Friday, January 16, 2026
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I remember: The Voter’s Privilege

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By Doris Schroeder

There was a time, not too many years ago, when voting was considered a special privilege. Even then, however, there were those who lamented the fact that “my vote doesn’t really count anyways!” and many did not make use of this wonderful way of voting for the right candidate.

In the beginning of our country, however, it was of utmost importance because that was the only way we could keep our land the way it was originally put which of course was “under God,” respecting him and the rules  of our land. These laws had to do with relating to Him, our parents, those in authority (who were also under God) no murderers, dishonesty,  and a general regard for those around us. As an ordinary rule, we appreciated these privileges.

Both of my grandparents who had come from other countries, went according to these laws. Even though they couldn’t understand English very well, they realized the importance of voting when the time came and they were sure to cast their ballots when election time drew near.

That continued to make a difference in the laws of the land and the U. S. prospered. Our country, although not perfect,  grew and was well-respected and feared throughout the world. They looked to us knowing because we worshipped the God of Creation, we were powerful, not in our own right but in the strength of Him.

Sometimes other countries who did not worship our God, sought to fight us and take away our freedoms but our leaders sent out soldiers who fought valiantly for our rights and succeeded.

I can remember when we lived in California for a year and a half and the Japanese sought to take us over in Pearl Harbor. I was only seven years old that fateful December 7 in 1941. On my way home from Sunday School, I remembered the announcement by President Roosevelt I had heard on the radio that morning that “We are at war!”

“What does that really mean?” I wondered. In the days to come, I heard the planes practice from the Bakersfield Airport. and it frightened me. They would practice their diving and it made me uneasy. Since I always liked to sing I would sing “You are my Sunshine” as loud as I could. trying to drown out the drone of war from my mind. As I think about it now, I wonder if the neighbors ever complained about my loud singing!

Within a few months we heard about another country, Germany, who under the rule of Adolph Hitler, also wanted to take down America. Again I can vividly remember walking down the sidewalk of McFarland, California, and thinking

“We are living in memorable times, fighting a country with people like Hitler!”

When the voting time came around in November I do remember my parents made a special effort to cast their ballots.

We moved back to Kansas later and I really appreciated the freedom our country had. I attended the one room country school. Every day we did the pledge of allegiance to the flag and our teacher would pray for God to bless our day. None of us had a lot of material wealth but we lived in a country where we were free to seek opportunity and we could make a living “by the sweat of our brow!”

Our country was safe. Hoboes would even come to the farm and ask for food in exchange for a little work and we all felt safe. We did not even have locks on our farmhouse door and we didn’t worry.

As I grew up and married the love of my life, I enjoyed the time in November when we could cast our ballots in our country and we did vote, although it didn’t seem as drastically necessary as it does today.

The time has come, however, when it is not only our civic duty to vote but our country’s life as we have known it, is at stake. Our vote does count! It is not only our God-given right but it is also our duty and our job as American citizens to cast our ballots for those who believe in keeping our country free and under God.

Voting is our privilege and is absolutely necessary. We can and must make our voices heard by making use of this instrument. I will see you at the polls!

Doris welcomes your comments and can be reached at [email protected]

Roger’s view from the hills: Suprise

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“TO SUCCEED IN LIFE, YOU NEED
TWO THINGS:  IGNORANCE
AND CONFIDENCE.”
                                                   Mark Twain

