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"This is the year to come to Fayette!" Why? Because you only turn 200 once! Bicentennial committee member, CONNIE SHAY, and Juneteenth coordinator, TIM JACKMAN, are here with details on just some of the celebrations happening this summer and throughout the year. June 13, 2023
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We're just over a month away from Red Top Christian Church's 200th anniversary celebration, and you're invited! TIM REINBOTT is back with the who, the what, the when and the how, and the book that's been created to mark this momentous occasion. Also, C.B. CHASTAIN, MU Veterinary Health Center, tells us something we don't know: he likes reptiles. If you're more in the 'they're icky!' camp, C.B. is here to say that they're not as dangerous as people make them out to be, if you just leave them alone. (4:27) September 1, 2022
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Paul Pepper: Dayna Glanz, OsteoStrong, "What is Osteopenia" & Tim Reinbott, RTCC Bicentennial UpdateYou've heard of osteoporosis, but what do you really know about osteopenia? OsteoStrong Columbia owner DAYNA GLANZ tells us it's more common than you might think in people over 50. Also, TIM REINBOTT is back to talk more about the year-long bicentennial celebration of Red Top Christian Church and, as always, you're invited. The big day is just around the corner! (4:49) July 21, 2022
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The State Historical Society of Missouri is winding down 2021 - our state's bicentennial - with a free concert and art event next Tuesday in Columbia! After a performance by the Columbia Chamber Choir, take a guided tour of the many early-statehood exhibits (including the quilt seen here) still on display inside the Center for Missouri Studies. Guest: JOAN STACK, Curator of Art Collections December 10, 2021
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Missouri's bicentennial is right around the corner, and to help celebrate this milestone, JOAN STACK invites everyone to come see The State Historical Society of Missouri's latest exhibit: 'Cultural Crossroads: Missouri in the Era of Statehood', which takes a closer look at the "melting pot" of cultures that have existed in our state over the past 200 years. July 29, 2021
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Randall Quisenberry and his mother lived in Columbia. The two of them would meet every Sunday after church to eat and watch a movie. On one Sunday in February, she woke up and said she didn’t feel good, and she died two days later. Randall buried her himself because he couldn’t afford to do anything else. He spoke with the Missouri on Mic team at this year's True/False Festival held in Stephen's Lake Park about coming to terms with his loss in this episode of Missouri on Mic.
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It's still eight years away, but Missouri lawmakers want the planning to begin for the bicentennial celebration of Missouri's statehood.Missouri was…