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INSIDE...
July 29-30, 2020 • Vol. 1, Issue 115
Parents look at
online classes,
homeschooling
for upcoming
school year
Mental Impact:
Cox Branson employee
survives COVID. Page 2
By K.D. Michaels
Staff Writer
With the beginning of the 2020Kids
in the Kitchen:
Train Up a Child has a fun
recipe for kids. Page 6
Gary McSpadden’s son, Shawn, and daugher, Michelle, speak at their father’s celebration of life. (Photo by
Marshall Meadows.)
Hundreds gather for pastor/songwriter
Gary McSpadden’s Celebration of Life
By Brenda Meadows
Staff Writer
Songs that Gary McSpadden
had written, arranged, recorded or
won awards for filtered throughout
the Mansion Theatre on Saturday,
July 25, while about 700 friends,
What’s that sound?
Grasshoppers create the
sound of summer. Page 14
WEATHER...page 13
Highs in the 80s with multiple
chances for showers and
thunderstorms.
family, fans and congregation
members gathered for his Celebration
of Life service. McSpadden,
77, passed away on April 15 from
pancreatic cancer.
Mansion General Manager Larry
Wilhite welcomed those in atAnd
it’s yes for face mask mandate
BRANSON, Mo – The Branson
Board of Aldermen voted in
favor of mandating face coverings
in public spaces in a special
public meeting held Tuesday,
July 28, 2020, at Branson
City Hall to slow the spread of
COVID-19 within the City of
Branson. In a double read, the
vote was in favor of the mandate
4-1 on the first read and 4-1 on
the second read with Alderman
Larry Milton voting no on both
SEE FACE MASKS, PAGE 8
tendance.
“Some people are stars in the
world’s eyes,” he said. “Gary was
a star of celebrity status who never
believed his own press.”
Shawn McSpadden hosted the
celebration in honor of his father.
Although McSpadden had received
many awards for his singing,
song writing, producing and
performances with Gospel music
artists including The Statesmen
Quartet, The Imperials, The
Oak Ridge Boys, Bill and Gloria
Gaither the Gaither Vocal Band
and even Elvis, “he was a preachSEE
McSPADDEN, PAGE 3
21 school year just around the
corner, many families are looking
forward to some sense of normalcy
as they send their children back
to school. But for others, it’s a
different story. With the spread of
Covid-19, parents are concerned
for the well-being of their children,
and that leaves many searching
for an alternative to a traditional
classroom setting.
When the pandemic caused an
abbreviated school year this past
spring, most schools offered some
form of online learning for students
to continue their education.
For the upcoming school year,
many of these schools will offer a
choice between seated classes and
virtual or online classes. These are
both viable options for many people,
but still others are considering
a third option -- homeschooling -where
they can have more control
over what, when, and how their
children learn.
Homeschooling has been on the
rise for several years. In 2019 over
2 million school aged children, or
more than 3.4% of kindergarten
through twelfth grade students
across our nation, were schooled
SEE HOMESCHOOL, PAGE 2
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2 •July 29 - 30, 2020
LOCAL
• HOMESCHOOL
Continued from page 1
at home. While homeschooling
does have some guidelines and
regulations, including maintaining
records for all children, and spending
a specified amount of hours on
the core subjects of reading, math,
social studies, language arts and
science, it does offer many benefits.
Mara Hughes, mother of 11, has
educated her children at home since
her oldest was of the age to start
school. She currently has six school
aged children, all of whom participate
in homeschooling.
“There are so many benefits
Emeline Hughes, a local entertainer and high school student, finds
a computer in a quiet corner of her family’s theatre to work on her
homeschool classes. (Photo by K.D. Michaels)
CONFIRMED POSITIVE CASES
TANEY COUNTY
216
STONE COUNTY
64
of homeschooling,” exclaimed
Hughes. “One is family time. You
really build family relationships
and you’re building relationships
between the kids. And, really
knowing how your kids are doing
with different things. There is obviously
a lot more control of what
they’re learning. And, you don’t
have to worry about different political
or social perspectives that may
be pushed by someone at school,
or about the language of some of
the kids, or even bullying and other
things that can happen at school.
However, you have to prepare them
to face those things, because they’re
going to have to face them in life.
But, it helps to be able to work on
those things at home, and help build
a foundation so they can have tools
to deal with things like that.”
Three of Hughes’ children have
SEE HOMESCHOOL, PAGE 5
RECOVERED CASES
TANEY COUNTY
92
STONE COUNTY
30
bransonglobe.com
Mikaela Schriver. (Special to Branson Globe)
A physical therapist’s journey
with COVID: ‘I never imagined
the mental impact of this’
Special to Branson Globe
Mikaela Schriver has had
countless colds in her life, so she
didn’t think much about it when
she got what she thought was a
sinus infection this June. That all
changed when she sat down for
breakfast.
“I could feel the crunch of the
bacon, but it had no flavor,” says
Schriver, a physical therapist at
Cox Branson. “My coffee tasted
watered down and my cinnamon
breakfast biscuit was bland. I
knew something was wrong.”
Schriver did one more quick
test of her senses. “I grabbed the
lavender essential oil stick from
my desk drawer,” she explains.
SEE COVID, PAGE 7
COVID-19 in Stone and Taney counties, by the numbers: (As of 7/23/2020. Data provided by TCHD and SCHD websites)
DEATHS
TANEY COUNTY
3
STONE COUNTY
1
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LOCAL
• McSPADDEN
Continued from page 1
er, a true pastor, said Shawn. “He
was a leader in spreading the Word
of God through teaching, singing,
writing and sharing the Gospel of
Jesus Christ.”
In 2009 McSpadden, and his
wife Carol began pastoring church
services at The Americana Theatre.
They founded Faith And Wisdom
Church (FWC) in Hollister in
2010 then moved to Branson, 3950
Green Mountain Drive. Many of
McSpadden’s services and messages
can be found online at fwcbranson.com
and on YouTube.
The Celebration of Life Memorial
included special songs by the
Faith and Wisdom Church Choir,
directed by Doug Morris.
McSpadden’s five grandchildren
Chase, Carley and Cole
Smith, Taylor and Brooks McSpadden
shared memories of their
granddad.
Brooks and Taylor McSpadden
spoke of how much fun they had
with him.
”He loved fiercely,” Taylor said.
“He taught me love is a verb an
adjective and a noun. Because of
my Pawpa, I know how to better
love.”
Grandson Cole Smith said,
“He is no longer on earth, but he
is where he has always wanted to
be.”
Church members Ken Rinsing
and Jon Todd were among those
Gary McSpadden, far right, when he sang with the original Gaither
Vocal Band. (Special to Branson Globe)
Gary McSpadden’s grandchildren shared special memories of their
grandfather. (Photo by Marshall Meadows)
that shared their experiences
working alongside McSpadden.
Due to limited travel because
of the COVID-19 virus Gospel
recording artists Clay Crosse,
Michael English, The Oak Ridge
Boys, Larry Gatlin and Bill and
Gloria Gaither sent messages to
talk about their relationships with
McSpadden through video presentations.
“I
had gone to Memphis for an
event,” said Crosse. “I gave Gary
a demo tape. He was kind and encouraged
me. He said he would
listen to the tape and he did.”
McSpadden called Clay, left a
message and asked to meet with
him in Nashville.