     There are many ways to define success and each has his own and everyone else has theirs about yours.  If monetary measure is a standard then I failed that miserably.  But there are many other ways that are more important.  I have done a lot in my life trying to do what I love.  Most times that is the worst paying but with a lot of satisfaction.
      Of the many things that I have an interest in, some would say passion, the presence of music is as strong as anything.  Those who know me only by my opinion columns would have picked up a little about how I feel about music and the people in it.
      Many know me as being a vocalist in Western Music and a poet.  Now my music is a wider field than just Western and we have been trying to define what that is anyway for years.  Now the term Roots or Americana is probably defining things a little better.
      At a point in my life my best friends started to die and the majority have been to cancer.  The way I dealt with the loss was to dust off an old talent from high school that no one knew about, poetry.  Applying my life experiences it became cowboy and country poetry.  The things I feel strongly about like horses, cows, tractors, farming, ranching, being outdoors and being rural.  Being independent and making my own mind up about issues and not follow some party line.
      Being aware of how many times I was swerved away from things that would have turned out bad.  Enough close calls to know that when my time is done I will meet a crippled up guardian angel that took a lot of the hits for me.
      I also know that to ease the grieving from so many friends lost a new group would come from out of no where to give me hope and purpose.  I was transitioning from poetry to music, my love from high school and a little college, and joined up with a group that took me in just as I am.
     Western Music, which is a combination of old classic cowboy tunes, classic Country & Western, Folk, Celtic, Spiritual, movies, Tin Pan Alley, Bluegrass, Hillbilly, Ethnic, Western Swing, and Rock, was booted out of Nashville and mainstream music.  Yet it exists today and is represented by the Western Music Association.
      I found a group of talented and diverse people with a streak of decency that was left behind by mainstream music long ago.  I am still amazed that this group lets me hang around with them.  I have tried to promote the music, artist, and fan whenever I could.  And still intend to even though I am slowed down temporarily.
      I was at our Kansas Chapter meeting at the Flying W Ranch in the Flint Hills last Sunday.  I am the Chapter Vice President and we had a good gathering of our members.  On the agenda there was listed a ‘special presentation’, which I had not any idea what it would be even though I have input into the agenda.
     When the time came there was a certificate of appreciation and a Life Membership to the WMA and I was looking around to see who had won it.  This is not something that happens often, many of our members work their tails of for the group.  The nice things they were saying I knew fit a lot of people in the room and then they called my name.
      For the first time in recent history I was speechless.  I did not see it coming.  When you love what you are doing, and the people in it, it just does not occur that anything special has happened.
     They like my ideas, wait until they hear about the show at the Ryman.
Thanks to all!

Keeping food stafe: prevention better than response

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Food scientists discuss recent FDA revisions that enhance protection from foodborne illnesses.

 

MANHATTAN, Kan. – Each year in the United States, about 42,000 cases of salmonella infection are reported, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Because many cases are not diagnosed or reported, the actual number of infections is estimated to be close to 1 million.

 

Salmonella infection is a common foodborne illness that can cause diarrhea, fever and abdominal cramps 12 to 72 hours after infection and can last four to seven days. In the last decade, people might recall salmonella outbreaks linked to a variety of foods, from peanut butter to cantaloupe to alfalfa sprouts.

 

“We know that foodborne illness can happen to people,” said Londa Nwadike, consumer food safety specialist for K-State Research and Extension and the University of Missouri Extension. “It is a problem, particularly in young children, older adults, pregnant women, and people who are sick and have weaker immune systems.”

 

Nwadike said many of the foods that can carry salmonella and other harmful bacteria are, in an uncontaminated state, healthy for people. Preventing contamination before the foods hit store shelves is key to making sure the foods remain healthy for consumers.

 

The Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA), signed into law in 2011, focuses on preventing food safety problems, rather than responding to them. The act, developed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), includes seven proposed rules for those involved in food production to follow.

 

Nwadike said the FSMA is “the largest overhaul of the food safety regulatory system within the FDA in the past 70 years.”

 

“(The FDA) is trying to do more at the beginning of the food production chain to make sure contamination is going to be prevented along the way instead of just reacting to foodborne illness outbreaks,” she said. “If we can help to prevent foodborne illness problems before they actually happen, it’s much better for everyone involved.”

 

The FDA realizes many stakeholders are present in the food production chain and will need to be involved in the prevention effort, Nwadike said. Since the law was passed, the FDA has accepted comments from the public—food industry experts, producers, processors, retailers and consumers alike—on the proposed rules. Last month, the FDA announced it updated four of the seven rules based on these public comments.

 

The difficulty of balancing foodborne illness prevention while making sure the law is reasonable, fair and non-penalizing to farmers, food processors and retailers is evident, she said, which is why the FDA has been inclusive in the process.

 

And, the process remains on going, as comments to the rules, even the recently revised rules, are still being accepted by the FDA, said Fadi Aramouni, extension specialist and professor of food science at K-State.

 

What the revisions entail

 

The four recently revised rules to the FSMA include produce safety, preventative controls for human food, preventative controls for animal food and foreign supplier verification.

