is 12th in
the standings, 63 points inside
the playoff picture.
Meanwhile, back at the mountain
home, adjustments are being
made.
Johnson plans to watch NASCAR
racing on television for
the first time since he became
a Cup regular in 2002, a potential
preview of how retirement
July 8-9, 2020 • 19
may look, while trying to figure
out how to celebrate the holiday
weekend and his older daughter’s
10th birthday.
“We’re very scared to be
around them and interact with
them, not to mention my oldest
has her birthday coming up on
the seventh,” he said. “We’re going
to be celebrating inside our
house, but it’s really been tough
for our kids to grasp.”
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ENTERTAINMENT
NEW YORK (AP) — Hugh
Downs, the genial, versatile broadcaster
who became one of television’s
most familiar and welcome
faces with more than 15,000 hours
on news, game and talk shows, has
died at age 99.
Downs died of natural causes at
his home in Scottsdale, Arizona, on
Wednesday, said his great-niece,
Molly Shaheen.
“The Guinness Book of World
Records” recognized Downs as
having logged more hours in front
of the camera than any television
personality until Regis Philbin
passed him in 2004.
He worked on NBC’s “Today”
and “Tonight” shows, the game
show “Concentration,” co-hosted
the ABC magazine show “20/20”
with Barbara Walters and the PBS
series “Over Easy” and “Live From
Lincoln Center.”
His signature sign-off at the end
of “20/20” told viewers: “We’re in
touch, so you be in touch.”
“I’ve worked on so many differHugh
Downs passed away at age 99. (AP Photo/Evan Agostini, File)
ent shows and done so many shows
at the same time,” Downs said in a
1986 Associated Press interview. “I
once said I’d done everything on
radio and television except play-byplay
sports. Then I remembered I’d
covered a boxing match in Lima,
Ohio, in 1939.”
Downs began his broadcasting
career at the age of 18 as a
$12-a-week announcer on a small
Ohio radio station. When television
came along, he at first looked on it
as a gimmick, but quickly realized
“it was probably a juggernaut, and
I’d better be in on it.”
He was an announcer in Chicago,
which was a television incubator in
the 1950, for “Kukla, Fran & Ollie”
and “Hawkins Falls,” which he said
was television’s first soap opera.
In 1954, he went to New York for
“The Home Show.”
In 1961, Newsweek described
him as “a gluttonous reader with a
first-rate brain that he keeps curried
and exercised like a prize poodle.”
His reputation was such that
he even won the right to approve
any commercial he was assigned
to read, striving to keep dubious
claims off the air.
“My loyalty was with the person
tuning in,” he said. “It was expedient.
If I lost my credibility, what use
would I be to a client?”
He showed his principled side
again in 1997, when he took a vacation
day on “20/20” rather than
be part on a show that included an
interview with Marv Albert after the
sportscaster was caught in a lurid
sexual assault scandal.
On Twitter Thursday, CBS News
political correspondent Ed O’Keefe
noted: “He retired from ‘20/20’ in
1999 and died at age 99 in the year
2020. Sweet symmetry. Rest easy,
Hugh Downs. One of the best.”
Downs had a particular interest
in science, once launching into a
monologue on the Paar show on the
science underlying water-skiing.
It prompted Paar to quip, “Well,
Hugh, when you drown, you’ll
know the reason why.”
His interest in problems of the
aging — he even earned a postgraduate
degree in gerontology — was
highlighted in his Public Broadcastbransonglobe.com
Hugh
Downs, genial presence on TV news and game shows, dies
ing Service series “Over Easy” as
well as many of his “20/20” pieces.
“We all suffer in our culture from
the idea ... that youth was the big
thing,” he said.
“There has been kind of a loss of
respect for older people, and we lose
gleaning wisdom from older people.
We lose the ability to see that
impairment and decrepitude don’t
necessarily go along with age.”
His work on “20/20” also showed
his adventurous spirit, such as the
time he got to ride a killer whale,
and another time he put on breathing
apparatus to swim near a great
white shark. There was a hazardous
expedition to the South Pole in
which one participant nearly fell to
his death.
Downs began his work as Paar’s
second banana in 1957, after a stint as
host of NBC’s “The Home Show.”
In a highly publicized incident in
February 1960, Paar stormed off the
air in a dispute involving network
cutting a Paar “water closet” (toilet)
joke the censors disliked. Downs
won praise for calmly telling the
audience “I’d like to think this is
not final” and keeping the live show
running until signoff time.