“It was the beginning of a solid
career and meeting Gary opened
that door for me,” Crosse said.
Crosse then sang a portion of
‘I Surrender All,’ the song that
launched his career.
McSpadden grew up in West
Texas and attended a church with
the Gatlin family. Larry Gatlin
sent a personal video message and
spoke of having known McSpadden
as a child. He also talked of
the great friend McSpadden had
been.
“I love that family,” he said,
then sang the old gospel hymn,
“Precious Memories” accapella.
The Oakridge Boys spoke of
McSpadden’s love for people.
They also spoke of his impact on
their lives, then sang “Life’s Railway
to Heaven,” a classic quartet
number.
Michael English said he got to
know McSpadden when he called
and asked him to join the Gaither
Vocal Band.
“After spending time with him,
I felt like family,” English said. “I
loved him so much. Rest in His
arms Gary.”
His sister Cheryl “McSpadden”
Kartsonakis spoke about how her
brother had been her protector.
“He was strong, stable and committed,”
she said. “He was a loving
brother, Godly and with a great
sense of humor and a teacher, for
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 3
sure. I loved him so much. I can’t
believe he is gone.”
McSpadden enjoyed golfing,
fishing, listening to or singing music
and writing songs. He loved
the church, but his greatest joy
was the love and passion he had
for his family.
McSpadden’s Son-in law Ron
Smith, married to their daughter
Michelle, brought a golf club up to
the podium to share some humorous,
as well as touching, stories
about his father-in-law. He worked
as road manager for McSpadden
and spoke of how he learned a
great deal from him.
“Gary did so much for me,” he
SEE McSPADDEN, PAGE 9
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LOCAL
bransonglobe.com
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LOCAL
• HOMESCHOOL
Continued from page 2
already completed their homeschool
studies, have successfully
taken their high school equivalency
exams, and are well on their way to
pursuing their life goals. Hughes’
oldest son is the head of the sales
and marketing department at the
family’s theatre, while taking a full
college course load. One daughter,
recently married, is looking forward
to beginning a career in early
childhood education, and another
daughter is using her homeschooling
education and the skills she has
acquired as she serves a mission
through her church. Two more
of Hughes’ children are currently
preparing to take their high school
equivalency tests soon.
Like everything, however, homeschooling
does have some challenges.
‘For
us, a big challenge is scheduling.
Making sure you have a
consistent schedule is difficult at
times, because there are so many
things going on in our family,” said
Hughes, wife of Jason Hughes,
who performs alongside her husband,
children and a host of other
family members in Branson’s popular
Hughes Music Show. “Sometimes
it’s a challenge keeping kids
motivated and excited about doing
it. One of the best ways to remedy
that, I have found, is by letting them
be as involved as possible in choosing
the curriculum, and learning
things they are excited about. Of
course they have to work on things
like reading and writing and math,
but if you can find something that
they are excited about or want to
learn about, and use that for their
classes they enjoy learning more.”
Another drawback to homeschooling,
according to many people,
is a lack of socialization. However
Hughes and her family have
found ways to rectify that concern.
Hughes explained, “ I think it’s
really important for kids to interact
with adults and with others their
age. There are lots of homeschool
groups, and people they can get together
with. Also, we’ve had our
kids involved in scouts, in church
youth activities, or in different music
programs where they do group
lessons. You can find all kinds of
positive activities for your kids,
where they will be able to interact
with other kids.”
Another local homeschooling
mom, Diane B, echoes Hughes’
thoughts on socialization, “There
are homeschool co-ops. Some
meet once a week, and some once
a month. That is a great resource
for field trips. A huge part of socialization,
for us, is friends and
classes at church. Homeschooled
children also do sports and music
lessons to help with that.”
Like Hughes, Diane, who has
two school-aged children, has also
found both pros and cons to homeschooling.
“It is a full-time job.
So for those that have to work,
it would be tougher to do both,”
Diane explained. “A huge benefit
to us is time. We don’t feel like
we’re missing out on their lives.
And, when they learn something
new, and you are the one that
taught or helped them with that,
it’s a great experience. Another
benefit is safety. I’m not worrying
about a school shooting or any
kind of sickness because they are
home.”
With so many educational options
available, there are many
opinions on what really is the best
option for the coming school year.
“It’s my daughter’s senior year,”
said Rachel, mother of a teenager,
along with younger school-aged
children. “She can social distance
and wear a mask. My younger two
I’m keeping home for at least the
first nine weeks. They can’t wear
a mask all day. And, they know
nothing about personal space!”
Another local parent, Mary, the
mother of three, added, “I’m homeschooling
only if masks are required.
I can barely stand to wear
my mask to the store, so I’m not
going to expect them to wear them
for eight hours a day while trying
to learn.”
SEE HOMESCHOOL, PAGE 13
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 5
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OPINION
By Pat Lamb
It is a good idea to get children
in the kitchen as early as possible
to begin teaching them some basics
of food handling. After all,
we all have to eat to survive and
someone has to prepare the food,
so everyone---both girls and boys--need
to learn to prepare food.
Children can help with small
tasks at a very early age. They
can help set the table for meals,
stir things like salads, and even
wash some pans. Even if some of
the work has to be done over, they
are beginning to learn.
One of the first things to teach
young children about cooking
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
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
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Pat Lamb. (FILE)
is cleanliness. They need to be
taught to always wash hands before
handling food. A good way
to help them be thorough with
washing their hands is to have
them sing the Happy Birthday
Song while rubbing hands with
soap and water. When they have
scrubbed for the duration of the
song, they hopefully have clean
hands. Small children usually
have dirt under the fingernails
and they need to be taught to use
a brush or other instrument to remove
the dirt. In addition, they
need to be taught not to touch the
hair, nose, face, or anything that
might have germs while working
with food.
Here is an easy recipe that even
bransonglobe.com
Train Up a Child: Teaching children in the kitchen
small children can do. The nice
thing about it is that they can use
it like play dough to be creative
in making animals, etc. and then
enjoy eating it. It is a nutritious
food that is especially good for
children who are not allergic to
peanuts or are not obese.
Edible Play Dough (Cookies)
1 cup powdered milk
1 cup peanut butter
½ cup honey
(A non-breakable bowl would
be best to use to mix the ingredients.)
Combine dry powdered
milk, peanut butter, and honey
in bowl. Mix with hands until
smooth.
Make animals, people, or funny
shapes. Eat the results.
(Be sure the surface area is
clean when making the shapes.
To make fur on animals, roll in
coconut. Raisins can be used for
eyes.)
Even though many parents buy
toy kitchen equipment for children
to play with, I always preferred
to let my children work in a
real kitchen. I never saw the wisdom
of spending all that money
on toy cabinets, dishes, pans, etc.
when the real thing was available
for the children. Children love to
have grown-ups spend time with
them. What better way to spend
time with the children than in the
kitchen making something useful?
(The comments on these pages are the opinions of the writer, and not necessarily those of Branson Globe, or its staff. Want to weigh-in? Have something
to say? Share it with us in your own Letter to the Editor. See submission guidelines in lower left corner of page 6.)
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LOCAL
• COVID
Continued from page 2
“It has a super strong scent. As
soon as I twisted off the cap, my
co-workers could smell it from
across the room. I put it right up to
my nose. I smelled nothing.”
In that moment, Schriver had
a gut feeling she had COVID-19.
She immediately left work, and an
official test confirmed she had the
virus three days later.
