We have a brand new updated website! Click here to check it out!

CHS To Rename Auditorium After Late Drama Teacher


Central High School will recognize a renowned teacher Saturday, March 10, when it renames the CHS Auditorium after Colleen Thom.

Mrs. Thom, who died last spring, taught drama, speech and language arts at Central from 1957 to 1988 and is considered to have set the benchmark for theatrical productions.

“She was known for elaborate sets, costuming and dramatic interpretations of Broadway-style musicals,” said Kevin Griffin, Coordinator of Fine Arts for Secondary Schools. “She was a guiding light to the students she coached in drama, as well as to teachers who had the privilege of working with her on productions.”

Fittingly, the dedication will take place at this Saturday evening’s presentation of “Les Miserables,” at 7 p.m., in the Central Auditorium.

According to Griffin, many of Mrs. Thom’s students became professional actors, singers and technical crew members in some of the finest theatres, opera houses and film companies both here and abroad. They also became award-winning teachers of drama and other subjects. An untold number of theatre-goers enjoyed her work.

CRP Signup Continues

USDA is making it possible for producers to enroll a total of one-million acres of land in a new Conservation Reserve Program initiative to preserve grasslands and wetlands.

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack says – this initiative will have enormous benefits for farmers, sportsmen, and all Americans. Rather than wait for a general sign-up, producers whose land meet eligibility criteria can enroll directly in this “continuous” category at any time. Some of the changes brought on by the expansion will take place immediately and some will be initiated in the coming months.

USDA’s CRP has a 25-year legacy of successfully protecting the nation’s natural resources through voluntary participation, while providing significant economic and environmental benefits to rural communities across the United States.

Courtesy: NAFB News

Emerging Market Systems Present Challenges

U.S. Grains Council President Thomas Dorr told attendees at Commodity Classic that the U.S. needs to prepare to handle a variety of emerging market systems in developing economies with rapidly growing middle classes. Dorr noted – systems will vary country by country, but they will have one similarity. Emerging markets will be unable to build food systems on the U.S. system model. They will create new product marketing systems likely very different than our legacy markets.

At the same time, Roy Bardole, U.S. Soybean Export Council chairman, said – a growing population demands a growing protein supply; a growing income demands a growing animal protein supply. Bardole noted that – in addition to standard grain and soybean markets, Vietnam’s aquaculture production will be important for our soybeans farmers. Vietnam plans to increase the volume and value of its aquaculture production in the next years, and likely provide soybean meal as feed.

Bardole also noted that – while these emerging economies will provide opportunities for U.S. exports, managing U.S. infrastructure and port systems may be a challenge. He said – the three-million dollar Panama Canal expansion makes it vital for the United States to increase its port capacities. Dorr called the Panama Canal expansion – a great thing. But it will cut our throats if we don’t fund the Army Corps to build up our ports.

Local Dairy Offers Super Premium Strawberry Ice Cream

Shatto Milk Company has added super-premium Strawberry Ice Cream to its lineup of locally-produced dairy products. Along with Shatto vanilla and chocolate, the new strawberry ice cream is made on the family farm in rural Osborn.

Barbara and Leroy Shatto say customers have asked for strawberry ice cream for five years. The new sweet treat is available in supermarkets this month. For more information go to http://www.shattomilkcompany.com/

State Bowling Tourney Coming To St Joe


Thousands of bowlers will come together in St Joseph starting next weekend for the Missouri State Bowling Congress women’s championship tournament.

Dubbed “Rock ‘n Bowl in St Joe Mo,” the tournament starts March 10, and continues over six weekends in March and April.

The St Joseph Visitors Bureau says the tournament will bring an estimated economic impact of over a half million dollars.

The tournament is scheduled at Belt Bowl, 210 North Belt Highway and South Side Family Fun Center, 6938 King Hill Avenue, for 6 upcoming weekends! Dates are as follows:

March 10 & 11, 2012
March 17 & 18, 2012
March 24 & 25, 2012
March 31 & April 1, 2012
April 14 & 15, 2012
April 21 & 22, 2012

Thousands of bowlers will compete in the tournament which will bring in hundreds each weekend. The estimated economic impact is approximately $732,600.

For more information, visit http://www.mousbc.org.

