August 2025

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Still in the swim

Kim Morrissey has taught thousands to swim, not done yet

At any given swimming party on any given summer day, there’s a good chance that someone is staying afloat thanks to “Miss Kim.”

Kim Morrissey, a 69-year-old Wichita retiree who has been teaching swimming lessons in Wichita for four decades, estimates that she’s taught at least 5,000 people to swim, some from different generations of the same family.

For the last 33 years, she’s done it in a sparkling swimming pool in the backyard of her mid-century white brick home in the Sherwood Glen neighborhood, near 37th Street North and I-235.

For eight weeks every summer, Morrissey, with help from eight other hired instructors, offers two-week

Kim Morrissey works with 10-year-old Miles McCulley, who has been taking lessons with her since he was 3.

sessions of one-on-one lessons that happen for 30 minutes at a time, Mondays through Thursdays. By the end of each summer, 275 students will have come and gone.

The swimming lessons are a little

side hustle for Morrissey, who retired nine years ago from a long career as an educator, most of it spent teaching physical education in USD 259 elementary schools Stanley, Earhart

See Miss Kim, page 6

Important Notice:

If you are receiving duplicate or unwanted copies of The Active Age, please let us know by calling (316) 942-5385 or emailing joe@ theactiveage.com.The money saved on printing and postage helps us continue delivering The Active Age to people who wish to receive it.

Heart disease remains leading U.S. killer

Family Features

While medical advances have helped people with cardiovascular diseases live longer, many of the risk factors that lead to these diseases continue to grow.

Fueled by ongoing increases in high blood pressure, obesity and other major risk factors, heart disease continues to kill more people in the U.S. than any other cause, according to the American Heart Association’s 2025 Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics Update. In fact, cardiovascular diseases including heart disease and stroke claim more lives than all forms of cancer and accidental deaths — the No. 2 and No. 3 causes of death — combined.

See Heart , page 10

‘The Girls in White’ tells story of trailblazing women doctors

As a medical student in the late 1960s, Anne Walling was required to read a book called “Boys in White.” It was the standard sociology textbok about medical students, and it completely ignored women. Walling didn’t forget.

When it came time to name her own book about the challenges facing women doctors of that era, she couldn’t help but call it “Women in Medicine: Stories from the Girls in White.”

“The whole idea was to try to get an honest picture of what it was like to go into medicine and live as a woman doctor at that time,” said Walling, a retired Wichita physician and educator.

The picture may be a little different than people expect. Published last month, “The Girls in White” is

now available in local bookstores and online.

In an interview, Walling said the book grew out of a research project that started with conversations among older female physicians in Wichita. The women had all entered medical school in the 1950s, ’60s and early ’70s, and were rightly viewed as trailblazers by a younger generation of female doctors, who said things to them like, “You were so brave! It must have been so tough!”

The actual consensus of the older physicians was less dramatic. “You know, it was tough, but it was a lot of fun, too,” Walling said. “We all had the feeling our history was being reinterpreted in sort of a negative way. We all had 50-plus years of good careers.”

“They didn’t deny there was a lot of prejudice against women,” she

Anne Walling has written about a book about what it was like to be a woman doctor before that was common.

See Girls, page 7

Win Music Theatre Wichita tickets

The Active Age and Music Theatre Wichita are giving away tickets to two MTW shows, “Something Rotten!” Aug. 20-24 and “A Grand Night for Singing” Sept. 3-7.

To enter our drawing, visit theactiveage.com and fill out the entry form near the top of the home page. Or, you can complete and mail or bring the form at right to The Active Age, 125 S. West St., Suite 105, Wichita, KS, 67213. Winners will be drawn Aug. 10.

Six winners will receive $161 gift certificates that will cover the cost of two Section 1 tickets plus the ordering

fee. One winner will receive a $34 gift certificate that will cover most of a Section 4 ticket, which is regularly priced at $36. The tickets can be used for any performance of “Something Rotten!” or “A Grand Night for Singing.”

“Something Rotten!” is described as a sidesplitting new take on Shakespeare while “A Grand Night for Singing” is a tribute to Rodgers and Hammerstein.

