Month: March 2011

Authorities cracking down on drunk driving across region

Posted by – March 31, 2011

In the last few weeks, we’ve received information from two separate law enforcement agencies warning of a coming crackdown on drunk driving.

The Palmyra Police Department two weeks ago took part in a state-wide initiative against drunk driving, conducting sobriety checkpoints and DWI saturation patrols.

“The sobering fact is that impaired driving contributes to 30 percent of all Missouri traffic fatalities,” Chief Eddie Bogue wrote in a release. “Driving drunk is simply not worth all the consequences,” including a wide array of severe legal fallout.

The Clark County Sheriff’s Office says it has joined forces with several other regional law enforcement agencies to keep the roadways safe and dry.

The Clark County, Lewis County and Scotland County sheriff’s departments, as well as police departments in Edina, Kahoka and Memphis, have created a multijurisdictional DWI task force. This group will participate in “several operations” throughout the affected counties in the coming months, Clark County Sheriff Paul Gaudette wrote in a release. He didn’t elaborate on the details of those operations.

Drunk driving isn’t worth it. And it isn’t cool. Think before you drink, and don’t drink before you drive. No kidding.

VIDEO: Holocaust survivor describes persecution to Hannibal freshmen

Posted by – March 30, 2011

Marion Blumenthal Lazan, who with her family survived the Holocaust, spoke to Hannibal High School freshmen Tuesday about her experiences surrounding World War II and the genocide in Europe that killed 6 million Jews during the war.

The persecution of Jews lasted throughout Lazan’s childhood, beginning long before her family’s interment in the Bergen-Belsen and Westerbork concentration camps. Nazi Germany’s anti-Semitic Nuremberg Laws of 1935 were enacted shortly after her birth in the small town of Hoya, Germany.

Below, Lazan discusses the persecution that beset her family even in her earliest days.

[local /wp-content/uploads/2011/03/lazan.flv]

To learn more about Lazan and her memoir, “Four Perfect Pebbles,” go to her website.

VIDEO: Hunting for buried treasure on the south side of Hannibal

Posted by – March 29, 2011

Local legend has it that just a few miles south of Warren Barrett Drive in Hannibal, just over the Ralls County line, a Civil War-era cannon is buried somewhere within a barren 10-acre plot on a private hilltop farm. Jim Waddell, who performs at Mark Twain Cave as its namesake, is leading a treasure hunt for the cannon this spring (in no small part because of its ties to a young Mark Twain).

Below is a video of Waddell explaining the cannon’s history as he and fellow historian Bob Kilmer doing an initial sweep of the field with metal detectors (not the ones they’ll eventually use — they’re still working to obtain a high-powered detector better suited to this sort of project).

[local /wp-content/uploads/2011/03/jim-waddell-treasure-hunt.flv]

By the way, if the farm looks a little familiar, that’s because this stretch of Carr’s Lane is also the home base for a popular holiday lights display, Candy Cane Lighted Lane.

VIDEO: Public hearing in Edina addresses CAFO regulations

Posted by – March 29, 2011

The Knox County Commission on Monday hosted a public hearing on the county health ordinance regulating concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs), massive animal barns — in this case, typically thousands-strong hog barns — that many county residents have said create a nuisance and pose a public health threat. Many farmers have defended CAFOs, many of which are affiliated with large farming corporations like Cargill and Smithfield, as ways to make an honest living in one of the least populous counties in Missouri.

Below is a video outlining a couple of the arguments for and against CAFOs, as well as one point of urgency underlying Monday’s meeting.

[local /wp-content/uploads/2011/03/knox-county-cafos.flv]

50 Miles of Art will put you on road less traveled

Posted by – March 25, 2011

imageThe 50 Miles of Art Studio and Gallery Tour this weekend seeks to spotlight art and shopping along scenic Mo. 79 in Hannibal, Louisiana and Clarksville.

That’s terrific. Just as long as you don’t intend to actually drive all the way down on Mo. 79.

The annual tour includes more than 40 artist and artisan galleries, studios and specialty shops along the 50 Miles of Art corridor connecting the three cities, “each (of which) … has its own special personality, talented artists and artisans, and tour offerings,” Brenda Beck Fisher of the Hannibal Arts Council wrote in a release. There will be special events, demonstrations and gallery receptions.

Overall, it’s a great event spotlighting the rich but sometimes overlooked artistic character of these three river towns. Tiny Clarksville, in particular, has become known as an art community in recent years, and its unique shopping is a significant draw for the town.

