What a dual. Eureka wins 33-32!

EUREKA STRONG MISSOURI
What a dual. Eureka wins 33-32!

Hassan Haskins signs with University of Michigan and Brendan Schlittler signs with Liberty University! Congratulations!
Drive through the Midwest’s most spectacular holiday light display filled with animated scenes, dazzling special effects, and millions of shimmering lights.
Click here for Train and Wagon Ride information
Maximum size of vehicle allowed is 12′ high and 30′ long.Due to the unique presentation of our display, large commercial buses will not pass through Santa’s Magical Kingdom but we do offer options to enable groups from large tour busses to visit the Kingdom. Please call 636-938-5925 for details.
Propose to that special someone during a private wagon ride through the dazzling lights of Santa’s Magical Kingdom.
Engagement package will include a private wagon wagon ride, photo with Santa, and a commemorative personalized ornament. Available on select dates only. Please call for pricing and availability.
Santa’s Magical Kingdom is conveniently located off I-44 just 10 minutes west of I-270 at Yogi Bear’s Jellystone Park Resort next to Six Flags in Eureka, MO at exit #261.
Take exit #261 off I-44 in Eureka and drive toward the lights.
You can see them for miles!

Take I-44 to Six Flags Exit #261 in Eureka, MO. Make a right at the 1st light as you exit the highway then left on Fox Creek Road at the next stoplight. Proceed 1/8 mile to the Santa’s Magical Kingdom entrance on the right.
Take I-44 to Six Flags Exit #261 in Eureka, MO. Make a left on Six Flags Road after you exit the highway then left at the stoplight on Fox Creek Road. Proceed 1/8 mile to the Santa’s Magical Kingdom entrance on the right.
From St. Louis (Westbound on 44), take Six Flags Exit #261. Take a LEFT off the exit (away from all the other traffic), then turn RIGHT at the Shell Station.
Toward St. Louis (Eastbound on 44) take Six Flags Exit #261. Take a RIGHT off the exit, then the next RIGHT into the Shell Station.
Click below for more info and to go directly to Santa’s Magical Kingdom Site!
MY VIDEO AND A GREAT ARTICLE BELOW-
The supermoon rises behind the U.S. Capitol and the Jefferson Memorial in Washington on Sunday, Dec. 3, 2017. Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA
For the first and only time in 2017, a visible supermoon will illuminate the sky starting Sunday night.
The supermoon will seem 7 percent bigger and 16 percent brighter to the naked eye, wrote Gordon Johnston, a program executive with NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft system. The moon will appear largest overnight after 12:45 a.m. ET, but those who might not be up to view it overnight can also take a look from sunset Sunday until sunrise Monday.
This lunar event looks like it’ll take a backseat compared to more hyped-up lunar events that occurred in the last year, like the supermoon in November 2016 and the total solar eclipse in August. Unlike the eclipse, however, this lunar event is safe to view with the naked eye and doesn’t require special glasses or eye protection.
Last year’s supermoon was the closest the moon has gotten to Earth’s orbit since 1948, NASA says, and it won’t get that close again until 2034.

Noah Petro, deputy scientist for NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission, explained why this supermoon is so close to Earth — the moon’s orbit isn’t a perfect circle.
“There are a lot of tidal, or gravitational, forces that are pulling on the moon,” Petro told Space.com, adding that the gravity of the Earth, the sun and the other planets of the solar system all affect the moon’s orbit. “You have all of these different gravitational forces pulling and pushing on the moon, which gives us opportunities to have these close passes.
Some people weren’t impressed with this phenomenon, like astrophysicist and author Neil deGrasse Tyson, who took to Twitter to explain its ordinariness. “If last month’s Full Moon were a 16.0 inch pizza, then this month’s ‘Super’ Moon would be 16.1 inches. I’m just saying,” one of his tweets read.
Geeking out tonight over this awesome moon! Almost supermoon! #telescope#almostsupermoon
Sunday night’s Full Cold Moon will kick off a very special “supermoon trilogy,” NASA says.
The Dec. 3 full moon is the first of three consecutive supermoons, including a lunar eclipse. The other supermoons will happen on Jan. 1 and Jan. 31, 2018
The Eureka area’s first known inhabitants were Shawnee Indians on the banks of the Meramec and even today artifacts can be found as evidence of their past occupation of the area.
The Missouri Pacific Railroad was opened to Franklin (now Pacific) on July 19, 1853. It is said that as the builders of the railroad track came around the bend on the east side of the present site of Eureka and looked westward at the level land with no rocks and very little dirt to move they cried out, “Eureka!”, which translated from Greek means “I’ve found it!”. This is how Eureka received its name.
Eureka was laid out as a village in 1858 by Strodt and Shands of St. Louis. Some of the early families in Eureka were Lorenzo Votaw, Thomas Thomas, George Hornecker, Edward William Johnston, Major Beale (his son Dr. J.B.H. Beale) and James and Peter M. Brown.
In 1890, Eureka was a prosperous village of about 100 homes surrounded by fine fruit and agricultural land. The country roads to Crescent, Big River, Antire, Bald Hill, Glencoe, Allenton and Clifty Creek all centered here and Eureka had to her credit at this time a Catholic Chapel, a Methodist Church, a Post Office, a Freemasons’ Hall, three stores, a district school, two blacksmiths, a wagon maker, a saloon, and a fresh air camp for poor & orphaned city children. In 1900, the Children’s Industrial Farm began operating and later became Camp Wyman. Camp Wyman, now known as Wyman Center, is still operating camp programs for underprivileged children.
The first high school class was held in 1909 in Eureka. Eureka-based schools over the years have provided education to children from many areas including Fenton, Creve Coeur, Manchester, House Springs, Cedar Hill, Allenton, Eureka, Glencoe and others. Today, the City of Eureka is served by the award-winning Rockwood School District.
Over the years, a number of disasters have hit Eureka including floods, tornadoes and a number of major fires. Such disasters led to the formation of the Eureka Volunteer Fire Department in 1945, when they constructed a firehouse and acquired equipment. In 1970, the Eureka Fire Protection District was formed and now serves a 79 square mile area. In 1972, the first ambulance was acquired by the District to serve the area that was made possible by citizen and community organizational efforts.
In 1954, the City of Eureka was incorporated as a 4th-class city with a land area of approximately 2.7 square miles. Over the years, the City has had a number of successful annexations and today is a City of approximately 9.35 square miles. The population of the City has grown: 817 in 1950; 1,134 in 1960; 2,384 in 1970; 3,862 in 1980; 4,683 in 1990, and 7,676 according to the 2000 U.S. Census. The City of Eureka’s annual budget has grown from approximately $3,400.00 in 1954 to over $4,000,000.00 today.
In 1970, the Six Flags – St. Louis Amusement Park was constructed and serves as a major tourist attraction in the Midwest. An average of two to three million people visit Six Flags St. Louis annually. The presence of Six Flags – St. Louis and the community’s proximity to the City of St. Louis has influenced and spurred growth in the Eureka area.
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