
Fall party downtown
Just days after the first official day of fall (Sept. 22) , the final Saturday in September (Sept. 27) has become a party on Sixth Street downtown.
Just days after the first official day of fall (Sept. 22) , the final Saturday in September (Sept. 27) has become a party on Sixth Street downtown.
If your joints ache after sitting too long or make crackling sounds when you get up, you’re not alone. More than half of older adults in the U.S. report having at least one arthritic joint, and while our understanding has improved over the past two decades, old myths still create confusion about how best to manage it.
By Pat MelgaresK-State Research and Extension news service MANHATTAN — Kansas gardeners often face a common challenge at the end of a successful growing season:… Login to continue reading Login…
Not long ago, I was haunting the alleys downtown and noting all the infrastructure you don’t see from the storefronts. The utility poles and power lines and electric meters reminded me of the work of R. Crumb, the underground cartoonist most famous for the anthropomorphic, sexually charged “Fritz the Cat” comics. It wasn’t an oversexed feline I was thinking about but Crumb’s urban drawings, especially “The History of America,” that render in painful detail the things we have trained ourselves not to see, such as the web of power lines strung from utility poles overhead.
For decades, the biggest challenge in health care has been its high cost. For far too many Kansans, that cost means making difficult choices — including delaying medical care or prescriptions.
It’s hard to imagine waking up and going to work on payday only to find you have less money than you started with at the beginning of the pay period. That’s the reality many farmers are facing as fall harvest enters full swing in Kansas. Almost every acre of corn and soybeans across the state is expected to cost more to plant, grow and harvest than farmers will receive when they sell their crops.
The First Saturday Bird Walk will be 8 a.m. Oct. 4 Kauffman Museum, 2801 N Main St., North Newton.
My five-year-old is just in the sweetest stage right now. I enjoy all stages—infant, toddler, preschool, and teens—but sometimes I get that feeling that I just need to freeze the moment, like it’s almost too good to let go. Well, you know how it is: hang onto it and it’ll lose its luster; thank God for it and the gift will come back to bless you many times over. That is really what I want to do—honor the One who created the child in the first place!
The federal government is on the brink of reversing a century of medical progress for older adults.
I have the argument dozens of different ways. Video of Congresswoman Lisa McClain (from March 25th) is routinely recycled: Trump could have the cure for cancer and the democrats would still be upset. Normally this is the kind of trolling or red-meat-to-the-MAGA-base kind of statement I ignore, but these are not normal times. In critical thinking there are several ‘smell tests’ that can be applied to check the soundness of an argument. Fallacies and contradictions are always things for which critical thinkers should lookout.