Unfortunately, the continued closure of Mo. 79 in northern Pike County throws a wrench into the idea of a scenic drive down the length of the riverside highway. It’s been closed just south of the Ashburn turn-off since November 2009 and will remain closed until this fall as the Missouri Department of Transportation works to repair unstable, crumbling pavement in the area. That means you can’t get from Hannibal to Louisiana on Mo. 79, although it’s still open (and still the preferred route) from Louisiana to Clarksville.

To get from Hannibal to Louisiana, take U.S. 61 from Hannibal to Bowling Green, then U.S. 54 to Louisiana. A more scenic route would be to hop across the Mississippi River on Interstate 72 and pick up Ill. 96 at Hull, Ill., taking that road to U.S. 54 and, from there, to Louisiana. Doesn’t add on too many more miles either way, but not quite the cruise down Mo. 79 that event organizers may have envisioned.

This is not meant in any way to detract from the event itself or discourage people from attending it. It’s simply worth mentioning that Mo. 79 isn’t actually the best route for this art crawl that, um, is based on the Mo. 79 art corridor.

Hopefully the highway at least opens back up in time for the leaves to change this fall, making Mo. 79 a particularly scenic drive. That would be an excellent opportunity to traverse the 50 Miles of Art.

Map of Hannibal’s proposed annexation plans

Posted by – March 24, 2011

Here’s a map reflecting Hannibal’s proposal for its latest round of annexation, provided to The Herald-Whig by City Manager Jeff LaGarce. The yellow areas represent Hannibal’s current city limits; the red boxes encompass land that would be annexed. (Click to enlarge.)

If all areas are annexed, they would fill in numerous holes in the somewhat haphazard shape of the city, particularly to the fast-growing west.

annexation-map

Family with Northeast Missouri connection shares harrowing tale from Japan

Posted by – March 23, 2011

Just because the shattering earthquake, tsunami and nuclear near-catastrophe in Japan earlier this month are no longer dominating the 24-hour news cycle doesn’t mean the human devastation there has ended. Countless people there now face the prolonged, daunting, in some cases insurmountable task of rebuilding their lives.

Three of those people, a missionary couple and their daughter, have a tenuous Northeast Missouri connection. Their father is a friend of Palmyra residents Wendell and Jan Kreider, themselves friends of David Lomax of the Lewis County Emergency Management Agency, who shared their story with us. The Gabe and Stephanie Craft family is originally from South Carolina, and they are safe in Japan, but all their worldly goods are gone.

Stephanie Craft wrote this account on March 14, three days after the earthquake and tsunami struck:

On Friday afternoon, as you all know, an 8.9 magnitude earthquake shook the country of Japan. (Editor’s note: It was later upgraded to a 9.0.) Gabe was at school across the bay and I was home in Jinomori with Violet.

When the earthquake started, I ran outside with Violet. We had no shoes or coats on, as it happened so suddenly.  I struggled to make it down the street to where my some of my neighbors were standing and holding on to some steel poles. They held out their arms to me, and then we all wrapped our arms around Violet. She began to cry, and the shaking became more and more severe and also probably because my heart was beating out of my chest. There was an explosion at the power plant that we could see from where we were standing, and we all screamed out loud as the sparks flew.

Finally, the shaking subsided, and we all stood around waiting to hear the announcement to follow. Violet was screaming so loudly that I could not hear the announcement at all. I stood there as long as I could, but we were both getting, cold so I started to walk back in to my house thinking it was all OK. Just as I arrived at my house, my dear friend Junko Mino drove past and shouted out my name. I was so happy to see her, and she immediately said, “There is a big tsunami coming, please get in my car.”

I ran to the door of my house and was able to grab shoes for me and Violet and our coats. They were by the door, so I didn’t even have to go inside, but I did see everything in my kitchen on the ground. I had my cell phone and ran back to the car, and we drove away. I tried to call Gabe several times, but everyone was doing the same thing. I could not get a connection. Finally, just before the service cut out, we connected, and I said, “Where are you?” He told me his location, and I told him I was going to the hospital because it is the highest place in our town.

Junko dropped me off there and then went to meet with her family. I went inside, and they were setting up triage in the entryways. I stood there in the entry as the aftershocks continued to shake the earth. A former student of Gabe’s and her mother arrived with her 1-month-old twin baby girls. And we waited together to meet our husbands.

After an hour passed, I was really getting sick. Someone came in and said, “Where is Gabe?” and I told them. Their eyes told me everything I did not want to know. They said the wave came, and I just felt my whole world shatter. I didn’t even know the wave had come. So I stood there trying to hold it together for our baby girl. Another 45 minutes passed, and I was really hanging by a thread of hope that I would see my beloved’s face one more time. I was thinking of all the things I had said the night before and that morning. What could I have said differently?