“The crazy thing is I would
have probably just kept taking
cold medicine if I didn’t have that
loss of smell and taste,” she says.
“How scary that I could have just
been walking around infecting
people, including people who may
have a harder time fighting it off!”
She reports, a few days after
testing positive, she began to have
mild shortness of breath. Nothing
too serious, but she would need
to sit down to wait for the coffee
to brew instead of standing next
to the pot. The humidity of a hot
shower would also wear her out.
“I didn’t shower for probably
three days,” she recalls. “I told
my husband there was no way he
was getting out of this adventure
COVID-free. I was right. He, too,
tested positive.”
While she and her husband Alex
were both able to physically recover
at home, Schriver says the
mental health impact of a COVID
diagnosis is something she didn’t
see coming.
“It’s really hard trying to live
as a couple sleeping in separate
rooms and trying to live separate
lives,” she says. “My contagious
period was over before his, so I
wanted to make sure I stayed away
from him because science isn’t
100% that we can’t catch this thing
again.”
She also has guilt that she could
have exposed her family in those
early days of the illness when she
thought it was just a cold.
“My mother-in-law has MS
and my father-in-law had cancer
last fall. They are vulnerable. I
kept feeling the guilt that I might
have exposed them even though I
didn’t mean to. That’s what could
happen to any of us if we’re walking
around without a mask. We
may be spreading a virus we don’t
know we have.”
So far, Schriver’s husband is
the only one in her “close contacts
while contagious” who was also
diagnosed with COVID.
Schriver considers herself lucky
that she had enough paid vacation
time at CoxHealth to ease the financial
burden of missing two
weeks of work.
“I know not everyone has that
luxury,” she says. “If you are infected
or exposed, you are required
to miss work. If you’re out
and about without a mask, you’re
taking the chance of putting yourself
as well as your family and
friends in that financial situation.
It’s risky behavior.”
Schriver says she’s much more
aware about the importance of
masking up in the community
now that she’s been through the
sickness and seen its impact first
hand. It has also strengthened her
position on the proposed masking
ordinance in Branson.
“They told us when the city was
re-opened it would be up to each
of us as an individual to do our
part to slow the spread,” she says.
“They encouraged face masks,
hand washing and social distancing.
A lot of people have not listened,
including me. So, here we
are with numbers climbing rapidly
in our county. If a mask mandate is
what is needed to slow the spread,
then let’s try it. It is a much better
alternative than closing local businesses
again.”
Help Support Branson local businesses
@bransonlocalbusinesses.com
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 7
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LOCAL
• FACE MASKS
Continued from page 1
reads. Alderman Kevin McConnell
was not present.
This amendment to Chapter
58 of the Branson Municipal
Code will go into effect starting
at 12:01 a.m. on Friday, July 31,
2020 and will remain in effect
until 11:59 p.m. on Tuesday,
September 8, 2020.
The ordinance now has the
following components:
•
bransonglobe.com
ily members of people they
reside with
• While performing on a
fixed stage
• While engaging in public
speaking while socially
distancing
• Any public safety officer
engaged in an emergency
situation
• Any person during a wedding
ceremony or while
photographs of the wedding
and reception are taken
Requires individuals to
wear face coverings while
in indoor and outdoor public
spaces unless they are
engaged in certain activities
or under the age of
thirteen.
•
•
Requires operators of public
places to ensure guests
use face coverings.
Requires signage at all
businesses outlining requirements
on social distancing
and face coverings.
The penalty for violating this
ordinance is a $100 fine and potential
revocation of business
license and other permits.
Under this ordinance, everyone
over the age of 12 will be
required to wear a face covering
when in public spaces in the
city limits of Branson. Exemptions
are made for those with a
health condition documented by
a medical professional, who are
hearing impaired and someone
who is communicating with a
person who is hearing impaired.
Other exemptions include:
• While swimming
• While obtaining a service
involving the head, face or
nose
• While playing a sport, exercising
or using exercise
equipment
• While outdoors while
maintaining a physical distance
of at least six feet
• While outdoors who is
closer than six feet to fam•
Any family member of a
deceased person during a
funeral, interment or memorial
Education
will be the first
step in enforcement. Branson
Police will work to educate
any violators of the ordinance
before pursuing further action.
Just like any other City ordinance,
violations of the face
covering ordinance can be reported
by calling 911.
The entire ordinance as
amended and voted on can be
found on the City’s “Coronavirus/COVID-19
Resources
and News” section of our website
at www.bransonmo.gov/
DocumentCenter/View/12751/
Face-Covering-Ordinance-PDF.
For any other questions about
this ordinance, please refer to
the Frequently Asked Questions,
which can also be found
on the City’s “Coronavirus/
COVID-19 Resources and
News” page on our website at
www.bransonmo.gov/DocumentCenter/View/12768/FaceCovering-FAQ-PDF.
The
health and safety of residents,
guests and community
members remains a top priority
for the City of Branson. The
City will continue to work in
coordination with our partner
agencies, as well as the state and
federal government, to monitor
this evolving situation and to
ensure our response actions are
based on the latest facts.
׉	 7cassandra://yqzGTcqpu1tqgSyE2XCs9Ilj-3Wu2w0_IGNhM5wOaMIz`  _ ۮmIe,׉Ebransonglobe.com
LOCAL
• McSPADDEN
Continued from page 3
said “He taught me how to be my
best. He taught me how to play
golf because he wanted to beat
me.”
Shawn McSpadden said Gloria
Gaither asked him, “Can you describe
your dad in one word?”
After much thought, he said
“Consistent. He was consistent
as a father, in faith, with the kids,
with mom and in loving people.”
Gloria Gaither agreed with
Shawn. The McSpaddens had
traveled with, and lived along
side the Gaithers for 10 years.
“I don’t remember a cross word
from either of them. They are the
dearest, sweetest people.”
Bill went on to say, “I loved this
man. I don’t know of anyone else
who could come in and do what
he did. Gary was an incredible
person. Gary, you’ve finally seen
the lights of home” (reference to
the song ‘Because He Lives’).
The Celebration of Life concluded
wth McSpadden’s brother-in-law
Dino at the piano accompanied
by the FWC Choir
performing ‘We Shall Behold
Him’ and ‘the Hallelujah Chorus.’
When
setting the date and
time for the Celebration, Carol
McSpadden wasn’t sure if anyone
would attend because of the
virus and restrictions. But, it all
worked out.
“It was a great send off, a great
tribute to a man’s life well lived.
But it doesn’t end,” said Carol
McSpadden. “God wants to do
something in this community
through this church. I am excited
about the future of this church. It
gave Gary a welcome into heaven
and good cross over. I am very
pleased. I was thankful people
could come and be with us for the
gifts that God had given him. He
used them for the Lord.”
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 9
Thank you for reading the Branson Globe!
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STATE
bransonglobe.com
Missouri Department of Labor
releases benefit numbers, hiring
additional staffing resources
Jefferson City, MO –– The
Missouri Department of Labor
and Industrial Relations’ (DOLIR’s),
Division of Employment
Security (DES) reports that it has
processed over $3.4 billion in unemployment
benefit payments to
more than 490,000 unemployed
Missourians since the beginning
of the pandemic in March.
In the last few months, the DES
saw a 254% increase in initial
claims compared to all the initial
claims it processed in 2019.