Name:

Address:

Phone number and/or email address: Please enter me in drawing for (check one) the $161 gift certificate __ or $34 gift certificate __.

When entering, specify whether you are seeking the $161 or $34 gift certificate. Good luck!

2025 Caregiver Summit

Your caregiving journey: Navigating, relationships, resources, and respite.

When: Aug. 27, 2025

Where: Wichita State Metroplex, 5015 East 29th Street North Wichita, KS

Time: 10 a.m. - 2 p. m.

Join AARP Kansas and the Central Plains Area Agency on Aging for a day of workshops and resources focusing on self-care, best practices, and networking with other caregivers

Scan for more information and to register for the event:

Riverside Park Pagoda to be reopened

Renovations of the Riverside Park Pagoda are set to begin this summer, but supporters are still seeking donations to finish the project. On July 19, the Friends of the Kansas Wildlife Exhibit held an ice cream social and tour of the building to publicize their efforts. About 100 people attended.

According to the Friends website, the pagoda was built in 1911 as a concession stand for the former Riverside Zoo and converted to a bathroom with waiting rooms two years later. Since 1938, it’s mostly been

used for storage, although it had a brief run as the Children’s Pagoda House in the mid 1960s as part of an effort to create interest in a new zoo.

The Friends want to use it as an educational and community space to support the adjacent wildlife exhibit, home to such popular critters as Keeper the golden eagle, Rufus the bobcat and Chuck the turkey vulture. The exhibit draws about 40,000 visitors a year.

The fundraising campaign is over half way to its goal of $200,000.

Checks can be mailed to: Friends of the Kansas Wildlife Exhibit, P.O. Box 2593, Wichita, KS 67201. Online donations can be made at kwefriends. org and PayPay. Donors are asked to indicate their gift is for the pagoda.

The Riverside Park Pagoda, built in 1911, is being made ready for visitors again.

Find your place. together

Age 18 or older

Upcoming Events

Hypertension diagnosis or medication

Interest in & readiness for the program

BP program offered

Significant cardiac event in the last 6 months

Atrial fibrillation or other arrhythmias

Diagnosis of lymphedema or risk of developing lymphedema

A hypertension awareness and prevention program called HAPp will kick off this month at the Sedgwick County Health Department, 1900 E. Ninth St. N.

The four-month program provides a free blood pressure monitor along with instruction on how to accurately self-measure your blood pressure at home, nutrition education workshops, biweekly meetings with a HAPp coach and tips for stress management and lifestyle strategies.

using the QR code at right. HAPp is being sponsored by the health department, K-State Research and Extension, the Kansas Department of Health and Healthy Hearts.

K-State Research and Extension is committed to providing equal opportunity for participation in all programs, services a activities Program information may be available in languages other than English Reasonable accommodations for persons with disabilities, including alternative means of communication (e g , Braille, large print, audio tape, and Ameri Sign Language) may be requested by contacting the event contact, Sara Sawer, two weeks prior to the start of the even 316-660-0118 or sarasawer@ksu edu Requests received after this date will be honored when it is feasible to do so Language access services, such as interpretation or translation of vital information, will be provided free of charge to limited English proficient individuals upon request

Alzheimer’s walk gearing up

Pre-sales are going fast !

With several styles already gone, now’s the time to find your place.

Expansion Lunch & Learn: Your Future at Larksfield Landing

Tuesday, August 12, 11:30 a.m

Larksfield Place • 7373 E 29th St N, Wichita, KS 67226

Larksfield Place is nearly full, but Larksfield Landing is just beginning! Join us for lunch, meet our team, and discover how Larksfield Landing offers the perfect opportunity to plan ahead. Learn about exclusive Charter Member benefits and limited-time pre-construction price breaks.

Ready to move now ?

Limited availability. Call to learn more. Spacious, light-filled one-bedroom deluxe apartment homes are ready now—no waitlist, no delay. With open-concept kitchens, stunning lake or future courtyard views, and easy access to new outdoor spaces, they’re the perfect way to join Larksfield Place now.

To RSVP, scan the QR code or call 316-202-4074. Stay informed about upcoming events and expansion updates.

The initial meeting is from 5:306:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 21.

