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Gubernatorial candidates Barnett, Hansen seek reinvestment in Kansas’ future

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Republican candidate for governor Dr. Jim Barnett is crisscrossing the state to introduce his running mate — his wife, Rosie Hansen.

He made a stop in Hays on Thursday.

If elected, the duo would be the first couple to serve together as governor and lieutenant governor. Barnett said he wanted someone who was correct on the issues and could step in at a minute’s notice to fulfill the role as governor. Hansen said she works well with her husband and sees the partnership as an advantage.

Hansen grew up on a small farm near Americus, Kansas. She earned a bachelor’s degree from the University of Kansas, a law degree from the University of Minnesota, master’s in public administration from Harvard University and was a National Security Affairs Fellow at Stanford University.

She spent the majority of her career working for the U.S. State Department in the Foreign Service Office. She traveled to Kuwait just after Gulf War ended to help set up U.S. Embassy, worked in Sarajevo, Bosnia, as the war coming to an end and in Kabul, Afghanistan, among other posts. Bombs were still flying and snipers still present when she started work in Bosnia.

Hansen worked closely with many government agencies and foreign governments on the management of the embassy operations so others within the embassy could get their jobs done.

“In places like that, a new problem comes up everyday, and if you are not good at problem-solving and managing those types of situations, you are not going to be very effective at your job. That is what I enjoyed, building things and solving problems, and that is what I realized I could bring to state government.”

Hansen said Kansas has suffered in the last seven years from not having a functioning state government. An opportunity to rebuild Kansas’ government was why she said she agreed to step up and run with her husband, which she was initially reluctant to do.

Under Barnett’s and Hansen’s One Kansas platform, they would like to see money go back into Kansas Department of Transportation for infrastructure improvements, the medical and mental health systems, and education. Barnett and Hansen support Medicaid expansion in Kansas for humanitarian and economic reasons.

“What has happened with Gov. Brownback and now Gov. Colyer is that they have raided KDOT and every other fund they could, taken the money out of every cookie jar they could find and now we are harmed as a state,” Barnett said. “We don’t have money in the state for roads. Our mental health system has been systematically dismantled, and we have a privatized Medicaid system called KanCare that sends money out of state to for-profit institutions.”

Colyer championed KanCare. Barnett noted United Health Care’s CEO’s last salary was $66 million. United Health Care is a contractor under KanCare.

“They take 8 percent off the top plus administration costs while our hospitals are struggling to stay open,” Barnett said. “One has closed, and 30 are on the critical list. Our hospitals are not being paid, and Kansans do not have access to health care when we are sending that kind of money out of state.”

There is no accountability for the money, according to the Post Legislative Audit, Barnett said. No data is available to see what value Kansans are getting from these companies, he added.

Rebuilding a functional Department of Commerce is also key, Barnett said.

“We need a Department of Commerce that has a governor leading it and a secretary leading it who understands that our state is different regionally,” he said. “This part of the state is different than the southeast, which is different than Johnson County for instance. The last time we approached economic development on a regional basis was when Bill Graves was governor, and that is very short-sighted.”

Hansen’s extensive global background should prove helpful as the Kansas tries to market ag and other products internationally. Barnett expressed concern about what is happening in Washington with trade and tariffs and how this will affect ag trade.

Barnett and Hansen’s vision for Kansas schools follows some of the goals already set by the Kansas Department of Education. These include kindergarten readiness, social and emotional support and growth for children, and career readiness.

Barnett supports technical programs to train Kansans for the tens of thousands of jobs in Kansas that require advanced training but do not require a college education. He said this will help to attract and retain young people in the state.

Barnett wants to get Kansas out of court. The Kansas Supreme Court is set to rule later this month if the Kansas Legislature’s plan to add about half a million dollars in funding to Kansas K-12 education over the next five years is adequate. The state of Kansas has been in and out of court for years on the funding issue.

Barnett suggested in his One Kansas plan, $600 million in education funding be added to the budget over three years. However, a study commissioned by the Legislature this spring suggested the state needed to increase funding by $2.1 billion.

“It would be my prediction that the court will not accept this,” he said of the Legislature’s plan, “and it is going to take a governor who is going to lead through appropriate investment in education and long-term appropriate investment in economic development for the state to we have enough money to do this.”

The state may see a budget surplus next year as a result of changes in the federal tax code. The Legislature made a failed attempt to float a tax cut in the spring as a result. Other candidates in the race are supporting a tax cut. However, Barnett said Kansas needs to pay its bills.