Downs said later that he expected
that Paar would at any minute return
to the stage “with some punch line or
something. He didn’t.” But Downs
said he was eventually grateful for the
boost the brouhaha gave his career.
Paar finally returned to the show a
few weeks later.
Paar’s departure from “Tonight”
in 1962 paved the way for Johnny
Carson. Downs, meanwhile, began
his nine-year run as host of the “Today”
show. Walters was a “Today”
colleague for part of that time. She
admired Downs and praised his generosity
and collegiality.
He expressed his views modestly
in the 1995 book “The Box: An Oral
History of Television, 1920-1961”:
“In a way the less talent you have or
deploy, the less chance you have of
overexposure. That may be why I
have been on network television more
than anybody in the world.”
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INTERNATIONAL
Little to celebrate in Pamplona
with no running of the bulls
PAMPLONA, Spain (AP) —
Residents in Spain’s northern city
of Pamplona dressed up Monday
in white clothes and traditional red
scarves to mark what should have
been the start of their annual San
Fermín festival, which was cancelled
this year due to the coronavirus
pandemic.
Known for its races with bulls running
along cobbled streets, the festival
was popularized by Ernest Hemingway’s
1926 novel “The Sun Also Rises”
and was last called off during the
Spanish Civil War in the 1930s.
With more than 28,000 deaths
from the novel virus and an economy
in the doldrums following a
strict nationwide lockdown, local
authorities say there is little to celebrate.
But
Joaquín Beloki, a 33-yearold
resident, said one could still
toast “the health of all those who
have not contracted the coronavirus.”
He joined together on Monday
with about 400 others at a central
square where normally more than
12,000 would witness the opening
of the festival.
They gathered at the city hall
square at noon, the time a rocket
known as “Chupinazo” opens
the 9-day festival in normal times.
Revelers from all around the world
respond to the rocket by bathing
each other with red wine and champagne.
Instead
a large sign from the city
hall’s facade displayed the slogan
#WeWillExperienceThem, an invitation
to revelers to return for next
year’s celebrations.
Hundreds of police officers were
deployed to prevent impromptu
parties at bars or on streets.
The city’s mayor, Enrique Maya,
said at a press conference that 2020
is “a parenthesis in which we are
going to accumulate desire to celebrate
in 2021.”
A video was also launched with
medical personnel reminding viewers
that “it is enough to be irresponsible
one day to ruin three months
of everyone’s efforts,” in reference
to the confinement that Spain enacted
from mid-March to mid-June.
July 8-9, 2020 • 21
Residents, wearing white clothes and traditional red scarves, take to
the streets on the day the ‘’txupinazo’’ would usually take place to start
the famous San Fermin festival, which was due canceled this year by
the conoravirus, in Pamplona, northern Spain, Monday, July 6, 2020.
(AP Photo/Alvaro Barrientos)
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CURIOUSITIES
Was green-onion flavored Chex
worth the wait?
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) —
South Koreans have waited 16
long years for a savory, crispy bite
that would satisfy their taste buds
and right an infamous wrong. This
week, they finally could fill a bowl
with the cereal they wanted all
along: green onion-flavored Chex.
Kellogg’s Korea’s limited-edition
flavor released this week,
complete with a catchy ad and an
apology for the wait, has taken on
surprising cultural significance for
an odd culinary experiment.
In 2004, the company advertised
a public vote for a new product:
chocolate-flavored Cheki or green
onion-flavored Chaka.
Chaka led by an overwhelming
Pieces of new green onion flavored Chex cereal are sprinkled on a
bowl of Tteok-bokki, or stir-fried rice cakes, a popular Korean dish. (Lee
Hyun Su via AP)
margin, but duplicates were said to
mar the online vote and Cheki was
declared the winner.
“It’s kind of representative of
bigger issues in South Korean society,”
said Raphael Rashid, a Seoulbased
freelance journalist who
writes about South Korean politics
and culture. “South Koreans are
used to or have experienced, you
know, like years, if not decades, of
dictatorship.”
The chocolate victory was “kind
of reminiscent” of that, he said.
It brought to the surface long-buried
memories for Yoon Gunhee,
who voted in the infamous election.
“At the time, I was young so I
voted for chocolate,” said Yoon, a
freelance game graphic designer.
“Green onion really didn’t sound
appetizing.”
Yoon said she was amused this
week by the light-hearted commercial
for green onion Chex — featuring
a popular South Korean singer
declaring, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry
that the green onion flavor arrived
so late” and “the promise must
be kept,” with scientists in white
gowns in a laboratory laboring
to develop the perfect flavor. The
video has racked up over 900,000
views on YouTube.