There is no charge for HAPp. To be eligible, you must be 18 or older and have a hypertension diagnosis or medication, a significant cardiac event in the last six months, atrial fibrillation or other arrhythmias or a diagnosis or risk of developing lymphedema.

For questions, contact Tara Sharon at (316) 660-7428 or HealthEducation@sedgwick.gov ; or Sara Sawer at (316) 660-0118 or sarasawer@ksu.edu. You can register

Several preliminary fundraisers for the 2025 Walk to End Alzheimer’s are being held this month. On Aug. 1, Mega Pines Mini Golf at 1802 U.S. 54 in Andover will donate some proceeds to the Walk and XY Bar at 235 N. Mosley St. in Wichita will host Bitchy Bingo to support the Walk. On Aug. 6 and Sept. 16, Picasso’s Pizza at 621 W. Douglas will donate 10 percent of proceeds to the Walk when customers mention it.

This year’s Walk will be held Oct. 25 at Wichita WaterWalk, 515 S. Wichita St. For more information, visit alz.org.

Thank You Recent Donors!

Honor Roll of Donors

Girls

From Page 1

said. “They pointed out that people nowadays don’t realize it was the ’60s and ’70s, and that was just the way the world was. The other thing (younger doctors) don’t realize is that medical school was tough on everyone. The men had a tough time, too.”

Walling’s experience differed slightly from her peers. A native of Scotland, she graduated from the University of St. Andrews School of Medicine in 1971 and moved to the United States with her husband, Dr. Adrian Walling, in 1980, taking a job with the University of Kansas School of Medicine the next year. At the time, she noted that women physicians were more common in Great Britain than here.

“The influx of women into medicine (in the United States) was just getting underway,”

Walling taught and held several other roles at the medical school before taking professor emeritus status in 2017. She’s a prolific writer on medical topics and has been an associate editor of the journal American Family Physicians since 1989.

In 2016, Walling got the ball rolling on an oral history project involving 23 senior female members of the Medical Society of Sedgwick County. It was called “The Only Woman in the Room.”

Then in 2019, she partnered with the University of Kansas Medical Alumni Association to contact women who’d earned their medical degrees before the influx of women into medicine in the mid-1970s. Walling interviewed 37 women doctors who’d practiced 13 different specialties in 16 states and several other countries. The oldest had graduated from KU’s medical school in 1948

“She was a great lady,” Walling said. “She was in a nursing home in North Carolina. She was determined to take part (in the research). She just

had a whole life of service to other people.”

Another participant, who was 88, “said she’d ‘promised (her husband) I’d retire when I was 90, but he’s dead.’ They all had a great sense of humor.”

The interviews were intended for a research project, so there was a set formula to the questions and the identities of the women are not revealed, but their personalities still come through at times. The book starts, for instance, with the tale of a 10-yearold Kansas girl watching as a boy who’s been seriously wounded in a hunting accident is brought into the office of her father’s rural medical practice. But her father is away delivering a baby, and her mother, a nurse, can only attempt to stop the bleeding before the boy is driven in a truck over unpaved roads to Wichita. The girl — one of Walling’s interviewees — decides on the spot to become a doctor.

The first opposition some women overcame to becoming a doctor was in the admissions process for college and medical school. After asking about pre-med courses, one recalled, she was told “girls don’t do pre-med. I just smiled sweetly at them and said, ‘What courses are required?’ And I did them.”

“They didn’t fight the system,” Walling said. “They kind of smiled sweetly and navigated the system.”

Women applying to medical school “were all asked about getting married and having children,” she added.

Once in medical school, they were a tiny minority. There were two female graduates in 1964 and four in 1968. “There was a lot of sexism that took a lot of different forms,” Walling said. “Everything from being touched and teased to the financial aspect when they tried to get loans to set up

practice.”

Once in practice, she said, “One thing that really got them was not being taken seriously as competent professionals — always having to prove yourself, work twice as hard as the men.”

Many of the women had young children early in their careers. One told a story of a babysitter becoming ill during her residency shift. She found someone to cover her shift, raced to the babysitter’s house to retrieve her child, sped to another babysitter’s house to drop the child off, then raced back to the hospital, getting pulled over by a police officer along the way.