To handle the historic number
of claims, the DES utilized 300+
staff from all their program areas,
other DOLIR divisions, nine other
Missouri state agencies and outside
call center vendor help. It also
hired both temporary and full-time
staff to assist citizens in processing
claims.
While UInteract, the unemployment
claims online filing system,
has overall been reliably operating
in response to the historical claims
volume, there have been instances
of system downtime to increase
capacity in order to more effecSEE
DEPT. OF LABOR, PAGE 15
MDC re-closes St. Louis regional
office amid rising COVID-19 cases
By Dan Zarlenga
Courtesy of MDC
St. CHARLES, Mo.—The incidence
of COVID-19 cases has
seen a significant rise in recent
weeks, prompting the Missouri
Department of Conservation
(MDC) to close its St. Louis Regional
Office on the August A
Memorial Conservation Area in
St. Charles to the public. The regional
office closure is effective
immediately until further notice.
All outdoor spaces and fishing
lakes on the conservation area
remain open. The All In Bait &
Tackle Shop, operated by an independent
vendor, will also remain
open. Visitors are reminded to observe
social distancing and other
COVID-19-related guidelines
when on the area.
According to the St. Charles
County online COVID-19 dashboard
(https://www.sccmo.
org/2105/COVID-19),
the incidence
of confirmed cases from
the disease in the last 14 days has
SEE MDC, PAGE 16
Congress considers emergency funds
to keep libraries open in Missouri
By Mary Schuermann Kuhlman
Courtesy of Public News Service
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Federal
lawmakers are considering
legislation that would help keep
library doors open in Missouri in
the wake of the COVID-19 crisis.
From digital programming to
curbside pickup, libraries across
the state have pivoted their offerings
in order to safely provide materials
to community members.
At the Daniel Boone Regional
Library in Columbia, Executive
Director Margaret Conroy says
they’ve shifting funding from
programming needs to health and
safety supplies.
“The masks, the sanitation
cleaning expenses, shields, all the
kinds of things that we’re putting
in place to keep our staff and our
public safe,” says Conroy. “And
those, of course, were unanticipated
expenses at the beginning of the
year.”
SEE LIBRARIES, PAGE 17
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STATE
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 11
Ashcroft announces grants to local governments
for records management, preservation projects
Courtesy of Missouri
Secretary of State Office
Jefferson City, Mo. — Secretary
of State Jay Ashcroft announced
11 Local Records Grant Program
awards totaling $100,411. Based on
the recommendations of the Missouri
Historical Records Advisory
Board, they provide the recipient
local governments with assistance
for records management and preservation
projects.
The following grantees are now
eligible to receive reimbursement
up to the total listed award amount:
• Francois County Recorder:
$12,500 to image records
• Cape Girardeau County Recorder:
$24,995 to image records
• Jasper County Record Center:
$7,300 to image records
• Clair County Collector: $2,777
to image records
• Wright County Circuit Clerk:
$6,090 for shelving
• Reynolds County Circuit Clerk:
$9,169 to image records
• City of Crestwood: $8,960 to
image records
• West St. Francois County R-IV
School District: $19,745 for shelving
•
City of St. Charles: $477 to image
records
• Buchanan County Circuit
Clerk: $4,400 for a microfilm reader/printer/scanner
•
Perry County Circuit Clerk:
$3,998 for a microfilm reader/printer/scanner
The
Missouri State Archives’ Local
Records Grant Program offers
Blunt discusses U.S. Senate
GOP’s $1 trillion HEALS Act
(MONet) U.S. Senate Republicans
have unveiled a $1 trillion
coronavirus aid package. The
HEALS Act includes $200 per
week in unemployment benefits,
more than $100 billion for schools,
more funding for the small business
Paycheck Protection Program and a
liability shield to protect businesses
from coronavirus-related lawsuits.
The plan would also give another
$1,200 stimulus payment with
similar eligibility requirements as
the last one. Qualifying individuals
earning a gross adjusted income up
to $75,000 per year in 2019, and
couples earning $150,000, would
get the full $1,200 or $2,400. Individuals
would also receive $500 for
each dependent, just like under the
CARES Act.
During a press conference in
Washington, U.S. Senator Roy
Blunt, R-Missouri, says the plan
would provide $16 billion to help
states cover COVID-19 testing.
“Our priority to help with testing
through the states is to put a priority
on elementary and secondary
education, on higher education, on
nursing homes and childcare facilities,”
says Blunt.
Blunt says the package would
give $15 billion to the nation’s
childcare providers.
“As people get back to work,
some people don’t want to send
their kids. There will be some childcare
expenses of distancing and other
things that have to be done, but
you can’t get back to work if you
can’t get back to childcare for most
families. And if you’re a working
parent, particularly if you’re a
working single parent, your biggest
single problem is being sure that
that childcare situation works,” says
Blunt.
Congressional Democratic leaders
say the bill should include
hazard pay for essential workers,
provide additional funding for food
stamps and address the eviction crisis,
among other things.
local governments, or local political
subdivisions with taxing authority,
funding for approved records management
or preservation projects
including imaging of permanent,
long-term or historically significant
records. Grant awards may fund up
to 70% of total project costs.
To learn more about the Local
Records Grant Program, visit www.
sos.mo.gov/archives/localrecs/
grants/.
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STATE
Courtesy of MODOT
JEFFERSON CITY – Beginning
August 3, a statewide awareness campaign
will remind Missouri motorists
to drive safely around big trucks and
buses. In turn, commercial motor vehicle
drivers will be reminded to obey
traffic laws, use their seat belts, slow
down and pay attention.
Commercial motor vehicles make
up 20% of Missouri’s interstate traffic,
carry goods from coast to coast, and
are essential workers to our nation’s
economy. When crashes involving
large trucks and buses happen the disproportionate
size of the large truck
versus a car means those crashes
can often involve serious injuries, or
SIZZLING SUMMER SPECIAL!
2 FOR THE PRICE OF
1 thru AUG 31
Not valid with any other offer. Exp. 8/31/20
worse. Research shows that, in the
majority of these crashes, drivers of
passenger cars unnecessarily endanger
themselves by not paying attention
and driving recklessly around
large trucks and buses. That’s why it’s
so important for all motorists to drive
safely around these larger vehicles.
There’s no room for taking chances
around big trucks and buses – they
require big room. “We can all do
our part by driving safely around big
trucks,” said Jon Nelson, MoDOT assistant
to the state highway and traffic
engineer. “Be patient, give them room
to operate and please put your phone
down.”
bransonglobe.com
Motorists are reminded: Respect the load, share the road
• Don’t cut off large trucks or buses.
Make sure you can see the truck’s
cab lights in your rearview mirror
before moving back into your original
lane.
• Stay out of the “No Zone.” Large
trucks and buses have large blind
spots on either side and up to 200
feet behind a vehicle. Pass only on
the left side.
• Large trucks and buses take longer
to stop.
• Watch your following distance.
Keep a safety cushion around large
trucks and buses. Can you see the
truck’s side mirrors? If not, the
driver cannot see you.