“We need to shore up KPERS, refund KDOT and invest in education and invest in a functional mental health care system across the state. That is where Kansas has a chance to put money back in the bank and invest,” he said.

Barnett said he recognizes economic development is the most important factor in Kansas if the state wants to raise money for schools, roads and health care. Barnett would like to grow tourism as an economic driver.

“Tourism is the economic engine still parked in the garage in Kansas,” he said, “but it is also for our state’s image. We are looked at as a fly-over state with black eyes. We have black eyes around the nation as a state that can’t stay out of court for schools or put money back for roads. We need to market Kansas in a way that changes our image.”

The last major issue in their campaign platform is young professionals.

“We educate and raise all these great young people, and then they leave. What can we do?” he said. “Jobs are part of that.”

He said Kansas needs to have job opportunities that can support families.

“What do young people look for? They look for communities that bring a sense of community and a sense of something bigger in life that they are working on. Communities [need to] have good schools and access to health care and have quality of life issues,” Barnett said.

Barnett commented briefly on a controversy surrounding his Republican opponent Kris Kobach. Some people objected to Kobach riding in a vehicle with a replica machine gun during a recent parade.

Barnett said although he supports Second Amendment rights, he said “the stunt was insensitive and inappropriate.”

SPONSORED: Jackie Creamer’s The Dance Studio summer camps, classes

Jackie Creamer’s The Dance Studio has scheduled the following summer camps and classes for the coming weeks.

• Princess Dance Camp
June 18 to 22
9 to 10 a.m.
Performance Friday at noon
$50 per dancer, includes T-shirt

Cheer Pom Dance Camp with a KU Rock Chalk Dancer
June 18 to 22
10 to 11 a.m.
Performance Friday at noon
$50 per dancer, includes T-shirt

Couples Social Dancing
July 18 and 19
6 to 8 p.m.
$50 per couple

Vision Dance Company Camp and Auditions also are scheduled for Aug. 7 to 9.

For more information, call (785) 623-1939 or email [email protected].

YOUNKER: Soil Aggregate Stability. What Is It? Why Is It Important?

Dale Younker is a Soil Health Specialist with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service in Jetmore.

Today I would like to talk about soil aggregate stability. A soil aggregate is a whole bunch of individual soil particles that are bound, or glued, together. How well those aggregates hold up to disruptive forces like tillage and erosion tells us how stable that soil aggregate is. When these disruptive events occur if soil particles stay bound together the more stable the soil aggregate is.

Aggregate stability is critical for water infiltration and in dryland cropping systems it’s all about water. The more we can capture and store in the soil profile the better chance we have a growing a good, productive crop. Stable soil aggregates, that don’t break apart when water enters them provide more pore space for water to enter into. This increases the soil’s water holding capacity. Good aggregate stability also helps in root development, which helps the plant take up more water and nutrients. The soil is also more resistant to erosion.

In low aggregate stability soils soil particles break away from each other when water enters into an aggregate. The individual soil particles fill surface pore spaces and can form a hard crust on the soil surface when the soil dries. Water has difficulty penetrating this crust and it typically runs off, which causes erosion. The crust can also restrict seedling emergence.

Good aggregate stability is highly dependent on soil organic matter and biological activity in the soil. Certain fungal groups help plant roots gather water and nutrients and help bind soil particles together. Other organisms, like earthworms, secrete glue like substances the help hold the particles together. Decomposing soil organic matter also provide organic glues.

Certain soil labs can complete tests to tell you how stable your soil aggregates are. But a simple quick way is to dip an air dried soil clod in a cylinder of water. If that clod breaks up quickly you have low stability because there are no glues holding those aggregates together. If the clod stays together 30 minutes or longer you have high stability.

So how do we improve our soil aggregate stability? The simple answer is to reduce tillage. Excessive tillage physically breaks down soil aggregates and disturbs the fungal groups that secrete glues that hold soil particles together. Over time it also depletes soil organic matter which is also important to aggregate stability.

For more information about this or other soil health practices you can contact me at [email protected] or any local NRCS office.

Dale Younker is a Soil Health Specialist with the Natural Resources Conservation Service in Jetmore.

Hot, breezy Sunday

Today
Sunny and hot, with a high near 101. Breezy, with a south wind 10 to 15 mph increasing to 19 to 24 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 37 mph.