“She said, ‘I burst into tears and told him what happened, and he said, ‘You got enough troubles, lady,’ and gave her an escort.”

“They all talked about having to have multiple backup systems when they had little kids.”

But with the exception of one participant, all said it was worth it.

“They all talked about the privilege of practicing medicine for 50 years and the intellectual challenges. They really loved what they did.”

Wichita radiologist Joy Darrah, one of the physicians Walling interviewed, was one of 20 women in the 1971 graduating class of 200. Darrah said Walling's research "introduces people to the way things were as opposed to the way things are now."

"I think all the adversities we met, you just kept plowing through to get to where you wanted to go."

Darrah, Walling and others like them helped usher in a new era of medicine. From a tiny percent in the 1960s, women now comprise a majority of the students enrolled at U.S. medical schools.

“They just did their jobs and made it credible for women doctors to be recognized as good doctors,” Walling said. “Without them, it wouldn’t have happened.”

Book talk at Watermark

Anne Walling will discuss "Women in Medicine: Stories from the Girls in White" at Watermark Books & Cafe, 4701 E. Douglas Ave., at 6 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 21. Signed copies of her book are available at the store.

Trump’s ‘Big, Beautiful Bill’: The good and bad, according to AARP

The “One Big, Beautiful Bill’ signed into law by President Trump on July 4 will be a mixed bag for seniors, according to AARP.

“While we support several provisions in the (bill) that would provide meaningful relief, we oppose others that would put health coverage, food assistance, and financial security further out of reach for those already struggling,” Nancy LeaMond, AARP’s executive vice president, wrote in a letter to U.S. senators before the bill’s passage.”

Several provisions in the bill that specifically benefit some seniors were

endorsed by AARP. These include:

• A temporary tax deduction of $6,000 for people 65 and older. This new deduction is in addition to the existing standard deduction and the standard senior deduction already available to eligible taxpayers ($2,000 for single taxpayers and $1,600 per spouse for couples filing jointly). The full amount of the new deduction is available to individuals with a modified gross adjusted income of up to $75,000 (up to $150,000 for couples filing jointly) and is phased out as a recipient’s income rises. The bonus deduction will expire in 2029 and does

not benefit the 64 percent of Social Security recipients who now pay no income taxes on benefits.

• An expansion in the Section 45S tax credit for companies that offer paid family or medical leave to caregivers.

• Easing access for builders and investors to qualify for the LowIncome Housing Tax Credit, which could lead to more affordable housing for seniors on fixed incomes.

AARP opposed other elements of the bill, including:

• Changes in how Affordable Care Act plans are administered that will reduce the number of people covered

and increase out-of-pocket premiums.

• Work requirements for Medicaid that will reduce the number of people covered by it.

• Shifting a portion of the cost of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) onto states that may not be able to afford it. The bill also adds a work requirement for most people up to 64 years old.

• Delaying the implementation of new nursing home standards that AARP says “will perpetuate unsafe conditions in many facilities across the country.”

Second-year medical students Lisa Jenkins, Mary Ann Lauver and Eva Roeder prepare for a pathology class in 1972. Photo courtesy of University of Kansas Medical Center Archives, Kansas City, Kan.

August Theatre

Kechi Playhouse, 100 E. Kechi Road, Much Ado About Nothing. The Bard’s most popular play about…nothing? Well, let’s just say it’s about the complexities of being in love. After 42 years, this comedy is Kechi Playhouse’s first staged Shakespeare script. Fri-Sat, 8 pm, Sun matinee 2:30 pm. Aug 1-24. Tickets are $17 on Fri and Sat and $16 on Sundays. For more information, call 316 -744 - 2152

Mosley Street Melodrama, 234 N. Mosley. Forgetting the Titans by Ryan Schafer and Molly Tully followed by a new musical review. Aug 25-Sept 6. Tickets, dinner, & show $36-40; show only $26-30. 316-263-0222

Music Theatre Wichita, Century II Concert Hall. Disney’s Newsies. July 30-Aug 3.

Next: Something Rotten! Humorous new take on Shakespeare, Aug. 20-24. And A Grand Night for Singing. Songs from Rogers and Hammerstein, Sept. 3-7. Contact box office for times and prices. 316-265-310. ASL provided,

Saturday, August 2nd @ 2:00pm.