 

“I remember when the produce rule first came out, a lot of our small farm operations were concerned about any undue pressure it would put on them in testing irrigation water,” Aramouni said.

 

The quality standard and testing for water used to grow produce is now more flexible. This means farmers using water that does not initially meet the proposed microbial standard would have more time to allow the microbes to die off. In its revised rule, the FDA also adjusted its approach to manure and compost used in crop production pending further research.

 

Additionally, the FDA exempted operations making less than $25,000 annually in produce sales from having to comply with the produce rule. It gave four years after the produce rule has passed for very small businesses, those making between $25,000 and $250,000 annually, to comply; small businesses that make more than $250,000 but no more than $500,000 annually three years after the rule’s effective date to comply; and all other farms two years after the effective date to comply with the produce rule.

 

For the water testing specifically, the FDA granted an extra two years beyond the compliance dates.

 

Regarding preventative controls for human food, the FDA no longer requires farms to register as a food facility merely because they pack or hold raw agricultural commodities grown on another farm or owned by another farm.

 

“At first, people thought farms, even very small farms, would have to comply as processors of food products,” Aramouni said. “Now farms that only handle or pack produce could go under the produce regulation. They do not have to comply with the food processing regulation.”

 

The human food preventative controls rule also shows the definition of a very small business at less than $1 million in sales. Very small businesses would have three years to comply to the human food rule, while small businesses, those that employ less than 500 people but are not eligible for an exemption, would have two years. All other businesses would have one year.

 

Along with enhancing food safety for human foods, the FDA is proposing measures to enhance pet and other animal food safety.
“There have been some outbreaks with pet food,” Aramouni said. “(The FDA) wants to make sure that these products are also safe.”

 

Human food processors already complying with human food safety requirements would not need to implement additional safety measures for animal food products. They would, however, need to prevent physical and chemical contamination when holding or distributing a by-product for animal food.

 

Those by-products might include wet spent grains from distillers, fruit or vegetable peels, or liquid whey, as examples. Also, further processing of those by-products would require compliance with the animal food rule.

 

A very small animal food business would be defined as having less than $2.5 million in total annual sales. The same compliance dates as human food businesses apply to animal food businesses.

 

Lastly, the FDA revised its foreign supplier verification rule to allow importers to conduct a compliance status review of each imported food and each foreign supplier, and analyze potential hazards. Supplier verification measures can be based on risk and previous experience with the foreign suppliers.

 

“The foreign suppliers need to present verification that they are complying to the same regulations (as U.S. food suppliers),” Aramouni said. “We cannot ask our companies in the United States to comply with stricter regulations when we import food and let food operations that export to the United States not meet the same standards.”

 

In general, the compliance date for foreign supplier verification would be 18 months following publication of the regulations.

 

The consumer obligation

 

Due to the focus on foodborne illness prevention, Nwadike said consumers could hear about more food recalls, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

 

“If you hear that there’s a food recall happening, to some extent it means our food safety system is working,” she said. “It shows there are checks in place, and it shows that product is not going into our food supply.”

 

Additionally, food safety measures don’t stop at the retail level, as consumers also have food safety obligations once they bring foods home to prepare for themselves and their families, Nwadike said.

 

“The government sets regulations that affect the farmers, processors, retailers, restaurants, and so on,” she said. “But, consumers still need to do their part in handling, transporting things safely, washing their hands and using a food thermometer. Hopefully everyone can work together to make sure we’re producing the safest, healthiest food possible.”

 

Information from the FDA about the FSMA contributed to this story. You can read more about the revised rules on the FDA’s website (http://www.fda.gov/Food/GuidanceRegulation/FSMA/default.htm).

Story By: Katie Allen

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural, Carolyn Harms

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kksu
K-State Research and Extension, Candice Shoemaker

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

 

Prestwick, Scotland; Jinjiang, China. A U.S. aerospace company opened repair facilities here. A key person in developing this venture is a woman from rural Kansas. Not only is she a leader in the business world, she is a remarkable volunteer in her community and state as well.

 

Carolyn Harms is now retired as vice president of aftermarket customer support for Spirit Aerosystems in Wichita. She has made a lifetime of serving, achieving, and giving back.