Governor’s Education Proposal Called a “Political Stunt”

 

House Budget Committee Chair Ryan Silvey, R-Kansas City

The chairman of the Missouri House Budget Committee says Governor Nixon’s proposed increase in public education funding is a political stunt. Ryan Silvey says Nixon takes another big chunk out of funding for higher education to pay for a very small increase in public school funding.

Silvey offers an alternative that would reverse Nixon’s higher education cuts. The money would come from the Governor’s increases for K through 12 schools, the judiciary, and an incentive program for certain businesses. It would also modify the Governor’s proposed pay raise for state employees, allowing it only for those making less than $70,000.  

Pig Adventure Center Receives NPB Funds

The National Pork Board has voted to “donate” 2-million dollars toward funding the Fair Oaks Pig Adventure Center in northwestern Indiana. But there are strings attached to the donation. The contribution will take the form of an initial one-million dollars in seed money and an additional one-million once sponsors have raised 7.6-million dollars of the 9.6-million that will be needed for construction. Also, the board stipulated that its contribution must go to the education center and that the board must approve initial proposed messaging.

The proposed Fair Oaks Pig Adventure will include a pork education center and a nearby commercial swine farrowing/gestation operation suitable for touring. The pig site will be positioned as a national destination. Michael Platt, executive director of Indiana Pork, believes – the level of trust consumers have in pork farmers will increase as they see firsthand the ways in which the animals are handled and cared for in a modern swine farm environment.

Board members see the education component as a “high impact” activity, and plans for a distant learning process as a means to capture a national consumer education experience, both well within the responsibilities of the Pork Board, which manages the Nation Pork Checkoff.

Courtesy: NAFB News

Regulation Could Drive Up Consumer Costs

A study commissioned by the American Soybean Association indicates that if regulations on U.S. poultry and livestock are increased, costs for consumers would also increase. For example, the report says requiring cage-free housing for laying hens would increase the cost of eggs from $1.68 to $2.10 per dozen, a total cost of 2.66-billion dollars per year to U.S. consumers. Overall, consumers could pay up to 16.8 billion dollars more annually for meat, milk and eggs.

Vanessa Kummer, a soybean farmer from Colfax, North Dakota, and chair of the United Soybean Board, says – this could have a big impact on everyone. The most recent statistics compiled by the soy checkoff show the poultry and livestock sectors support 1.8 million jobs and generate more than 283-billion dollars for the U.S. economy.

Courtesy: NAFB News

Ethanol Groups File Legal Brief in California Court

A coalition of national ethanol groups, along with California and Midwest farming groups, have filed a brief urging the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold a court-ordered injunction on the California Air Resource Board’s low-carbon fuel standard. At issue is California’s request for a stay of the injunction issued by District Court Judge Lawrence J. O’Neill when he ruled in December that the new fuel regulation issued by CARB violated the Commerce Clause and was therefore unconstitutional.

The Renewable Fuels Association and Growth Energy believe California is using its leverage as the largest single state in the U.S. ethanol market to try to force producers in other states to reduce emissions in those states—not California.  The Commerce Clause forbids regulations like the LCFS, where one state tries to regulate activity in another state.

In the brief, RFA and Growth Energy argue that staying Judge O’Neill’s injunction would harm and disrupt the Midwest ethanol industry, but would not appreciably advance the goals of the LCFS. Growth Energy CEO Tom Buis and RFA CEO Bob Dinneen say – if we are going to have a low-carbon society, we need to have a low-carbon fuel. Ethanol is the only commercially-viable, low-carbon fuel we have today.

Courtesy: NAFB News

HSUS Reaching Into Canada

The Humane Society of the United States is reaching across the Canadian border, asking the Ontario-based Tim Hortons restaurant chain to disclose to its shareholders the feasibility of ensuring that bacon and other pork products the restaurant chain uses in its U.S. locations does not come from pigs traced back to systems using gestation-sow stalls. HSUS is a shareholder of Tim Hortons. The HSUS proposal will be voted on at the company’s annual meeting in May.

This proposal mirrors McDonald’s plan announced in late February, in which it asked its suppliers for a report on their long-term gestation-sow housing strategies. McDonald’s has given its suppliers a deadline of reporting back by May. McDonald’s believes – there are alternatives that we think are better for the welfare of sows.

According to its web site, Tim Hortons is the fourth largest publicly-traded quick service restaurant chain in North America and the largest in Canada.

Courtesy: NAFB News

 

Copyright Eagle Radio | FCC Public Files | EEO Public File