Roxy’s Downtown, 412 E. Douglas, cabaret-style theatre. The Play That Goes Wrong. This Tony winning farce portrays the doomed opening night of a play. 7:30 pm Wed-Sat, 2 pm Sat & Sun, through Aug 10. Tickets $40. 316-265-4400

Next: EVITA. Tony-winning musical charts Eva Peron’s meteoric rise from illegitimate child to ambitious actress to wife of Argentinian president Juan Peron before her death from cancer at age 33. 7:30 pm Thur - Sat, Aug 22Sept 27. Tickets $40. 316-265-4400

Wichita Community Theatre, 258 N. Fountain. The Cottage by Sandy Rustin and directed by Mary Lou Phipps-Winfrey. Sylvia and Beau find themselves in an English countryside cottage for their yearly rendezvous when their spouses arrive. Sept 4-14; 8 pm Thur-Sat, 2 pm Sun. Tickets $1618. 316-686-1282

Contact Diana Morton at dianamorton12@sbcglobal.net

August quiz: Arm chair traveling

In this prime season of vacation traveling, see if you can name the countries where these famed manmade and natural attractions are located. The answers appear on page 20.

1. Butchart Gardens, CN Tower, Chateau Frontenac_____________

2. Yellow Mountains, Forbidden City, Terracotta Army___________

3. Musee d’Orsay, Mont Blanc, Palace of Versailles_____________

4. Algarve, Belem Tower, Pena National Palace_______________

5. Christ the Redeemer, Copacabana Beach, Iguazu Falls_______________

6. Stirling Castle, Isle of Skye, Loch Lomond______________

7. Valley of the Kings, Sinai Desert, Alexandria___________

8. Lake Lucerne, Rhine Falls, Interlaken_____________

9. Cliffs of Moher, Guinness Storehouse, Ring of Kerry_________

10. Neuschwanstein Castle, Brandenburg Gate, Cologne___________

11. Blue Lagoon, Golden Circle, Reykjavik__________

12. Hallstatt, Schonbrunn Palace, Innsbruck___________

13. Positano, Lake Como, Amalfi Coast_____________

14. Uluru, Sydney Opera House, Gold Coast__________

15. Sapporo, Mount Fuji, Okinawa___________

The Little House on the Prairie really is … little

I never read any of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s books when I was a kid. I wasn’t intentionally trying to avoid the lady, I was just more into The Hardy Boys. My wife and I never tuned into the “Little House on the Prairie” TV series, either. Nothing against Michael Landon or his luxuriant forest of hair, but we were probably watching “MASH” instead. We both love Kansas history, though, and the prairie where Laura’s little house stood is right here in our state. So we decided to take a day trip down to the Little House on the Prairie Museum, near Independence.

As we drove up to the Ingalls’ homestead, I imagined that I was seeing Laura’s book come to life. There’s a pretty little white farmhouse with a hand-dug well outside. Nearby is a small log building that I’m thinking is some kind of shed. A buckboard wagon stands in the yard, ready to be loaded with supplies. And there’s a sleepy-looking donkey who ambles up to the corral fence to greet us. He quickly loses interest when he sees that we have no snacks, then wanders back toward the big red barn with the colorful mosaic above the hayloft door.

“That’s not a mosaic,” explains Rhonda Stephen, the museum director. “That’s a quilt pattern called Doves in the Window. It’s the pattern Laura used to make her wedding quilt.”

People who’d read the books or watched the TV show might have recognized Laura’s quilt pattern and might not have called it a mosaic, but Rhonda isn’t judging. She’s cordially greeting guests and answering questions inside the little white 1885 farmhouse that I’d assumed was the famous Little House on the Prairie. It isn’t. It’s the gift shop.

Teeny-Tiny House

The Little House where Laura lived is actually the little log building that I’d mistaken for a shed. It’s a replica, built to match Laura’s descriptions of the family’s one-room dwelling. It’s definitely little — only a fraction of the size of the little white farmhouse. In fact, Laura might have more accurately named her book “The Teeny-Tiny House on the Prairie.” The interior doesn’t look large enough to accommodate Michael Landon’s blow dryer and collection of hair care products, let alone a family of five. It’s sparsely furnished with an antique cradle and spinning wheel, a narrow bed that sags in the middle, a crude homemade table with tree bark still on the legs, and some smaller period pieces. There are no luxury items.