 

Carolyn grew up on the family farm near Asherville in Mitchell County. She was the second oldest of five girls, which meant she was very involved with the farm work. The girls were active in school, church, and 4-H. Carolyn took 4-H projects such as foods and clothing and also showed hogs and cattle.

 

“I was my dad’s combine driver,” she said.

 

After graduating from Beloit High School, she went to Brown Mackie Business School in Salina, then took a job in the Department of Economics at K-State. She earned a degree in business management at KSU and met and married her husband Allan. He graduated in construction management.

 

When his career took them to Wichita, Carolyn applied to various companies. “Boeing was the only company which would offer me anything other than a secretarial position,” Carolyn said.  She joined Boeing as a procurement buyer. The year was 1978.

 

Carolyn worked her way up through the corporate ranks at Boeing. The company went through various changes. Today the business in Wichita is known as Spirit Aerosystems.

 

Carolyn moved up to become director of procurement and ultimately to be the vice president of aftermarket customer support. At home, she and Allan had two boys and a girl. Being in the Wichita area, their childhood was different from Carolyn’s upbringing on the farm.

 

“I got my kids involved in 4-H in Sedgwick County, and I found it is just as good for urban kids as rural,” Carolyn said. Her kids had great 4-H experiences and went on to excellent careers. One is with an engineering consulting firm in Denver, another is a family practice physician doing residency in Grand Junction, Colorado, and the third is a teacher in Junction City.

 

“Our 4-H club was active in community service,” Carolyn said. “We learned the importance of giving back.” She continues to model that principle.

 

Carolyn got elected to the county 4-H program development committee and ultimately served as chair of the county extension executive board. She serves extensively in various volunteer positions. These include the K-State Business Management Advisory Board, Kansas 4-H Foundation Board of Trustees, KSU Foundation Board of Trustees, State Extension Advisory Council, and the Kansas Agriculture and Rural Leadership Board of Directors.

These volunteer causes are close to her heart.

 

“One of my loves is 4-H,” Carolyn said. “4-H helped me gain confidence and leadership and public speaking skills,” she said.

 

As immediate past chair of the KARL Board, she praised the leadership development which is accomplished through that program. “It’s a great model for networking and international exposure,” she said.

 

Carolyn and Allan love to travel. She is active in her church, especially the ministries for women and for children. She and Allan volunteer for a local food service called The Lord’s Diner. They also mentor two young people through Youth Horizons. Back home, Carolyn’s mom is now 81 and still on the farm, serving as a 4-H leader.

 

“You have to have a servant heart,” Carolyn said. “We’ve been given certain gifts. It’s vital that we give back to help others, to make this world a better place.”

 

This philosophy was formed in childhood near the rural community of Asherville, population 28 people. Now, that’s rural.

 

Prestwick, Scotland; Jinjiang, China. It’s time to say farewell to these aviation facilities operated by Spirit Aerosystems. It is interesting to learn of the role played by a rural Kansas woman in developing these facilities, and it’s especially interesting to see how she is giving back to her state and community. We salute Carolyn Harms for making a difference with her good skills in business and her good works in life.

Barton women’s golf wins fourth straight; Kim breaks Teeratrakul’s streak for individual title

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barton cc

The Barton Community College women’s golf team won its fourth straight tournament to complete their fall season by running away with title at the South Central Kansas Fall Invitational held at the Winfield Country Club.  The Lady Cougars led by thirty-seven strokes after day one then extended their lead out to fifty-four strokes on Tuesday to finish with a 689.  Host Southwestern College made a charge with the day’s second best round to finish behind the Lady Cougars with a 743.

Freshman Hye Rin Kim fired an opening round four-over-par 76 to jump out to a four stroke lead over teammate Natthakan Teeratrakul.   Kim held off Teeratrakul in the final round as the pair finished with identical 81 scores to claim the top two spots.  The win by Kim was the first of her collegiate career and snapped Teeratrakul’s four straight tournament titles dating back to last season.

For the second straight meet Abbie Thelen posted her best score on the second day of competition following a 92 with a six stroke improvement 86 to finish in a tie for the seventh spot.  Madison Krull strung together rounds of 95 and 98 to finish in 12th while Madison Walden finished 15th with her 97 and 101 rounds.

With the conclusion of the fall season, Barton will not be on the competitive links until next spring.