Yoon said she would like to buy it
“at least once.”
“The rigged voting at the time
bransonglobe.com
was such an unpleasant experience,”
she recalled. While the memory was
a small one, she was reminded of it
whenever she saw a box of Chex.
“I think I will be able to sort out my
feelings after eating green onion flavored
Chex,” Yoon said.
South Korean Twitter has been rejoicing
by uploading photos of their
Chex. Some, feeling adventurous,
sprinkled green onion cereal pieces
as garnish on South Korean signature
dishes including kimchi and spicy ramen
noodles.
Like Americans, South Koreans
typically eat their cereal with milk,
but some say green onion Chex tastes
better alone or with a drink like beer
or soju.
Rashid positioned himself to be
among the first to try it and acquired
a box online. On Thursday his face
turned sour when he got his first taste.
It has an “artificial onion background
taste,” he said, reminiscent of
onion ring snacks that are popular in
Korea.
“It doesn’t taste great,” Rashid
said, rinsing his mouth between bites.
“And I think Kellogg knows that it
probably doesn’t taste great either.”
EXP. 7/31/20
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HISTORY
July 8-9, 2020 • 23
Today in History: Movies, sports and more
•
•
1099 First Crusade: 15,000
starving Christian soldiers
march in religious procession
around Jerusalem as its Muslim
defenders look on
1497
Portuguese
Roswell, New Mexico
•
1948 500th anniversary of the
Russian Orthodox Church celebrated
in Moscow
navigator
Vasco da Gama departs on his
first voyage, becoming the 1st
European to reach India by sea
• 1663 King Charles II of England
grants a charter to Rhode
Island
•
•
1680 The first confirmed tornado
in America kills a servant
at Cambridge, Massachusetts
1776 Colonel John Nixon
gives the 1st public reading
of the Declaration of Independence
to an assemblage of citizens
in Philadelphia
•
•
1777 Independent Vermont
introduces a new constitution,
prohibiting slavery
1800 Dr Benjamin Waterhouse
gives 1st cowpox vaccination
in the US to his son to prevent
smallpox
•
•
1835 Liberty Bell cracks
(again)
1853 Commodore Matthew C.
Perry sails his frigate Susquehanna
into Tokyo Bay, opening
Japan to Western influence and
trade
•
•
•
•
1889 Wall Street Journal begins
publishing
1898 US battle fleet under Admiral
George Dewey occupies
Isla Grande at Manila
1907 Florenz Ziegfeld staged
1st `Follies’ on NY Theater
roof
1913 Alfred Carlton Gilbert’s
patent for the Erector Set is
issued, it becomes one of the
most popular toys of all time
•
1923 Warren G. Harding becomes
1st sitting US President
to visit Alaska (Metlakahtla)
• 1932 Depression low point of
Dow Jones Industrial Average,
41.22
• 1947 Reports are broadcast
that a UFO has crash landed in
•
•
• 1950 General Douglas
MacArthur named commander-in-chief
of UN forces in
Korea
• 1969 US troop withdrawal begins
in Vietnam
• 1975 US President Gerald
Ford announced he’ll seek
Republican presidential nomination
•
•
•
•
•
1979
Voyager 2 takes 1st ever
photo of Jupiter’s satellite
Adrastea (J14)
1981 Senate confirms Sandra
Day O’Conner to Supreme
Court (99-0)
1990 12:34:56 on 7/8/90
(1234567890)
1994 Preliminary trial rules
there is enough evidence to try
O.J. Simpson
1999 “Harry Potter and the
Prisoner of Azkaban” the
3rd book of the series by J.
K. Rowling is published by
Bloomsbury in the UK
2008 American businessman
T. Boone Pickens announces
his “Pickens Plan”, an energy
policy that moves away from
imported oil
•
2015 The New York Stock Exchange
stops trading for nearly
four hours due to a technical
error
2019 US financier Jeffrey
Epstein indicted on further
charges of sex trafficking of
minors
Movies & TV
•
2010 “Inception”, directed by
Christopher Nolan and starring
Leonardo DiCaprio and Joseph
Gordon-Levitt, premieres
in London
Music
•
1988 Stevie Wonder announces
he will run for mayor of Detroit
in 1992
• 1996 British girls group the
Spice Girls release their debut
single “Wannabe” in the UK
Sports
•
•
•
•
•
•
1889 John L Sullivan KOs
Jake Kilrain in 75 rounds (last
bare-knuckle bout)
1928 Phillies set record of errorless
25 inning doubleheader
1946 Baseball grants $5,000
minimum salary
1973 NY Mets are 12½ games
back in NL and go on to win
pennant
1982 Billy Martin records his
1,000th career win as a manager
•
1991 Major league umpire
Steve Palermo and former
NFL defensive lineman Terence
Mann shot trying to help
2 waitresses from being robbed
2000 Wimbledon Women’s
Tennis: Venus Williams wins
her first career Grand Slam singles
title; beats fellow American
Lindsay Davenport 6-3,
7-6
Birthdays
•
1839 John D. Rockefeller,
American industrialist and
founder of Standard Oil, born
in Richford, New York (d.