Above, the writer's wife stands in front of the Little House replica to provide scale. Top right, one-room schoolhouse brought to museum from Wayside, Kan. Center right, a half-awake mule tries to cadge an apple or carrot from visitors. Bottom right, Charles and Caroline Ingalls. The producer of the "Little House on the Prairie" television series quit over star Michael Landon's refusal to wear a bear like Ingalls.

“They suffered cold and heat, hard work and privation as did others of their time,” Laura wrote.

The Little House is a replica, but the other buildings here are legitimately historic, dating back to the Ingalls’ time. The 1885 post office and the 1872 one-room school were both moved here from the nearby town of Wayside when they were earmarked for demolition. Inside the Sunny Side School, it’s like you’re transported back to 1872 and class is ready to begin. The student desks have period textbooks open for study. The scarred wooden desktops are equipped with inkwells and the straight-backed wooden seats are built for concentration, not comfort. The teacher’s small oak desk sits up in front of the blackboards, beneath the framed portraits of George Washington and Abe Lincoln. Her wooden-handled bell stands ready to start the school day, and her hurricane lamp can be fired up if there’s insufficient light from the windows on cloudy days. There was no electricity, of course. The world globe sitting on top of the old upright piano reflects some of the changes our planet has seen since 1870. Ceylon is called Sri Lanka now. There’s no longer a Kingdom of Prussia. And the U.S. has more than 37 states.

The only man-made structure here that Laura would recognize is the water well. Her Pa, Charles Ingalls, dug it by hand outside the little house. It was back-breaking work. Pa shoveled down

Fifth in a series about day trips around Kansas

ten feet before calling in a neighbor to help. They finally hit water at 20 feet down.

“That well is how we are 99-point-99 percent sure that this is the exact spot where The Little House stood,” Rhonda tells us. “We have the 1870 census, showing that Charles Ingalls and his family were living here in Rutland Township, in a home with a hand-dug well. Rutland is very small, only 3 miles square, and there were only two other homes in this township at the time. This is the only one with a hand-dug well that’s carbon-dated back to that time period.”

Aug. 2 celebration

Charles and Caroline Ingalls and their daughters moved here from Wisconsin. They loved the vast open prairie. But like a number of other homesteaders, they were illegally squatting on Osage territory. So the Ingalls were forced to move back to Wisconsin after only a year and a half. But they were here in Kansas long enough to build a little house, dig a well and make a baby. Laura’s little sister Caroline Celestia Ingalls was born here in the little house on August 3, 1870. They called her Carrie. And here at the museum, they celebrate Carrie’s birthday every August. This year’s Carrie Days celebration will be on Saturday, Aug. 2.

“We’ll have some cake and probably some watermelon,” Rhonda tells us. “But there won’t be any ice cream at this birthday party. It’ll be

August in Kansas, after all.”

There’s a small admission fee to explore the grounds of the museum. But it offers a glimpse back into Kansas life on the prairie in the late 1800s that’s well worth the price of admission and the two-hour drive. The address is 2507 County Road 3000, Independence, KS. It’s about 15 miles southeast of Independence, just off of US-75. Picnic tables are provided if you want to bring a lunch to enjoy before your slice of Carrie’s birthday cake. Bring your own water, too. Pa’s well is permanently sealed to prevent accidents.

“As you read my stories of long ago,” Laura wrote, “I hope you will remember that things truly worthwhile and that bring you happiness are the same now as they were then. It’s not the things you have that make you happy. It is the love and kindness and helping each other and just plain being good.”

There’s a lot of wisdom in that quote. Maybe I’ll actually break down and read one of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s entire books someday.

Contact Joe Norris at Joe.norris47@ gmail.com

Photos by Joe Norris

Couple finds navigating these obstacles enjoyable

When Sharon and Hank Brillhart started dating, they found they had a few things in common.