Tonight
Partly cloudy, with a low around 72. Breezy, with a south wind 15 to 21 mph, with gusts as high as 31 mph.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 89. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 15 to 20 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Monday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 61. Northeast wind 8 to 14 mph.

Tuesday
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with a high near 88. East northeast wind 7 to 9 mph.

Tuesday Night
A 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 1am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.

Wednesday
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 90.

Wednesday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 69.

Thursday
Mostly sunny, with a high near 96.

HaysMed honors nurses completing RN residency program

Seven registered nurses at HaysMed were honored recently at a recognition ceremony and luncheon. They completed the yearlong RN Residency Program offered at HaysMed, part of The University of Kansas Health System.

The program began a year ago in July 2017 and the nurses spent the first 3 weeks in a classroom setting. The remainder of training focuses on clinical experience, one on one mentorship with their preceptor, high-fidelity simulations and on the job training. Additionally, nurses receive training from professionals in several departments, such as radiology, pharmacy, cardiac care, periop and others.

The RN Residency class included Danelle Glines, RN, Tabitha Greathouse, RN, Andrew Heimann, RN, Tara Hoekman, RN, Katie Rabe, RN, Shelby Rohr, RN and Amanda Rudman, RN.

The RN Residency Program at HaysMed is one of only two in the state and has been offered since 2008. Shari Hertel, RN heads the program and has oversight of all the training. HaysMed also works closely with critical access hospitals in the region through a rural residency program to provide training to nurses practicing in the rural setting.

“The ever-changing health care landscape presents challenges and opportunities to new nursing graduates.” Said Hertel. “Our evidenced based residency program goes beyond basic orientation and provides a clinical preceptorship focused not just on delivering competent care, but also in how to develop and grow in the nursing profession. The positive clinical outcomes benefit not only the participating nurses, but also our patients.”

Currently there are 10 nurses scheduled in the next program which begins in July and six nurses enrolled in the Rural Residency program. The program is open to newly graduated RNs.

— HaysMed

Wheatland, Hays students selected for Washington Youth Tour trip

The youth tour winners met with Nex-Tech CEO, Jimmy Todd, to go over travel arrangements prior to the trip. Pictured are Levi Hickert, Jimmy Todd, and Angel Mong.

LENORA — A free trip to Washington does not come along every day, but for two students, it became a reality. Through its association with the Foundation for Rural Service, Nex-Tech sponsored two students to attend the FRS Youth Tour, June 2-6. Students apply by written application, which includes an essay addressing the benefits of attending the Youth Tour and impact that it may have to their career goals. This year’s winners were Angel Mong and Levi Hickert who joined nearly 100 other students from across the country at the FRS Youth Tour.

Youth tour participants receive a first-hand glimpse at how the legislative and regulatory decisions made in Washington, D.C. affect how their local service providers operate in their own hometowns. The trip features a comprehensive overview of the communications industry and the critical role communications plays in rural America. In addition to the educational component, the Youth Tour also introduces students to various historical landmarks.

Angel, an upcoming senior at Wheatland High School, is the daughter of Marilyn and the late Tim Mong. In her essay, Angel shares that she finds our country’s history extremely fascinating, and she wants to experience the history and culture of D.C. Angel wants to become a teacher and feels the Youth Tour will give her an opportunity to increase her worldly knowledge and learn about our nation’s capital.

Levi is the son of Kevin and Sondra Hickert. He will be a junior at Hays High School. Levi writes that the learning experience he will gain from the Youth Tour will help him with educational and occupational decisions for his future. Pursuing a course of study in Engineering, Levi feels that increasing his knowledge of governmental regulations and communications will be beneficial to project planning and development.

“We are excited to provide Angel and Levi with this wonderful opportunity,” said Jacque Beckman, Nex-Tech’s Youth Services/Training Specialist. “Educating them about government processes, the telecommunications industry, and our nation’s history will make them stronger individuals and will prepare them as future leaders and contributing citizens.”

SPONSORED: City of Ellis seeking FT Police Officer

The City of Ellis, Kansas, is accepting applications for a Full Time Entry Level Police Officer or a Lateral Transfer Police Officer. Police Officers are required to enforce local, state, and federal laws as well as serve papers and complete other various tasks.