A statewide awareness campaign will remind Missouri motorists to
drive safely around big trucks and buses. (Special to Branson Globe)
Showtimes: 3pm or 8pm
1600 West 76 Country Blvd. Branson, MO
Call for Tickets: 877-SIX-SHOW
theSIXshow.com
׉	 7cassandra://6WkMMAoozC4uI4o9qaXeFiHTwDtmt6rCZVHarE83xZ8y`  _ ۮmIe,׉Ebransonglobe.com
STATE
Courtesy of MODOT
Southwest District – State routes
in five (5) southwest Missouri counties
are scheduled to be sealed with
a mixture of rock and oil beginning
the week of August 3, the Missouri
Department of Transportation said.
Here’s a look at the locations:
• Barton County – U.S. Route 160
from the Missouri/Kansas state
line east to I-49 (17.5 miles)
• Jasper County – Route E from
near Missouri Route 571 east to
Missouri Route 37 (9 miles)
• HOMESCHOOL
Continued from page 5
Letha, a local parent, had a different
perspective. “I’m sending
my daughter to school, but she has
to wear a mask in the hallways and
on the bus. My main reasoning is
she thrives in school, and I definitely
struggled in teaching her.”
And, Jessie, a single mom of
three, agreed, saying, :”I’m sending
my child back to school. I
have other kids at home, and simply
do not have the time and capability
to teach her and give her
the correct amount of time, while
working.”
A mother of high-school students,
Crystal Wolfe, had differing
thoughts, explaining, “We will
send the kids to school only if
the school has mandatory masks,
temp checks, social distancing
and health safety for the kids at
all times. Another option we
are presently leaning toward is
working with eight other families.
The children would all attend
online school at our home three
days a week, so the kids have a
healthy social circle to encourage
each other. They would enroll in
school, and miss three days a week
when they take the online classes.
Taking online classes still allows
them to participate in all sports at
the school, as though they were
attending full-time. My children
do NOT want to do online classes,
• Jasper County – Route V from
I-49 south to Missouri Route 96
(2 miles)
• McDonald County – Missouri
Route 43 from Route DD south
to Route B (5 miles)
• Barry County – Route F from
Missouri Route 112 east to Missouri
Route 86 (5 miles)
• Barry County – Missouri Route
112 from Route F north to Missouri
Route 86 (5.5 miles)
• Newton/Barry counties – Missouri
Route 86 from U.S. Route
but they understand our decision
in regards to their health.”
Despite many differences in
opinion regarding their children’s
schooling -- and with more and
more people leaning towards educating
from home -- most parents
can definitely agree that education
is important, that each family faces
different and unique circumstances,
and that we are all very
concerned for the health and welfare
of our children.
Your Branson Area Weather Source
Loving The Ozarks
WED
86
Showers &
T-Storms
Likely
68
Branson Area 5 Day Outlook
THU
FRI
60 near Neosho to Missouri
Route 76 south of Wheaton
(24.5 miles)
Drivers also can expect flaggers
and pilot cars directing them
through the work zone. Drivers
should wait for the pilot vehicle
before proceeding through the
work zone or before entering the
work zone from a side road.
Signs and message boards will
alert drivers to the work zone.
Weather and/or scheduling delays
will alter the work schedule.
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 13
Pavement sealing work planned week of Aug. 3 in five Southwest Missouri counties
A chip-seal is not an alternative
to an asphalt overlay, but is
planned for these roads as an economical
way to maintain and preserve
the roadway. The treatments
keep a road from deteriorating and
will extend its life.
SAT
SUN
87 83 81 86
Showers &
T-Storms
Likely
69
Chance for
Showers &
T-Storms
66
Chance for
Morning
Showers or
T-Storms
65
Partly to
Mostly
Cloudy
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 	5̔9ׁHhttp://www.buymissouri.netׁׁЈנ_ ۮmIe-	 eA̷9ׁHhttp://bransonglobe.comׁׁЈ׉Ew14 • July 29 - 30, 2020
STATE
MDC online program helps kids learn about nature’s ‘secret agents’
By Francis Skalicky, MDC
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. –
The animals around us use a variety
of fascinating adaptations to
find food and to avoid being food
for other predators.
Kids who think they have the
stealth to go undercover as covert
nature detectives can learn more
about the tricks of the wildlife
trade in the virtual Missouri Department
of Conservation (MDC)
four-part program “Nature’s Secret
Agents.” The dates for these
programs, which is being put on
by the staff at MDC’s Cape Girardeau
Conservation Nature Center,
will be Aug. 4-7. Each day, the
program will be 10-11 a.m. This
event is designed for ages 7-11
and online attendees must be able
to participate in all four sessions of
the program.
Wildlife detectives can particAn
outdoors landscape holds many interesting clues about how
animals survive and thrive in their surroundings. (MDC Photo)
ipate with a computer, tablet or
smartphone. Participants will be
asked to pick up a box full of secret
activities at the Cape Girardeau
Nature Center so they can share
their sleuthing skills with MDC
instructors and other participants.
Participants can get information
on picking up their boxes by calling
573- 290-5218 or e-mailing
MDC Naturalist Alex Holmes at
Alex Holmes at Alex.Holmes@
mdc.mo.gov (link sends e-mail).
People need to register for the program
at: https://mdc-event-web.
s3licensing.com/Event/EventDetails/173719
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 chatbased
question-and-answer period
where participants
with the presenters.
can
bransonglobe.com
Differential grasshopper. (MDC
Photo)
Grasshopper calls
sounds of summer
By Peg Craft, MDC
Grasshopper calls are the elevator
interact
music of summer. As their rasping
drones on, we soon tune it out.
Grasshoppers create songs that
are repeated without a musical
pitch. The songs aren’t whistles or
trills. Instead, they sound like two
pieces of sandpaper scratching together.
It’s a sort of insect rhythm
section.
A grasshopper makes its coarse
tune by rubbing a series of small
spines on its hind leg across a scraper
on its wing, like sliding a thumbnail
along the teeth of a comb. Each
species has its own call to attract
mates, just as birds do. Usually,
only males take to music, attracting
females with their calls. They mate,
and the female lays eggs. Tiny
nymphs hatch from the eggs the following
spring. By late summer, the
nymphs have grown through about
five molts to become adults with a
song.
Try tuning in to the grasshoppers
when you go outside. Listen
for their different calls, especially
during the day, along roadsides and
in woods and fields.
Differential grasshoppers are a
favorite bait for anglers, and are an
important component in the food
chain for many animals, including
foxes, raccoons, squirrels, amphibians,
snakes, birds, turtles, and bats.
At times, differential grasshoppers
occur in large enough populations
to cause severe damage to agricultural
crops.
׉	 7cassandra://9V01pHcf4x2ZqGy6HmtQG2zWtbMDOuHYYoAhrZjcrk8x``  _ ۮmIe,׉E1bransonglobe.com
STATE
JEFFERSON CITY, MO –
Since its creation in 2018, the
Buy Missouri Program has highlighted
and actively promoted
Missouri businesses that manufacture
products in Missouri.
Recently the program reached
a milestone by enrolling its
three-hundredth business member.
“We
are proud and excited to
share that Buy Missouri membership
continues to grow,” com•
DEPT. OF LABOR
Continued from page 10
tively deliver benefits under the
three new federal programs created
under the CARES Act.
“Despite DES’ own best efforts to
serve Missourians during this time
of historic and record-breaking call
volumes with staff from the existing
state workforce and temporary hiring,
we know that more resources
are needed. It is our highest goal to
help Missourians who are frustrated
that their calls are not being answered
as quickly as we would like,
especially those whose unemployment
claims are still pending after
many weeks,” said DOLIR Director
Anna Hui.
