Desk its good to be back here today. Lieutenant governor want to thank you, sender shots, statewide elected officials and the state legislators that are here today. It is an honor to stand before you today as they 57th governor of the great state of missouri. Some point in our lives many of us have probably been reminded of the importance of considering the past when making decisions for the future. It also seems fitting that such a historic milestone, missouris bicentennial celebration, coincides with these challenges. Missouri is seen difficult days in the past 200 years from the civil war and the Great Depression womens suffrage, civil rights, through it all missouri has prevailed . [applause] we had just experienced a chaotic and on precedented series most of ministrations heavily 60 days to prepare the First Six Months of the administration were hectic to say the least we are faced with quick decisions on a 30 billion state budget and nearly 150 of legislation that same summer, an
Players who become doctors and there are lots of people who go on to law school who were gymnasts. These are decisions that the student had to make. Its not easy. Its difficult, again from it gets into the whole issue of time commitment, and if its a tough balancing act, but whether or not the degree to which athletes are supported in their academic choices again gets into, its a school by School Situation but some athletes experience proved to be really fulfilling. Others not so much. There some question whether call it was talk about, those experiences are out there and theyre real and those things happen. Theyre not just happen in football and mens basketball. They happen in gymnastics, swimming track athletes come it happens across the board. Host mike from pennsylvania. The morning, go ahead. Caller okay. Earlier you had a call from another penn state alumni and abroad of the fairness issue of what happened to penn state. You didnt seem to have an opinion about the fairness issue,
Dr. Keisha Scarlett, St. Louis Public Schools superintendent, was greeted with a first day of school challenge she rarely if ever faced as a Seattle Schools administrator for 24 years.