Minimum requirements are U.S. citizen, High School diploma or GED, 21 years of age, valid driver’s license, no felony, serious misdemeanor or domestic violence convictions. Police Officer employed with the city of Ellis is required to establish residence with the Ellis School district USD 388. KLETC certification is required for lateral transfers. A background check will be conducted on each applicant. Applicant must pass a pre-employment drug screen, written test, oral interview, and physical and mental health evaluations. Applicant will provide a current driving history and current credit report.

The City of Ellis is an equal opportunity employer offering a highly competitive benefit package including paid family health insurance. Starting pay for Police Officers is $15.90 an hour. Lateral transfers will receive $17.22 an hour after they complete field training.

To apply, go to the city of Ellis Kansas web page click the job opportunities link and fill out the application. Send the application either by mail to the Ellis Police Department 815 Jefferson St. Ellis, Kansas 67637 or by email to Chief Taft Yates at [email protected]. You may also contact the Ellis Police Department by phone at (785) 726-4462 or the Ellis City Clerk by phone at (785)726-4812 for an application.

FHSU faculty members present about student learning at national conference

Dr. Pelgy Vaz
FHSU University Relations

Three Fort Hays State University faculty members recently presented at the National Social Science Association convention in Las Vegas.

Dr. Pelgy Vaz, professor of sociology, Dr. Carrol Haggard, retired associate professor of communication studies, and Lynn Haggard, retired librarian at Forsyth Library, presented “Academic and non-Academic Strategies to Enhance Student Learning.”

The presentation described existing academic and non-academic programs and practices that enhance students’ learning and college experiences. It also focused on integrative and holistic approaches to student learning and comprehensive support services provided to students.

Now That’s Rural: Ted Bender, Bender Steel

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

By RON WILSON
Huck Boyd National Institute

What is being built by this business? In the case of one Kansas company, it might be decorative metal railings for a Big 12 football stadium or for Oklahoma City’s Bricktown entertainment district. These are among the key projects of this entrepreneurial company in rural Kansas.

Ted Bender is founder and owner of Bender Steel in Whitewater, Kansas. He grew up between Newton and Hesston, and took agricultural education classes at Moundridge from agricultural instructor Larry Goering. Here he learned to weld. That skill would become the basis of his career.

During the following years, Ted worked for a local manufacturing company and for various local farmers, including Mr. Goering. Then Ted married his wife Amy and moved to the Whitewater area, northeast of Wichita.

In 2003, Ted started his own business, primarily doing farm equipment repair. He also had a hay business and traded in antique tractors.

2008 marked a turning point in his business. “A guy from our church asked me if I wanted to do some welding on a handrail for a project he was working on,” Ted said. Ted took on the project and it went so well that this type of custom welding became a major part of his business.

Today, Bender Steel is a full service metal fabricator of products such as steel fencing, architectural steel structures and custom design elements. “We’ve built everything from bike racks to trash cans to decorative fences,” Ted said. Among the company’s most popular products are the custom, ornamental handrailings.

The company’s website says: “Our team can handle everything from the beginning stages of design to the installation of the completed project. Our technicians have experience in AutoCAD to begin the design process and produce professional shop drawings. We have the ability to fabricate plasma-cut projects as well as bend, shear, and roll steel. Our experienced welders can weld everything from aluminum to steel. Once the project is produced, we can sandblast, paint and install it.”

From Ted Bender’s one man shop, the company has expanded to include 14 employees. Bender Steel has worked on projects from Kansas City to Oklahoma City. For example, the company’s products can be found near the Wichita riverfront, a bridge over Interstate 70 near the Kansas Speedway, bus stop shelters in downtown Wichita, a unique new waterfront park called A Gathering Place for Tulsa, and Bill Snyder Family Stadium in Manhattan.

“We built every piece of exterior rail (on the KSU west stadium renovation),” Ted said. “It’s fun to think that everybody touches our product and our customers are happy.”

What are the keys to the growth of the business? “We owe it all to the Lord, one hundred percent,” Ted said.

What about advice to other small businesses? “Building relationships with customers is really important,” Ted said. “We need to meet and exceed expectations and make sure things are right in the end.”

He pointed out the importance of going the extra mile for the customer. “Long after the pain fades from your extra effort, the customer will remember that you took care of them,” Ted said. “It’s all about people, not about money.”

Ted reflected on the basis for his business today. “It starts with faith and family,” Ted said. “My wife Amy has been very supportive through all of this. We have seven beautiful children, and I thank God every day for them.”