“Every claim that awaits an eligibility
determination is an individual
facing uncertainty on the next step
of how to pay for groceries, rent
and other bills,” stated Hui. “This
is why we are engaging the help of
Ernst and Young, whose additional
manpower, perspectives, expertise,
and experiences will help the state
meet citizens’ needs by processing
claims and answering calls, all the
while analyzing our existing unemployment
program processes so that
together we can improve service
delivery to meet current and future
needs. We look forward to adding
these additional resources to support
those in the state workforce
who have been working tirelessly
to serve Missourians during this
historic time.”
mented Lieutenant Governor,
Mike Kehoe. “This program provides
the opportunity to recognize
and promote Missouri-made
products. The Buy Missouri
Program, which began with the
vision of then Lieutenant Governor
Parson, continues to grow
because of the dedication and efforts
of the 300+ members whose
hard work supports and strengthens
the state’s economy.”
To be eligible for membership
Ernst and Young staffing and expertise
will be adding to ongoing
efforts by the DES to improve and
enhance process and system operations.
This includes enhanced reporting
to pinpoint claim issues in
order to improve timely resolution,
as well as a review of the web-based
application system to make it more
user-friendly and easier to navigate.
While the DES is already working
on an outbound calling system
where claimants can schedule an
appointment time for someone to
call back and assist them, the DES
also continues to hire employees
and temporary workers to help with
the call volume and claims processing.
Finally,
the DES is working with
the Missouri Office of Administration
to have other resources on
stand-by for additional outside call
and claims assistance in order to
more efficiently meet future program
workload needs.
“With these additional resources
onboard, we are better positioned
to meet citizens’ needs and improve
flexibility in our processes so that
we can better adapt to future federal
and state changes to the unemployment
program,” concluded Hui.
“We are now operating in a time of
rapid and constant change but our
dedicated state employees stand
ready to meet those challenges.
With the extra help of our contract
partners, we will be able to complete
our mission even faster and
more efficiently.”
in the Buy Missouri program, at
least 51% of a company’s product
must be manufactured in-state.
Buy Missouri, by the numbers,
equates to 305 members enrolled,
81 total counties reached, with
13,185 individuals employed,
providing nearly $400 million in
salaries to Missourians.
“The importance of shopping
and buying local has been highlighted
by COVID-19 pandemic,”
Kehoe continued. “When
we Buy Missouri, we support our
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 15
Buy Missouri Program membership reaches milestone
friends and neighbors. Doing so
will be even more critical in the
coming weeks and months.”
For a complete listing of Buy
Missouri members, please go to
www.buymissouri.net or find us
on Facebook and Twitter.
_ ۮmIe,ȁ_ ۮmIe,ǁ
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STATE
Comments? Questions? Call the Branson Globe at 417-334-9100
• MDC
Continued from page 10
risen by 182%, as of July 24.
“The MDC St. Louis regional
leadership team carefully
weighed the public services our
regional office was providing
with the public health risks of
the recent rise of COVID-19
cases in St. Charles County,”
said MDC St. Louis Regional
Administrator Julianne Stone.
“We made the difficult decision
to reclose the office after determining
it was the best course of
action to protect the health of
our visitors and staff.”
Stone added that her leadership
staff is continuing to monitor
the COVID-19 situation,
and that should there be other
changes in the COVID outlook
for St. Charles County or elsewhere
in the region, MDC will
be prepared to respond appropriately.
bransonglobe.com
All
other MDC public facilities
will remain open, including
Powder Valley Conservation
Nature Center in Kirkwood,
the Jay Henges Shooting Range
and Outdoor Education Center
in High Ridge, and the August
A. Busch Shooting Range and
outdoor Education Center in
Defiance.
MDC will adhere to all local
ordinances and guidelines
regarding COVID-19 at every
facility, and it strongly encourages
visitors to wear face coverings
at its locations. Any local
ordinances mandating wearing
of face coverings will also be
observed.
Have a news tip?
Send it to us at
info@
bransonglobe.com
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STATE
• LIBRARIES
Continued from page 10
Conroy notes that much like
other organizations and businesses,
libraries have suffered
significant financial losses
during the pandemic.
The Library Stabilization
Fund Act was introduced this
month in both the House and
Senate; it would establish a $2
billion federal fund to defray
library costs and improve services.
Libraries
also have served as
a trusted resource for Missourians
seeking assistance with
unemployment assistance, telehealth
services and other virtual
services. Director and CEO of
the St. Louis Library District
Kristen Sorth explains they’re
also helping those in need.
“We partnered with many
area organizations to provide
meals, diapers, and just a variety
of other things,” says Sorth.
“We started in March shortly
after we closed, and we continue
to provide those services.”
American Library Association
President Julius Jefferson
says secondary COVID-19 relief
packages proposed in Congress
do not include dedicated
support for library operations.
“There’s been the CARES
Act that’s offered lots of relief
and funds to small businesses,
to those in the health-care industry,”
says Jefferson. “But we
see libraries as second responders,
and this is an opportunity to
continue to support the essential
services that libraries have
been providing throughout this
whole pandemic.”
The Library Stabilization
Fund Act would help support
nearly 370 thousand library
jobs nationally, with each state
receiving a minimum of $10
million in funding.
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 17
The Library Stabilization Fund was introduced this month in both the House and Senate. (Public News Service)
VOTE BRIAN
FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE
CHRISTIAN CONSERVATIVE VETERAN
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NATIONAL
(AP) It’s been months since the
coronavirus pandemic limited restaurant
options and caused many people
— even the most kitchen-phobic
among us — to try to cook more.
How are people faring?
Some are experiencing cooking
fatigue. Others have found they enjoy
preparing and eating homemade food
more than they expected. Some new
habits and skills appear likely to last.
Before she began quarantining in
late March, 33-year-old television
producer Erika Navarrete Nagle of
Denver had never cooked chicken.
“I was a mess in the kitchen,” she
says. ``I grew up in a Cuban family
with a mother and sister who always
cooked for me. You’d think I picked
up a thing or two, but I’ve always been
a workaholic and I never made time
nor had the desire to cook.”
“It took a global pandemic and
mandatory quarantine for me to
learn,” she says.
She’s feeling great about her progress:
“I jumped up and down when I
sautéed my first onions and garlic. I
almost took to social media to brag.”
Navarette loved her mom’s Cuban
chicken breast recipe, and asked for
the recipe. “My mom is a typical Cuban
mom cook ... no measurements,
just ‘a ojo,’ which means ‘eye it’. I
don’t do ‘a ojo’,” she says.
After some fails, Navarrete Nagle
has mastered it.
Mostly, however, she relies on
cookbooks these days. “I’ve always
been intimidated by cookbooks; now
they are my best friends!”
John Wing, a travel agent in New
York City, used to spend a lot of time
in his car ferrying kids to and from
activities. He was already the primary
cook in his household of 5 people, but
since March, when his driving duties
abated, he’s been cooking more than
ever.
His everyday cooking style hasn’t
bransonglobe.com
From exhilaration to fatigue, home cooks assess new normal
changed much – he is sticking with his
repertoire of chicken cutlets, fajitas,
pasta, salmon and homemade pizza,
balancing the different preferences of
three kids living at home.