1937)
•
1908 Nelson Rockefeller,
American politician (Vice
President: 1974-1977; Governor
of New York (R), 195973),
born in Bar Harbor, Maine
(d. 1979)
•
1958 Kevin Bacon, actor (Diner,
Footloose, She’s Having a
Baby), born in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania
•
1961 Toby Keith, American
country singer and actor
(Boomtown, Blue Moon),
born in Clinton, Oklahoma
• 1992 Taylor Mayne Pearl
Brooks, daughter of country
singer Garth Brooks
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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
FREE ESTIMATES FROM
ground up remodels roofs, deck,
additions, pole-barns, flooring
and complete build 5yr labor warranty
417-699-1635
07/10
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. 07/10
ACE HOME IMPROVEMENT
Heating & Air HVAC Service &
Repair, Doors, Windows, Decks,
Fences, Pressure Washing, Int &
Ext. Painting, Siding, Roofing,
Flooring, Tile & Drywall. Handyman
Work!
Call Ryan
417-335-1347
VENDORS WANTED
VINTAGE CHIC BOUTIQUE
in Forsyth, has booths available,
great store, location, traffic and
rent. Call afternoons Tue-Sat.
417-677-6673
07/10
Support Our
Local Veterans!
07/10
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
07/10
GARAGE SALE
FORSYTH CITY
WIDE
YARD Sale, Saturday July 11,
2020, starting at 7 am. 07/10
ESTATE SALE 375 SPLIT
ROCK HOLLISTER. Complete
contents of a Large Home.
Furniture and furnishings, seasonal,
museum quality Raggedy
Ann and Andy collection, jewelry,
2015 Toyota Avalon plus
LOTS more. July 8-11 417559-1091.
Visit our website for
more information and photos,
azsalesmo.com
07/10
HELP WANTED
GARAGE SALE
BRANSON-HOLLISTER
LIONS CLUB Annual Summer
Garage Sale. Lions Community
Building 1015 E. Hwy
76. Friday, July 10th 7:00am
– 5:00pm. Saturday July 11th
8:00am – 2:00pm. Lots of items
to choose from including Coca
Cola items, jewelry and books.
Thank you for
reading the
Branson Globe!
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CLASSIFIEDS
OFFICE HOURS 9am - 5pm
Monday to Friday
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
ATTENTION ELECTRICIANS!
Lightspeed Electric is hiring
electricians for service work in
the Branson area. Great troubleshooting/people
skills and
a minimum 4 years experience
required. Benefits. Bonuses.
Company truck. 417-239-5050
Branson Scenic
Railway
Accepting applications
for full-time on-board
train attendant. Will
train. This is a smokefree
non-tobacco use
business. Pre-employment
drug screening.
Apply in person. No
phone calls.
206 E. Main Street,
Branson
APARTMENTS
2 BED/2 BATH FURNISHED
condo (available Aug 1st) Fall
Creek Area with golf course
view.
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
HOME FOR SALE
Remodeled/updated.
Smoke free unit/no drinking/
parties or pot usage. $750 per
month call or text 307-6307833.
Hiring
Overnight
Oversite Staff
THIS COULD
BE YOUR AD
CALL
417-334-9100
TODAY!
For more information,
call Kim Phillips at
417-320-6380
Sales Position
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
NEWLY REMODELED HOME
on 2 Level Lake View Lots Table
Rock Lake 3 BR, 2 BA. One
story home, 413 Tina St. SEE
on craigslist
9749
Spfg. 417-33907/10
RENT
TO OWN
AUTOS
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
July 8-9, 2020 • 25
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
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.
07/19
VEHICLES FOR SALE
COMMERCIAL FOR RENT
OFFICE-RETAIL-FLEA
mart-car lot Branson/Forsyth.
Cabin w/bathroom, large parking
area, Highway 160 frontage
and signage. Great location & traffic.
$450/mo. 417-213-1783.
07/19
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WORSHIP
Worship Directory
You are encouraged to worship with us!
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
July 8-9, 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
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