He also gives thanks for the agricultural education instructor who taught him to weld. “Larry Goering was a fantastic ag teacher and a fantastic mentor for a lot of us,” he said.

All this has led to this successful business located near the rural community of Whitewater, population 718 people. Now, that’s rural.

For more information about this company, see www.bendersteel.com.

What is being built by this business? There are lots of products, but more than that. We salute Ted Bender and the people of Bender Steel for making a difference with their craftsmanship. In the end, this is not only about metal products.

“We don’t just build rails, we build relationships,” Ted said.

Ron Wilson is director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.

In Case You Missed It: Eagle Morning Show 6/4-6/8

It was another busy week on the KAYS Eagle Morning Show. Here’s what you missed!

Monday

Hays Recreation Commission Superintendent Roger Bixenman

Roger made his monthly visit to the show to talk about the things coming up at the Hays Rec for June:

  • Kids Day at Larks Park this Saturday (June 9th)
  • Deadline is upcoming for tennis lessons for those ages 8-18
  • Fort Hays State Jr. Golf Camp is on Wednesday, June 20th for ages 8-14. Still looking for about 10 more people to sign up
  • National Yoga Day June 21st @ Hays Rec

Vance Chartier & Ed Holzmeister – The Society of 40 Men & 8 Horses

Vance and Ed were on the Eagle Morning Show to talk about the history and rededication of the Kansas Merci Boxcar that is open to the public coming up on June 16th.

Wednesday

Protect & Serve: Ellis County Undersheriff Scott Braun

Undersheriff Braun made his monthly visit to the show to talk about the new uniforms coming to the sheriff’s department

 

Thursday

Fort Hays State University Vice President of Student Affairs Dr. Joey Linn

Dr. Linn was in for President Tisa Mason on the Eagle Morning Show. Here are some of the things that he talked about.

FHSU Professor Greg Kandt

Greg joined the Eagle Morning Show to talk about aqaucise for people in the community ages 50+.

 

Here’s what’s coming up next week on the Eagle Morning Show!

  • Hays Arts Council Brenda Meder
  • Protect & Serve: Hays Police Department
  • Marketing Director w/Smoky Hills Public Television: Callie Kolacny
  • Downtown Hays Development Corporation Executive Director: Sara Bloom
  • Humane Society of the High Plains: Betty Hansen

Ranchland Trust of Kansas launches annual photo contest

RTK

TOPEKA – The Ranchland Trust of Kansas (RTK) invites professional and amateur photographers to submit photographs for its seventh annual photo contest to showcase the natural beauty of ranching and grazing lands across the state. The competition offers Kansans the chance to explore and capture the many activities, seasons and faces of Kansas’ ranching tradition.

Participants should submit photos expressing the mission of RTK: “To preserve Kansas’ ranching heritage and open spaces for future generations through the conservation of working landscapes.” This may include landscape, livestock and people, with preference to grasslands, grazing land, ranchers, cattle and much more.

Participants may enter up to five photos. The entry deadline for the contest is August 15, 2018. Entries will be judged by a panel of professionals in the field of photography and by RTK representatives.

All prizes for the contest are sponsored by Wolfe’s Camera of Topeka. Wolfe’s will award 10 photo cards to all 10 category winners.  Categories include:  Grand Prize, Landscape, Livestock, People, Youth (ages 5-17), Kansas Livestock Association Member, Fan Favorite via Facebook voting and Honorable Mentions.  The grand prize winner will receive their choice of an 11”x 14” stretched photo canvas or a 12” x 18” metal print of their winning photo.

For full contest rules and to enter, visit www.ranchlandtrustofkansas.org (News, Events, Photo Contest).  For questions, please contact Samantha Weishaar at (785) 273-5115 or [email protected].

Sunny, hot Saturday


Today
Sunny, with a high near 99. South wind 7 to 12 mph increasing to 13 to 18 mph in the afternoon. Winds could gust as high as 28 mph.

Tonight
Mostly clear, with a low around 72. Breezy, with a south wind 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph.

Sunday
Sunny, with a high near 98. Breezy, with a south wind 13 to 22 mph, with gusts as high as 33 mph.

Sunday Night
Partly cloudy, with a low around 72. Breezy, with a south wind 16 to 23 mph, with gusts as high as 34 mph.

Monday
Sunny, with a high near 90. South wind 14 to 16 mph becoming north in the afternoon.