Wing also has dug into a few cooking
projects, like homemade bagels,
learning the proper way to deep fry,
and perfecting his scone game. The
family has begun ordering in more
now, too, and his kids have taken up
baking.
“The hugest adjustment for me was
surrendering my control over food
shopping,” says Wing. He describes
himself as “that guy who picks up
and looks at almost every package of
berries before picking the one,” and an
intuitive shopper who likes to walk up
and down every aisle of the market in
lieu of using lists. Since the pandemic
started, he has been ordering online,
which has taken some getting used to.
Emmie Lee, who lives with her
husband and two teenagers in New
York City, was already an avid cook,
but has used her extra time during the
pandemic to stretch those muscles.
Her babysitter used to make peerless
Chinese dumplings, and Lee made
it a mission to replicate them with
her family’s help. “We can’t produce
them at the incredible rate she can
pleat them, but they are delicious!”
SEE HOME COOKS, PAGE 19
Erika Navarrete Nagle. (William Nagle via AP)
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NATIONAL
NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
New Orleans Saints quarterback
Drew Brees and his wife have
announced a $5 million donation
to build community health centers
throughout Louisiana.
Drew Brees and Brittany Brees
appeared in a video posted to the
NFL player’s Instagram account
Monday revealing the partnership
between the Brees Dream Foundation
and Louisiana health care
system Ochsner Health.
• HOME COOKS
Continued from page 18
Other cooking projects have included
Taiwanese beef noodle soup,
Spanish tortillas and tahdig (Persian
rice). Lee started her quarantine cooking
by focusing on foods the family
normally ordered in or ate out, trying
to satisfy those cravings in her own
kitchen.
She also has become a fan of preparing
large pieces of meat and re-using
that protein for a few meals in different
ways. She re-purposes them in
salads, sandwiches, or simple rice or
pasta bowls.
At first, Lee made everyone sandwiches
for lunch, but now breakfast
and lunch have become more fendfor-yourself,
do-it-on-your-own-timeline.
“That
came with cooking fatigue
and my realization I could not spend
all day in the kitchen,” she says. “Now
I’m just focused on dinner,” which the
family still eats together at the table.
Lee still enjoys cooking, but has experienced
“dark days where I feel unDrew
Brees said the partnership
would have a particular emphasis
on underserved communities,
adding that the first of the health
care centers was set to be built in
New Orleans East later this year.
The centers will include primary
and specialty care services, he
said.
“COVID-19 has changed nearly
everything ... and as we work
through one of the greatest challenges
of our lifetimes, our health
inspired … then I’m cooking for subsistence,
and my heart is not vested
in what I’m making.” This summer,
she has been trying to organize some
socially-distanced outdoor meals with
friends.
Wing says his accelerated cooking
pace is not likely to stick: “Once our
lives are back to normal, I fully expect
we will be back to ordering in as
frequently as cooking at home.” He
plans to return to his brick-and-mortar,
in-person supermarket shopping too.
Navarette says she feels empowered
by having learned to cook, and
expects she’ll keep doing it. She has
learned to find recipes based on what
ingredients she has and what need
to be cooked first, and adds, “I’m so
much less intimidated by cooking and
knives and cookbooks!”
“I can feed my family (more than
just buttered noodles). Feels good to
say,” she says.
And Lee can’t wait to return to
restaurants with friends for certain
foods that she’s not attempting at
home, like Shanghai soup dumplings
and falafel.
and wellness has never been more
important,” Drew Brees said in
the video.
“We will continue to bridge
the gap to bring healthcare, education
and economic equity
to all of our communities,” the
Brees’ added in the post.
In March, the family donated an
additional $5 million to go toward
coronavirus relief in Louisiana,
news outlets reported.
Brees drew criticism in June
and subsequently apologized for
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 19
Drew Brees to donate $5M to support Louisiana health care
comments he made in an interview
regarding his opposition to Colin
Kaepernick’s kneeling during the
national anthem. The comments
came as demonstrations against
police brutality and racial injustice
unfolded around the world.
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CURIOUSITIES
Farmer returns prosthetic leg
that skydiver lost during jump
WEST ADDISON, Vt. (AP)
— A Vermont skydiver who lost
his prosthetic leg during a jump
has it back, thanks to a farmer
who kept an eye out for it and
spotted it in a soybean field.
Double amputee Chris Marckres,
of Hyde Park, went for a
jump Saturday at Vermont Skydiving
Adventures in West Addison
and lost one of his prosthetic
legs after leaping from the plane.
“I think my adrenaline was
so high and I was just so excited,
I didn’t realize I had lost
it,” Marckres told NECN and
NBC10 Boston.
Marckres, who was harnessed
to an instructor, landed safely.
He then put out the word on social
media that he’d lost his leg.
Farmer Joe Marszalkowski saw
the post before finding the prosthetic
on Sunday in a soybean
field. Beyond a few scratches, it
was undamaged.
bransonglobe.com
“You’ve always got to keep an
eye out,” said Marszalkowski,
who compared the discovery to
a needle in a haystack. He said
he was grateful he found the leg
without running it over with a
machine during the fall harvest.
Farmer Joe Marszalkowski holds a prosthetic leg that he found Sunday in a
soybean field on his farm. (Jack Thurston/NECN and NBC10 Boston via AP)
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CURIOUSITIES
“Or, God forbid, the combine
sucked it up — it would’ve destroyed
it,” Marszalkowski said.
Marckres said losing his leg
turned into a positive experience.
“We kind of take for granted
sometimes how many truly
good people there still are in the
world.”
Long haul: Dog lost on South
Carolina highway found in
Miami
MIAMI (AP) — A pet dog
that jumped out of a car window
on a South Carolina highway
has been found two weeks
later, nearly 600 miles away in
Miami, according to a relative
of the owner.
The dog named Belle escaped
from the moving car near
Charleston on July 15, according
to Tim Whitfield, whose
90-year-old mother owns Belle.
Whitfield put out a call for
help on Facebook at the time
and said that he bought the puppy
for his mother after her dog
of 16 years recently died. She
was “heartbroken” after hearing
the dog was lost, Whitfield
added.
After nearly two weeks of
searching, Whitfield learned
over the weekend that a car of
Florida residents grabbed Belle
out of traffic after spotting the
animal while traveling through
Charleston to Miami, WCIVTV
reported Sunday.
The rescuers said they saved
Belle because they were afraid
she was going to be hit by oncoming
cars, the station reported.
They then tracked down
Whitfield through social media
posts.
Whitfield thanked all the people
who helped share Belle’s
story in a message posted to
Facebook on Sunday.
“A great reminder that when
all seems lost, hope must be the
constant thought,” he said.
For more
‘awww!’ per
column inch.
Read...
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 21
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22 • July 29 - 30, 2020
HISTORY
bransonglobe.com
Today in History: Movies, sports and more
• 904 Thessalonica is sacked
by Saracen pirates led by renegade
Leo of Tripoli
• 1221 Emperor Go-Horikawa
aged only 10 years old ascends
to the Chrysanthemum
Throne of Japan
• 1567 James VI is crowned
King of Scots at Stirling
• 1588 The Battle of Gravelines
- Spanish Armada damaged
and scattered by the English
fleet
• 1609 Samuel de Champlain
shoots and kills two Iroquois
chiefs at Ticonderoga, New
York setting the stage for
French-Iroquois conflicts for
the next 150 years
• 1676 Nathaniel Bacon declared
a rebel for assembling
frontiersmen to protect settlers
from Indians
• 1794 African Episcopal
Church of St. Thomas in Philadelphia,
dedicated
• 1848 Irish Potato Famine:
Tipperary Revolt - an unsuccessful
nationalist revolt
against British rule put down
by police
• 1864 American Civil War:
Confederate spy Belle Boyd
is arrested by Union troops
and detained at the Old Capitol
Prison in Washington,
D.C.
