News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Bolivar restaurant business owners sued for defamation, breach of contract
SUMMARY: Larry and Kathryn Gifford, former owners of Bolivar’s Kathy’s Pasta, have filed a lawsuit against Iris Pogue and Edward Cahoj, managers of Side by Side LLC, who rented the restaurant location in late 2023 and were evicted in 2024. The Giffords, who own the building, allege Side by Side failed to pay rent, neglected maintenance, and caused financial losses exceeding $60,000. They claim Pogue made false, defamatory social media posts accusing them of neglect and fraud, damaging their reputation. The Giffords seek damages, injunctive relief, and a jury trial. Side by Side LLC has not yet commented.
The post Bolivar restaurant business owners sued for defamation, breach of contract appeared first on www.ozarksfirst.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Chiefs’ tight end Travis Kelce makes shirtless cameo in Happy Gilmore 2
SUMMARY: Travis Kelce makes a comedic cameo in *Happy Gilmore 2*, now streaming on Netflix. Playing an over-the-top hotel server, Kelce clashes with Oscar (Bad Bunny) over a gin order, leading to a fiery outburst and dramatic firing. Later, Kelce chest-bumps two players through a table and appears in Oscar’s surreal dream sequence, tied up and covered in honey before being attacked by a bear. Adam Sandler praised Kelce’s performance, calling him “unbelievable.” The film features other celebrity cameos, including Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy, John Daly, Eminem, and Post Malone, blending golf, humor, and star power in a wild sequel.
The post Chiefs' tight end Travis Kelce makes shirtless cameo in Happy Gilmore 2 appeared first on fox4kc.com
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
Lawmakers created a teacher seat on Missouri’s education board. It’s been vacant for 7 years
by Annelise Hanshaw, Missouri Independent
July 25, 2025
The Missouri State Board of Education has an empty seat, chronically vacant since lawmakers created a position for a teacher to advise the board seven years ago.
Like the other board members, the spot is appointed by the governor. But former Gov. Mike Parson, who took office shortly before the seat was created, never chose someone for the position. And thus far, Gov. Mike Kehoe hasn’t either.
“We would like to see an active classroom teacher be on the state board to provide that perspective of someone who’s in the classroom now and say what the immediate needs of educators and students are in the classroom,” Mark Jones, communications director for the Missouri branch of the National Education Association, told The Independent.
The State Board of Education, at its board retreat in July, discussed the vacancy during a discussion of the board’s legal responsibilities.
“This position still hasn’t been appointed, and I don’t know if there are any plans to do that at this point,” Sarah Madden, general counsel for the Missouri Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, told the board.
Pamela Westbrooks-Hodge, a board member from Pasadena Hills, questioned why the seat was empty.
“I would hope there’s a sense of urgency,” she said.
Madden responded that she didn’t have an answer for why the position has never been filled.
Despite the position being largely unpaid apart from expense reimbursement and lacking voting authority, teachers have been willing to step up.
“Those teachers that are there every day in the classroom, they have that firsthand knowledge, so they’re able to share that with the board,” said Matthew Michelson, director of education policy at Missouri State Teachers Association. “A lot of them would want to do that, and they would want to be able to explain how decisions impact classroom teachers or how it impacts the profession.”
Jones said he knows two former Missouri Teacher of the Year awardees who have inquired about becoming the teacher member but never got tapped to join the board.
State law requires that they must be an “active classroom teacher” with at least five years of experience. The requirement to be an active teacher is important, Michelson told The Independent, because the state of education moves quickly.
“Even if you took a teacher from 2019 pre-COVID and you put them on the state board, I don’t know that they would have the same perspective as someone who was in the classroom last year,” he said. “Things have just evolved so quickly, so having someone that is currently in the classroom and that is dealing with the issues of today is really important.”
The other board members are barred from having direct ties to the classroom, with statute restricting them from being “connected, either as an official or as an employee, with any public, private, or denominational school, college or university.”
The idea for a teacher representative came over a decade ago, Michelson said, with a member of the teacher’s association pitching it. Then-state Rep. Becky Ruth, a Republican from Festus and a past president of the teachers association, took the idea to the state legislature in 2015.
Her original bill asked for voters to weigh in on requiring three members of the eight-member board to be educators. By 2018, the legislation evolved to propose adding a teacher as a non-voting member, and it passed as part of an omnibus education bill.
“Ultimately it ended up being more of an advisory position because, frankly, that is what the legislature was more inclined to get something passed with,” Michelson said.
At the time, he never would have imagined that the seat would sit empty for years.
Board vacancies are not rare in Missouri. According to a state website dedicated to boards and commissions, there are over 1,000 positions left vacant or filled with a member serving on an expired term.
Some boards and commissions, like the Citizen’s Land Development Cooperative Commission, are completely vacant. But the State Board of Education rarely has its voting-member positions unfilled.
“It just depends on what the priorities of the governor are and what other boards and commissions he needs to fill,” Jones said. “But I think seven years is a long time to go without a direct teacher voice to the board.”
The governor’s office did not respond to a request for comment.
Keep Missouri Journalism Alive
As a nonprofit newsroom, our articles are free for everyone to access. Readers like you make that possible. Can you help sustain our watchdog reporting today?
Missouri Independent is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Missouri Independent maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jason Hancock for questions: info@missouriindependent.com.
The post Lawmakers created a teacher seat on Missouri’s education board. It’s been vacant for 7 years appeared first on missouriindependent.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Left
This article presents a factual account of the prolonged vacancy of a teacher advisory seat on the Missouri State Board of Education, emphasizing the perspectives of educators and education associations advocating for the position to be filled. The language is measured and focuses on the importance of having an active teacher’s voice in education policymaking. It highlights criticisms of the governor’s inaction without adopting a strongly partisan tone. The article leans slightly left by giving voice primarily to teachers’ unions and education advocates, groups generally associated with progressive education policies, but it avoids overt ideological framing or partisan rhetoric.
News from the South - Missouri News Feed
SLSO announces single tickets sale, adds additional shows to 25-26 season
SUMMARY: The St. Louis Symphony Orchestra (SLSO) announced that single tickets for its 2025-2026 season are now on sale, featuring two new shows: “Dolly Parton’s Threads: My Songs in Symphony” on Jan. 17-18, combining multimedia storytelling and symphonic renditions of Dolly’s hits, and “Tower of Power,” an R&B funk band collaboration with SLSO on April 15. The season unfolds at the recently renovated $140 million Powell Hall, reopening in September. The 145th season’s lineup includes classics, film concerts, and special events, with tickets available via the SLSO website or box office.
The post SLSO announces single tickets sale, adds additional shows to 25-26 season appeared first on fox2now.com
-
News from the South - North Carolina News Feed5 days ago
Helene devastated our region. Even more death and despair might be on the way. • Asheville Watchdog
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed6 days ago
Appeals court upholds Texas law limiting cities’ ordinances
-
News from the South - Arkansas News Feed7 days ago
Judge Reviewing Request For 10 Commandments To Not Be Displayed This School Year
-
News from the South - Missouri News Feed6 days ago
NYC pawn shop owner pleads guilty to his role in Kelce, Mahomes burglaries
-
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed7 days ago
Court order: Tennessee prisoner’s heart implant must be deprogrammed before his execution
-
Mississippi Today4 days ago
Mississippi’s U.S. Rep. Michael Guest in running for Homeland Security chair
-
News from the South - Georgia News Feed7 days ago
Statesboro man sentenced for shooting cop
-
News from the South - Texas News Feed5 days ago
Texas health officials analyze lessons of measles outbreak