Monday Night
Mostly clear, with a low around 60.

Tuesday
A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 2pm. Mostly sunny, with a high near 87.

Tuesday Night
A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 8pm. Partly cloudy, with a low around 64.

Wednesday
A 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 8am. Mostly sunny, with a high near 90.

Day Trippin’: Russell sheds light on oil history, offers affordable family getaway

Made possible by: Dock’s Boat & RV, Fossil Creek Hotel & Suites, Myers Furniture, Jake’s Sales and Service, Waudby’s Sports Bar & Grill, and Russell Main Street.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

On the Map: Russell, Kansas Distance: 30 miles east of Hays on Interstate 70 Drive time: 34 minutes

I have lived in Kansas all my life and traveled many of its back roads and to its forgotten burgs.

However, a year ago I pulled up stakes from my hometown of El Dorado, Kansas, and moved to Hays to begin a new job working for Hays Post and Eagle Communications.

Now that I live in northwest Kansas, I feel I have a whole new geography and palette of Midwestern cultures to explore. I have set a goal to travel to all 105 counties in the state, so I am using this move as an opportunity to mark off as many of the locales in this corner of Kansas I can.

My first day trip was last weekend to Russell. Although I have sped by this city many times on I-70, I had never really stopped to explore the community.

Russell is by no means a large community, but it has a lot of history to boast about.

I will start in reverse with my last stop on the trip, which was the Oil Patch Museum.

I have a special affinity for oil history because it is inexorably entwined with my own family tree. My grandfather Roy Janney came from southeast Kansas to work in the oil fields of Butler County, Kansas, and eventually was the head electrician for Cities Service. I was tickled when I saw an old Cities Service sign hanging in the Russell museum.

Ag and oil continue to be king in both the Russell and Ellis county economies. There are two things I think are really vital to a Kansas child’s education. That is knowing their food does not come from a grocery store, and the fuel for their car doesn’t come from a gas pump. The Oil Patch Museum tells the story of the latter.

The Carrie Oswald No. 1. Oil derricks were made out of wood when oil was first stuck in Russell County in 1923.

Oil was first struck in Russell County in November 1923 at The Carrie Oswald No. 1 near what is now the unincorporated town of Fairport. The well was named for the land owner’s wife. Ed Oswald was about to go bankrupt and the strike saved his farm and house from foreclosure.

Even though I was in a different part of the state, many of the exhibits and pieces of machinery clicked with stories my grandpa and dad had told me about the oil fields.

A large horizontally mounted wheel called a bull wheel is on display at the Oil Patch. Coming out from the wheel are pipes or rod lines that attached to pump jacks. These wheels were connected to engines by huge belts, and they ran multiple pump jacks. Pump jacks remind me of metal horses that bob up and down and pump the oil to the surface.

My dad said my grandma warned him to not get tripped up in the pipes as he played in the oil fields near his home in Oil Hill. Apparently the little boys used to try to ride the pipes for fun.

The platform near the top on this rotary rig is an example where my dad worked as a roughneck when he was a young man.

Rotary rigs, giant rusting towers cast criss-cross shadows on the grassy meadow. My dad worked as a roughneck (name for an oil rig worker) from the time he was 18. He was a derrick hand who worked on the stabbing board, a narrow platform just shy of 30 feet off the ground.

It was his job to catch the pipe used in the drilling as it came flying up the side of the rig. I am afraid of heights, and I shuddered at the thought of him balancing on the tiny platform, slippery with mud. He volunteered for the job because he was paid a few extra cents a day. It is a miracle he survived to bring me into this world.

Descendants of these aging rigs and pump jacks can still be seen dotting the area landscape today. In fact, I saw a rotary rig drilling in a field off I-70 on my way home.

From watching old movies like “Giant” and “Hellfighters” with John Wayne, I thought oil rigs always gushed when they hit oil. I spent one very hot, summer day when I was about 11 waiting for this to happen as I watched a well being drilled on my grandparents’ farm in Greenwood County.

To my disappointment, this is not the case. All I had to show for my patience was a bad sunburn.

Only one gusher was recorded in the Russell oil fields. As I learned at the Oil Patch, 90 percent of the wells in Kansas are strippers. Get your mind out of the gutter, not those kind of strippers. In oil field talk, this is a nearly depleted well whose income barely exceeds the cost of production.

My dad said about 90 percent of the slang he used in the oilfield is not fit to print, but here is some of the cleaner terms, according to the museum.