• 1905 US Secretary of War
William Howard Taft makes
secret agreement with Japanese
Prime Minister Katsura
agreeing to Japanese free rein
in Korea in return for non-interference
with the US in the
Philippines
• 1907 Sir Robert Baden-Powell
forms Boy Scouts in England
•
1914 1st transcontinental
phone link made between
New York City and San Francisco
•
1921 Adolf Hitler becomes
leader of the National Socialist
German Workers Party
• 1923 Albert Einstein speaks
on pacifism in Berlin
• 1927 1st iron lung installed
(Bellevue hospital, NY)
• 1932 Great Depression:
in Washington, D.C., U.S.
troops disperse the last of the
“Bonus Army” of World War
I veterans
• 1948 King George VI opens
14th modern Olympic Games
in London
• 1949 Moscow ends the blockade
of West Berlin
• 1954 Publication of “Fellowship
of the Ring” 1st volume
of “Lord of the Rings” by J.
R. R. Tolkien published by
George Allen and Unwin in
London
• 1955 USSR performs nuclear
Test
• 1956 Jacques Cousteau’s Calypso
anchors in 7,500 m of
water (record)
• 1958 US President Eisenhower
signs into law National
Aeronautics and Space Act of
1958
• 1959 First United States Congress
elections in Hawaii as a
state of the Union.
• 1968 Pope Paul VI, in an encyclical
entitled “Humanae
Vitae” (Of Human Life), declares
any artificial forms of
birth control prohibited
• 1969 Mariner 6 begins transmitting
far-encounter photos
of Mars
• 1974 2nd impeachment vote
against Nixon by House Judiciary
Committee
• 1974 Episcopal Church ordained
female priests
• 1975 Ford became 1st US
President to visit Nazi concentration
camp Auschwitz
• 1976 In New York City, the
EXP. 7/31/20
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HISTORY
“Son of Sam” kills one person
and seriously wounds another
in first of a series of attacks
• 1987 Ben & Jerry’s and Jerry
Garcia agree on a new flavor
Cherry Garcia
• 1988 FDIC bails out 1st Republic
Bank, Dallas, with $4
billion
• 1988 Gorbachev pushes plan
electing president and parliament
in March, 1989
• 1988 Judge orders NASA to
release unedited tape from
Challenger cockpit
• 2015 Microsoft launches
Windows 10
• 2015 Zion Harvey became
the first paediatric patient to
receive a double hand transplant
at The Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia
• 2016 Hillary Clinton accepts
the Democratic nomination
for US President at Democratic
convention in Philadelphia
- first woman by a major
US party
Movies & TV
• 1928 Test footage first created
for Walt Disney’s “Steamboat
Willie” with Mickey Mouse
• 1957 Jack Paar’s The Tonight
show premieres
• 1965 Beatles movie “Help”
premieres, Queen Elizabeth
attends
Music
• 1973 Led Zeppelin have more
than $200,000 in cash stolen
from a safety-deposit box at
the New York Hilton
• 2019 Record for longest run
at the top of US singles chart
made by country rap single
“Old Town Road” by Lil Nas
X remixed with Billy Ray
Cyrus, No. 1 for 17 weeks
Sports
• 1915 Pirate Honus Wagner at
41, hits a grand slam HR
• 1950 Pee Wee Reese, hits the
3,000th Dodger home run
• 1961 Phillies lose 1st of 23
straight games
• 1974 St Louis Card Lou
Brock steals his 700th base
• 1978 On Old Timer’s Day,
NY Yankees announce that
Billy Martin will return as
NY Yankee manager in 1980
and Bob Lemon will become
GM
• 1991 Yankee Stadium fans
throw cups and blowup dolls
at Jose Canseco
• 2014 Chicago Cubs player
John Baker scores the win
against the Colorado Rockies
at Wrigley Field in the longest
game in Cubs history
Birthdays
• 1796 Walter Hunt, American
inventor (safety pin, sewing
machine), born in Martinsburg,
New York (d. 1859)
• 1883 Benito Mussolini [Il
Duce], Fascist Italian dictator
(1922-43), born in Predappio,
Forlì, Italy (d. 1945)
• 1888 Vladimir K. Zworykin,
Russian-American inventor
(development of television,
cathode ray tube), born in
Murom, Russian Empire (d.
1982)
• 1892 William Powell, American
actor (Thin Man, My Man
Godfrey), born in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania (d. 1984)
•
• 1905 Clara Bow, American
silent screen actress (It,
Saturday Night Kid), born
in Brooklyn, New York (d.
1965)
• 1932 Nancy Landon Kassebaum,
(Sen-R-Kansas )
• 1936 Elizabeth Hanford
Dole, US Secretary of Transportation
(1983-87)
• 1937 Charles Schwab, American
investor and entrepreneur
(Charles Schwab Corporation),
born in Sacramento,
California
• 1938 Peter Jennings, Canadian-American
news anchor
(ABC Evening News), born
in Toronto, Ontario (d. 2005)
• 1953 Geddy Lee, lead vocalist/bassist
(Rush-Tom Sawyer),
born in Toronto, Ontario
• 1953 Ken Burns [Kenneth
Lauren], American director
and documentary film producer
(The Civil War, Baseball),
born in Brooklyn, New
York
• 1953 Tim Gunn, American
television and fashion personality
(Project Runway), born
in Washington, D.C.
• 1966 Martina McBride, country
singer
• 1972 Wil Wheaton, American
actor (Star Trek Next Generation-Wesley,
Stand By Me),
born in Burbank, California
• 1980 Ryan Braun, Canadian
July 29 - 30, 2020 • 23
baseball player (Los Angeles
Angels), born in Kitchener,
Ontario
• 1993 Rayne Dakota “Dak”
Prescott, American NFL quarterback
(Dallas Cowboys),
born in Sulphur, Louisiana
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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
VENDORS WANTED
AND
COMMERCIAL service
and installation 0% interest
financing 100% satisfaction
guarantee. GOFF
HVAC and Solar Energy
417-334-3681 goff-hvac.com
07/31
VINTAGE CHIC BOUTIQUE
in Forsyth, has booths available,
great store, location, traffic and
rent. Call afternoons Tue-Sat.
417-677-6673
07/31
DON’T PANIC
... SELL YOUR
STUFF!
HELP WANTED
Your ad would
look GREAT
right here! Call
(417)
334-9100
TODAY!
FREE ESTIMATES FROM
ground up remodels roofs, deck,
additions, pole-barns, flooring
and complete build 5yr labor warranty
417-699-1635
07/31
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. 07/31
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
07/31
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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, supervised
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
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!
HELP WANTED
STAY
CALM
AND
PLACE A
CLASSIFIED
AD.
(417)
334-9100
Support Our
Local Veterans!
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
July 29 - 30, 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
July 29 - 30, 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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P(,Volume 1, Issue 115 NBranson Globe, July 29-30, 2020. Your source for local news and entertainment._ 2UQe