Then a familiar face appeared. It was my neighbor, and she shouted out that Gabe was there. I didn’t believe her though. She left, and running through the doors three minutes later was my beautiful husband. It was the most beautiful embrace of my life. My husband, my friend and love, was with me again. Then we waited for news of other loved ones.

That night, we were told to stay in the gym of the hospital with other survivors. It was amazing to experience such kindness and grace under so much distress. We are safe and very blessed. The next day we moved to another evacuation area to make room for incoming elderly and injured. There was no lack of water or medicine, but we knew the night would be another rough sleep. We decided to journey to the town where our friend Mark and his aforementioned wife, Junko, live. As we were about to leave, Mark came in the room. We all embraced in tears of relief and thankfulness. Mark took us to his home, and we ate and slept well. There is so much more to tell… But we must go at this time.

We give thanks to all of you who have kept us in your thoughts and prayers. We have each other, but we have lost our home, car and possessions.

We love you all and thank you so much for all of your thoughts and prayers. We are continuing a vigil of hope for friends not yet contacted.

Because of shipping costs and considerations, Gabe Craft’s father, Roy Craft, is collecting monetary donations for his son, daughter-in-law and granddaughter. Contact me if you need the address.

Where’s the Mark Twain CD?

Posted by – March 22, 2011

Back at the end of November, the Mark Twain Boyhood Home & Museum held a star-studded party celebrating Twain’s 175th birthday and debuting the new CD “Mark Twain: Words and Music.” So where is it?

The CD of Twain-inspired songs and spoken word, produced by Grammy-winning country music impresario Carl Jackson, wasn’t quite done at the time. The audio was still rough around the edges, and a few tracks were still just placeholders until stars like Jimmy Buffett and Alison Krauss could record them. Hannibal Convention and Visitors Bureau then-director Beau Hicks and museum director Cindy Lovell were hoping to wrap up the longer-than-anticipated recording process and shoot for a holiday release.

Lovell was asked a couple months later, after we still hadn’t seen it, how it was coming. She told me they hadn’t set a date yet because they were still waiting on Krauss, a Grammy-winning bluegrass singer, who was to record the standard “Beautiful Dreamer.” (By then, beach-bum idol Buffett had finished recording his readings from “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”)

Monday, with still no CD and no less curiosity about that, I phoned Lovell to ask how things were going. She responded in a message, “We are still collecting artist release signatures, so we do not have a date.”

Keep your eyes open, folks. It’s got to be released sooner or later. And with tracks like “Huck Finn Blues,” it should not disappoint fans of Hannibal’s favorite son or of Americana music.

Hannibal Area Chamber of Commerce to kick off Noonday Luncheons

Posted by – March 20, 2011

The Hannibal Area Chamber of Commerce will be hosting its first Noonday Luncheon for the 2011 season at noon Thursday at the Quality Inn and Suites Conference Center, 120 Lindsey Drive, Hannibal.  The luncheon’s theme will center on the April 5 municipal election and other active issues in the Missouri Legislature.

Tracy King, vice president of governmental affairs for the Missouri Chamber of Commerce and Industry, is the featured speaker at this luncheon.  He will discuss matters relating to tax and fiscal issues, economic development, labor and industrial relations and transportation before the Missouri General Assembly, government agencies, the courts and the general public. King also will discuss “Fix the Six,” six legislative priorities identified by Missouri businesses.

Chamber Noonday Luncheon season tickets are still available for the four planned Noonday Luncheons in 2011. This luncheon series provides an opportunity to receive up-to-date information on the community, legislation, ballot issues and other items of interest to the membership.  Season tickets can be purchased for $65 each for the entire series.

Individual tickets for each luncheon are $17.50.

To make a reservation for the luncheon Thursday, call the Chamber office at (573) 221-1101.  The final date for purchase of a season ticket or to make a reservation for the luncheon is Monday.

Harlem Wizards to play fundraiser game at Highland High School

Posted by – March 19, 2011

The Harlem Wizards, an entertainment basketball team in the style of the famous Harlem Globetrotters, will play a fundraiser game at 6:30 p.m. April 27 in the Highland High School gym along Mo. 6 just west of Ewing.

Tickets are $8 in advance, $10 at the door, with children under 3 admitted free. Order forms for the tickets are available at Highland High and Highland Elementary.

The Wizards will face off against the “Cougar Dawgs,” a team of district educators.

Proceeds go to the Lewis County C-1 PTO, which is sponsoring the game.

For more information, call Jennifer Parrish of the PTO at (660) 213-3928.