A wildcat is not an animal or a K-State fan. It is a drilling operation seeking unproved oil possibilities.

To spud is to commence drilling operations.

A Christmas tree is an assemblage of valves and gauges used to control the flow of oil and gas.

A tool pusher is a drilling supervisor.

The runs are the purchases from a producing lease.

Admission to the Oil Patch is through freewill donation.

As with any small town, if you really want to get to its heart, you have to sample its downtown.

My first stop downtown was to grab some lunch at Wauby’s Sports Bar and Grill. The Wauby’s building was built in 1885 and is on the Nation Register of Historic Places. The burgers are run-down-your-face juicy, which mine did.

The Wauby’s building was built in 1885 and is on the Nation Register of Historic Places.

There wasn’t much traffic downtown on a warm Saturday afternoon, so, with my belly full of burger, I strolled leisurely hitting up a couple local stores and antique shops.

For art lovers, the Deines Cultural Center, which is also downtown, houses wood-engraved prints created by Russell native E. Hubert Deines. Deines worked in the ’30s and ’40s in commercial arts, creating artwork for the Kansas City Star and later national magazines. Admission to the center is free.

In addition to Deines’ work, the Center has on loan from the school district several Birger Sandzén paintings. Sandzén lived in Lindsborg, Kansas, and the Birger Sandzén Memorial Gallery in Lindsborg is dedicated to his work. The Sandzén paintings at the Deines were saved from obscurity, having been pelted by students with butter and one left in a broom closet.

Coming June 22 to the Deines is the Reflections on Water and My Places,” paintings by Steve Read and Post Rock Country” photographs by Greg Rud.

Just off of Main Street at 331 N. Kansas is the Fossil Station Museum, which is also on the National Register of Historic Places. The castle-like limestone building was constructed in 1907 to serve as the sheriff’s home and jail. Admission is free.

An outfit worn by a Dole supporter during one of his campaigns on display at the Fossil Station Museum.

The museum includes a tribute to Russell native son, Bob Dole, who served in Congress from 1968 to 1996. He won the Republican nomination for president in 1996 and lost to incumbent Bill Clinton. I have met Bob Dole a number of times throughout my journalism career. I didn’t always agree with his politics, but I have always respected the man. He did much for the state of Kansas and his country, and I would say he is a different breed of politician than we see in office today.

A note to the weird and wacky, the museum has a gallon jar of human teeth as part of its “The Tooth Story” exhibit on an early Russell dentist. The man saved every tooth he pulled. I am sorry I don’t have a picture. I was a bit grossed out by the sight, even though I was warned by a volunteer they were there, and scurried out of the room.

Being in post rock country, limestone was a common early building material. Just down the street you can view the Heym-Oliver House, which was built in 1879, and the Gernon House, also on the National Register of Historic Places. It was built in 1872 and is the oldest house in Russell.

Downtown also offers several examples of public art, including a black and white mural at Eighth and Main streets by Rick Rupp that tells the story of Russell. The Russell Post Office, 135 W. Sixth, also on the National Register of Historic Places features yet another mural “Wheat Workers” by Martyl Schweig.

I didn’t make it over to the Dream Theater to see a show, but I am excited to go back.

The original theater was built in 1923, but was destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt in the Art Deco style in 1949. The theater was built by the Boller brothers of Kansas City, Missouri, and is one nine theaters in Kansas on the National Register of Historic Places. A local committee raised money to reopen the theater after it was closed by B & B Theatres in 2000.

In addition to current-run movies, the theater has summer and classic movie series.

The “Grapes of Wrath” starring Henry Fonda is coming in August and to “To Kill a Mockingbird” with Gregory Peck is showing in September. I have seen both classics on the small screen, but it is not the same as seeing them as they were intended on the big screen with the scent of butter-drenched popcorn in the air and a giant soda in your lap.

If live theater is more your speed, the Russel Community Theater is presenting “The Nerd,” June 26-30.

See related story: Russell Community Theater presents ‘The Nerd’

This weekend I am headed to my former home-base of Salina. Look for that story June 23.

See you on the road!

Below you will find some more helpful links in planning your trip.

Kansas Vendors invited to participate in Russell’s Downtown Market

Russell County Economic Development and Convention and Visitor’s Bureau

Russell Main Street 

Russell Area Chamber of Commerce

Russell County Free Fair

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