Category: News

  • Bucket List Trip


    Rotarians Kate Campbell and Bob Rademaker love to travel, so their recent trip to Panama was no surprise. However, this trip was special for Bob as he became fascinated with the Panama Canal as a school boy. Bob shared some early history of canal building in Panama noting that early Spanish explorers made the dangerous overland trip from ocean to ocean. It was a dangerous trip through the jungles and over the mountains. The French were the first to try to dig a canal, but the climate, disease, and difficult terrain put an end to the project. President Theodore Roosevelt championed a United States effort which benefitted from power equipment and the eradication of yellow fever. The construction was a marvel of engineering as lakes and a series of locks were built that made it possible to raise and lower vessels 85 feet on their 40 mile journey between oceans. The canal opened in 1914, saving vessels as much as 8,000 nautical miles.

    Panama assumed ownership and operation of the canal in 1999, providing the country with its main source of income. In 2006 a system of new locks were added to accommodate the bigger cargo vessels. Today considerable cargo is offloaded and transported overland and reloaded to continue its journey. Kate said she enjoyed the trip, meeting new people and learning lots. Both travelers agreed that the trip was enjoyable and worthwhile.

  • Advocating for Good Health

    A local steering committee came together in 2008 to discuss how county entities could work together to advocate and advance good health in the community. Live Well Douglas County, a non profit advocacy group. was the product of those early efforts. Ginny Barnard is Executive Director and has been on the job one year. Barnard is a former Douglas County Extension Agent and took degrees in Public Health from Kansas State University. Live Well consists of over twenty groups that work together to create policy and system changes to improve life and good health in Douglas County. In 2020 Live Well benefitted from a four year Pathways to a Healthy Kansas Initiative grant.

    There are six Live Well work groups, including Healthy Built Environment, Health Food for All, Healthy Kids, Sexual Violence Prevention, Tobacco-Free Living and Work Place Wellness. Some examples of the group’s accomplishments are Farmers Market Grants for people of color, assisting the revamping of policies and building improvements for Positive Bright Start, prescription assistance programs, school bike programs, and updating rules for tobacco sales. The Douglas County Community Foundation and Lawrence/Douglas County Public Health are significant partners and Douglas County Extension plays an important administrative role. The organization will conduct an Annual Spring Summit on April 11.

  • Investing in a Vital Downtown



    Downtown Lawrence has a great Story to tell according to Downtown Lawrence Executive Director Andrew Holt. Holt has been on the job eleven months, coming from Yakima Washington where he held a similar position. He noted the health and vigor of Downtown Lawrence is what attracted him to the community. The purpose of the organization is to promote and enhance the welfare of the downtown, which is the economic and social center off the community. Memberships are held by a variety of businesses and organizations. Since his arrival Holt has created a newsletter for members, increased the organization’s activity on social media and revamped the web site. He has visited Downtown members to become personally familiar with community offerings and needs.

    Downtown Lawrence has sponsored candidate forums and a recent town hall on homelessness. The organization maintains an event calendar and offers gift cards for use with downtown merchants. Some of the popular downtown events include Buskerfest, Kaw River Roots Festival, Mid Summer Nights on Mass, Art in the Park and the Christmas Parade. Holt noted that moving home football games this fall due to construction was a big challenge to local merchants. He also reports that two police officers will be permanently assigned to the downtown. Holt says that the downtown experience makes it a destination place and an important part of the community’s identity.

  • A Legacy of Service


    Marlin Bates, Director of the Douglas County Extension office, presides over a unique community resource with a historical legacy of service. The county extension service developed from the national effort to establish land grant colleges in the 1860’s. The movement was intended to “take the university to the people” and had an emphasis on agriculture. Each county in the state has an Extension office, representing a partnership with Kansas State University, and Federal, State, and County governments. Extension is dedicated to a safe, sustainable and competitive food and fiber system, and strong and healthy communities, families and youth, through integrated research, analysis and education.

    Extension provides a numerous educational programs and services. There are a number off youth programs including 4-H and summer camps. An extensive resource library provides information on horticulture, crops and livestock, health, wellness, nutrition and home and family. Extension specialists are also available to answer questions and provide recommendations. The annual 4-H fair is a poplar community event that draws thousands of attendees every summer. Douglas County Extension is on the radio on Wednesdays at 9:15 am on 101.7 FM and AM 1320. The Extension Office and 4-H Building are located at 2110 Harper, on the fair grounds.

  • Don’t Worry, “Bee” Happy

    Honey Bee puns were flying as Rotarians Jim Evers and Fred Atchison talked about their beekeeping experiences. Both Evers and Atchison are enthusiastic backyard beekeepers and shared many bee facts and personal experiences. Humans were harvesting honey and keeping bees in prehistory and it is believed the Egyptians were the first to engage in organized beekeeping. Human agriculture depends greatly on crop pollinating performed by bees. Besides its sweetness, honey has antibacterial, antimicrobial and antiinflamitory properties. Female worker bees build wax cells, remove waste, forage and perform guard duty. Male drones mate with the queen and have a calming influence on the hive. The queen is the largest bee in the hive and may lay up to three thousand eggs a day, as honey bees live a only a few weeks and must be replaced. Bees may visit over fifty flowers on a trip and may range two miles. They are able to communicate the nature and location of a food source by performing an elaborate waggle dance. Bees have a highly advanced sense of smell and use the sun to navigate. These desirable creatures are endangered by disease, mites, loss of habitat and over use of insecticides. Evers and Atchison professed a fascination with their bees and urged the group to learn more and appreciate these industrious insects.