From the metro desk, here are a few headlines you will find this weekend in The Joplin Globe and online at joplinglobe.com.
Tuition rates to stay steady at Crowder College
Brairbrook residents seeking Community Improvement District
MSSU BOG meets in Joplin
Special Olympics set for weekend in Joplin
Health Choice petition drive set to start
Fairview residents hold town hall, talk about mayor’s arrest
Missouri DNR director talks water quality with Wally Kennedy
Faith: Forest Park Baptist plans Christmas show
Online readers take aim at The Joplin City Council and The Joplin Globe over property rights issues
These stories, local sports results and the Faith & People sections — This weekend in The Joplin Globe and online at joplinglobe.com.
Local News
Tomorrow’s News Now for the weekend
- Local News
-
-
‘A creek runs through it’ concept posed for new JHS
The Joplin Board of Education got its first peek at preliminary architectural renderings for the new Joplin High School at a special meeting Wednesday night. Architects from DLR Group, based in Omaha, Neb., and Corner Greer & Associates, based in Joplin, presented the plans to the board for its blessing to move forward with the design concept.
-
Joplin Globe wins APME Sweepstakes Award
A Joplin Globe project, “22 Miracles in May,” telling stories about 22 victims of the May 22 tornado, has won the APME Sweepstakes Award, it was announced this morning.
-
Okla. receives waiver from No Child Left Behind
Oklahoma’s top education official reacted with glee Thursday with the announcement that the state is one of 10 states being granted a waiver from the federal No Child Left Behind law that requires students be proficient in reading and math by 2014 — but focused on getting students to “just pass the tests.”
-
Mo. optometrist filed $40 million refund claim
A southwest Missouri optometrist who filed a tax return claiming a $40 million refund has been sentenced to four years and three months in federal prison.
-
Kan. House approves bipartisan redistricting bill
Power in the Kansas House is likely to shift next year from rural parts of the state to the Kansas City area after members overwhelmingly approved a bipartisan bill Thursday for redrawing their districts.
-
Horses getting dumped into Mo.’s wild herd
Owners who can no longer afford to care for their horses are abandoning them in southern Missouri hoping they will join Missouri’s only wild horse herd, which descends from animals set free in the Great Depression also by their impoverished owners.
-
Mike Pound: Spirit of competition evident during double-overtime game
When I played basketball in high school, I played in several very close games.
Now, some people who may have known me in high school are probably laughing right now and saying, “What Mike meant to say is that when he was in high school, he came very close to playing in some games.” -
Neosho council approves new golf cart contract
The purchase of golf carts was back on the agenda this week for the Neosho City Council. City Attorney Steve Hays said there were errors in the financing terms that were part of a bid approved last month for the purchase of 55 gas-powered carts from E-Z-Go for $144,195, so the purchase of a new fleet was rebid.
-
Fugitive in 1993 British heist arrested in Ozark
A man suspected of stealing about $1.5 million from a security van in England in 1993 has been arrested in southwest Missouri.
-
Kansan describes trips into space during PSU visit
Everyone had a reason Wednesday afternoon for heading to Yates Hall at Pittsburg State University. Kansas native Steven Hawley was there to make a presentation called “The Engineering, Scientific and Cultural Legacy of the Space Shuttle,” which attempted to fit into 30 minutes 30 years of human space flight and what we have learned from it.
- More Local News Headlines
-