For one: “We like to drive fast,” Sharon said. But not recklessly.

Today, the Brillharts are regulars in the Sports Car Club of America’s Autocrossing events. In Autocross, drivers compete to see who can complete an obstacle course in the fastest time.

“We just have a lot of fun doing it and have met so many good people.”

But competition is definitely part of the appeal.

“We have a lot of young kids that think they can drive,” Sharon said. “Then you have somebody like me and Hank come along and beat them. Then they want to come ride with us and see how it’s done.”

The Brillharts met through a dating app after both lost their spouses to cancer. Hank spent his career at Beech Aircraft, and Sharon is the former owner of the Yoder Market. They’ve been married 11 years.

Hank has been a car guy his whole life, with an affinity for British sports cars. Sharon’s first husband rebuilt and showed American hot rods.

The Brillharts belong to SCAA’s Wichita region, which holds its events at the former Hutchinson Naval Air Station south of Yoder (the old runway is also leased by glider and parachuting enthusiasts), as well as the Salina region.

Autocrossing course are typically one-half to one-mile long, with the twists, turns and straightaways marked by orange rubber traffic pylons. The half-mile-long Yoder course takes most competitors about 45 to 60 seconds to complete, depending on how it’s been arranged. Knocking over a cone

From Page 1

According to the update, nearly 47% of U.S. adults have high blood pressure, more than 72% are at an unhealthy weight, nearly 42% are obese and more than half have Type 2 diabetes or prediabetes.

The annual report published in “Circulation,” the peer-reviewed, flagship journal of the American Heart Association, shows the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors are projected to worsen over the coming decades.

“Although we have made a lot of progress against cardiovascular disease in the past few decades,

adds two seconds to a driver’s time, so control is important since many wins are decided by a second or less. Drivers get between three and six attempts at the course to post their best time.

Vehicles used in autocrossing don’t have to be race cars. Cars are divided into classes with similar abilities. For instance, a stock Camaro would be matched against stock Firebirds and Mustangs. There are other classes for modified cars.

The SCAA emphasizes both safety and a welcoming attitude. Vehicles must undergo a technical inspection checking such things as their brakes, steering, seatbelts and tires before racing, and drivers must wear helmets (loaners are available for people who don’t own one). Drivers must sign an insurance waiver, and rules are in place to keep the track clear of anyone not driving.

There’s no training required for first-time participants but they must sign up ahead of time at wichitascca. org. The cost of a meet is $30 for SCAA members and $50 for nonmembers. There’s no charge for audience members, and drivers are known to take onlookers for nontimed rides.

Since SCAA is an all-volunteer organization, participants are required to help out in some way, whether it’s collecting cones at the end of the day or working the registration table. Meets are held one weekend a month March through November, and there’s an awards banquet in January. SCAA claims more than 50,000 members and 100 regions nationwide.

The Wichita region also sponsors Street Survival, a defensive driving course for young drivers that teaches them how to brake, change lanes and do some basic car maintenance. The

there is a lot more work that remains to be done,” said Dr. Dhruv S. Kazi, head of health economics and associate director of the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Center for Outcomes Research in Cardiology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and associate professor at Harvard Medical School. “If recent trends continue, hypertension and obesity will each affect more than 180 million U.S. adults by 2050, whereas the prevalence of diabetes will climb to more than 80 million.

Over the same time period, we expect to see a 300% increase in health care costs related to cardiovascular disease.”

next one is set for Saturday, Sept. 28.

The speeds reached in autocrossing aren’t dangerously high, topping out at about 60 miles per hour due to the slalom-like course. The goal, Hank said, is to “get back into acceleration as soon as you can” after each turn and anticipate the next set of cones, and the ones after that. “If you look right in front of you, you’re going to miss your next turn,” Sharon said.

The Brillharts have also taken part in SCAA meets in Nebraska, Oklahoma and Missouri. “Every time we go, the course is set up differently, so it is a new experience each week,” Sharon said.

The Brillharts say autcrossing also helps them do a better job at everyday driving. Hank recalled being run off the road onto the shoulder by the errant driver of a pickup truck coming back from Salina one day. He brought his vehicle back safely onto

Prevalence for major risk factors varies across sex and race:

• Black women had the highest rate of obesity at 57.9%, compared to the lowest rate of 14.5% among Asian women.

