Bangs American Legion Lynn Snow Post 308 recently presented $3,000 in donations to area entities. Those given $500 were Good Samaritan Ministries, The Ark Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Shelter and CASA in the Heart of Texas. $250 donations went to Bangs Volunteer Fire Department, Bangs Cemetery Association, Bangs Food Pantry, Bangs Lions Club, Santa Anna Volunteer Fire Department and the Brown County Child Welfare Board. Pictured is adjutant Rick Phelps with Leesa Stephens, director of Good Samaritan Ministries; Travis Curry, board member with the Brown County Child Welfare Board and Sharon Cook, Abby Fraser and Brenda Butler with the Ark.
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Photo by Ken Goold
Handed lemons with the cancellation of the 2020 musical Bye Bye Birdie and the inability to do a regular musical this spring, the students in the Honeoye Falls-Lima Drama Club and artistic director John Hennessey and vocal director Ken Goold have made lemonade with a unique virtual musical revue called Broadway Unmasked 2021. The virtual revue will be dropped on the HF-L High School Music 2020 and Beyond YouTube channel on May 1.
Bye Bye Birdie was only two weeks from being presented when COVID-19 shut down schools last March. Originally, it was hoped it would only be postponed until June, but the ongoing pandemic forced its cancellation. Then, it was hoped that maybe it could be presented as the 2021 show since only six seniors from the Class of 2020 (Audrey Natale, Zetta Hayes, Sydney Picciotti, Dominick Abraham, Evie Manchester and Melissa Price) were in the show. However as the 2020-2021 academic year got underway, it was obvious that wasn’t an option eithe
wall street. today s poor performance comes amid fears of a global recession. reporter: right after the opening bell rang, the dow took a nosedive, dropping more than 350 points. sinking united states stocks followed markets around the globe. investors worldwide were not impressed by the federal reserve s latest effort to boost the economy. i don t see how that is really going to help the market per se in the long run. reporter: the fed s new plan, called operation twist, will use $400 billion to try and drive interest rates down even further. that is supposed to encourage business to his borrow more money, spend more, and ultimately, hire more employees. but united states corporations are already sitting on huge piles of cash, and don t have any plans to part with it. some economists believe we are headed for another recession. that fear is keeping businesses from spending. the problem is, consumers aren t spending either. 40% of americans say they have cut back their