News Categories
Advertising
Staff Soapbox
Joys of living with a fixer-upper guy
Written by Patty Decker Tuesday, 31 August 2010 16:29
My husband, Randy, is a fixer-upper kind of guy. When he gets started on a project, it might take him awhile to finish, but once it’s done, it looks fantastic.Most of his inside work is done or developed during the winter months when it’s too cold to work outside. But by spring, he is ready to go outside and get started.
For many years, I didn’t see the fixer-upper part of his personality.
Like most parents, when our three children were at home, we spent a lot of time helping them with their studies or enjoyed sharing in their extracurricular activities. We took an active role and looked forward to seeing them grow and change into the young adults they are today.
Weekends in the summer were reserved for swim meets or other...
Write comment (0 Comments)
Border debate takes on human face
Written by Jerry Engler Tuesday, 03 August 2010 17:17
I met Joe while we were each drinking a senior coffee under the golden arches in Liberal. We were both headed south, toward the main thrust of what has come to be called the “immigration problem” on the Mexican border.I was traveling to Harlingen, Texas, right by South Padre Island on the Gulf Coast, to see my son, and I had already been driving for a couple hundred miles.
Joe was just leaving his home in Liberal, where he had worked in meat packing more than 30 years, for his home in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico, the place he had been raised.
Joe was happy with his personal accomplishments, owning a home in both Liberal and in Chihuahua, all part of the personal success of a poor Mexican boy who had started with few...
In search of a zebra mussels Pulitzer
Written by David Vogel Tuesday, 06 July 2010 18:23
Sometimes I take a long, hard, scrutinizing look at myself in the mirror, analyzing my morals and beliefs and convictions and priorities. Then the thought suddenly occurs to me: “Whoa! When did THAT pimple get there?”So then I take several minutes to pick, squeeze and apply about three different brands of topical acne medication to the offending bump.
Other times, while reflecting (pun intended) on my personal values, I realize that I take up valuable newspaper space writing about inane topics such as restroom politics and Minnesotan accents when I could be making a difference in my community by bringing about relevant information that is at the very heart of our economy, faith and country.
This is just such a time.
Now that...
County fairs surface good memories
Written by Patty Decker Tuesday, 06 July 2010 18:22
When it comes to favorite childhood memories, the county fair is near the top of my list. The smell of corn dogs, funnel cakes and other goodies are hard to forget, and I equate those things with happy times.It’s also fun to enter items in 4-H or open-class divisions.
I did.
At age 10, I decided to enter a cake in open class. It was 1962, and my contribution would be a “funny cake.”
For some reason, this cake was in a class of its own, and participants needed to follow the recipe exactly. The reason it was called a “funny cake” was because this cake had no eggs in the batter.
It was also the first time I had entered something in the fair, and I was so excited. It didn’t matter whether I won a blue ribbon or nothing at...
Ordinary people can do great things
Written by Jerry Engler Tuesday, 01 June 2010 20:07
What we perceive as the normal in our lives can be shattered by momentary call to a higher plane of understanding.Remember this in the days following Memorial Day, considering the sacrifices of persons we might have once have considered “ordinary” in the usual daily hum-drum of our lives.
I will paraphrase Charles Dickens today in writing a small version of “A Tale of Two Cities”—or call it a tale of two trips with multiple cross-trips within them.
The first trip to the first city, Leavenworth, was short compared to the second one—a three-week trip to Philadelphia, with stops along the way for the murals in Chillicothe, Mo., the Lincoln Museum and Tomb in Springfield, Ill., the Serpent Mound in Ohio, the Civil War...
More Articles...
Page 1 of 8
