• Hispanic men had the highest rate of diabetes at 14.5%, compared to the lowest rate of 7.7% among white women.

• Black women had the highest rate of high blood pressure at 58.4%, compared to the lowest rate of 35.3% among Hispanic women.

The prevalence of these risk factors – obesity in particular – is growing among young people globally. As many as 40% of U.S. children have an unhealthy weight

the highway.

“It keeps you altert to what’s going on,” he said.

“I think it helps you be more in tune to the situation so you don’t panic,” Sharon added.

Sharon currently holds family honors for fastest driver. “She’s beaten me for the last few years,” Hank said. “I’m just the mechanic.”

That may be an understatement. In addition to the 1999 Miata (Hank’s) and 2003 Toyota MR2 Spider (Sharon’s) they drive in autocross, he maintains six other family cars. “Our insurance and our tag office love us,” Sharon said.

Upcoming meets

The Wichita region Sports Car Club of America has several more autocrossing meets scheduled this year near Yoder: Aug. 23-24, Sept. 21; Oct. 5; and Oct. 25-26. For more information, visit wichitascca.org.

with 20% having obesity. Nearly 60% of adults globally have an unhealthy weight.

Long considered one of the leading preventable causes of death in the U.S. and worldwide, tobacco use is also trending down. Smoking rates have steadily declined among both adults and youth since the U.S. Surgeon General’s first report on the dangers of smoking from 51% of men and 34% of women in 1965 to 15.6% and 12%, respectively, in 2018.

To find the full report and more advice for healthy living, visit heart. org.

Hank and Sharon Brillhart pose with Sharon’s Toyota MR2 Spider during an autocrossing meet in Independence, Kan.

Quiet houseguests worked their way into her heart

This spring, we took on four of the smallest — and quietest — houseguests I’ve ever had. They weren’t invited, but they were certainly welcome.

It all started when a stray cat gave birth beneath our house in the Sonoran Desert. I never saw much of her — just quick glimpses as she darted from shadow to sun. Then one day, she simply stopped coming. Coyotes roam these parts, and I fear she became one of their many unseen victims. Left behind were four tiny kittens, barely five weeks old, suddenly orphaned and alone.

We couldn’t just ignore them. So, I began feeding them, gently and consistently, three times a day. I’d spread out a big beach towel on the ground and sit there, 3 or 4 times a day, just to be down on their level. At first, I used a soft, high-pitched voice to help them get used to me. I still use that same voice when I call them to eat. All I have to do now is say one word: “Babies.” As soon as they hear it, they come running.

They earned their names from the way they’d emerge — always in the same order — from beneath the house to eat. Numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4. Simple, but it stuck. Those four numbers have

Meet our Paws-itive Vibes Winner

Ms. Monroe is the winner of The Active Age's Paws-i-tive Vibes photo contest. Owner Denise Jackson Simon snapped a picture of Ms. Monroe with her sculpture piece entitled "Paper Bag Reimagined." Ms. Monroe is 9 years old.

Thanks to everyone who sent in their pet pictures. To see all the entries,visit theactiveage.com and click on Sections, then Local Interest. Thanks also to the Spice Merchant for providing the winner witha $50 gift card.

become a cherished part of my daily rhythm. Now nearly four months old, they’re healthy, playful, and still living under the house. During the long, hot desert days, they stay tucked beneath it where it’s cool and dark, wrestling and playing with each other in their own little shaded world. When the sun finally dips and the desert heat loosens its grip, they emerge like clockwork — usually around 6:45 p.m. — trotting up to the front porch for dinner, where I’ve started feeding them in the evenings. They’ve become a steady, silent part of my life. And when I say silent, I mean it. None of them meows. Whether it’s instinct or just their

Clockwise from top are Numbers 3, 2, 1 and 4. nature, their quiet presence is part of what makes them so special.

They’ll all be spayed or neutered, a promise I made to their mama, wherever she may be.

We don’t always choose the things that show up at our door — or in this case, under our floor — but sometimes, the smallest lives bring the biggest blessings.

Teresa Schmied is advertising director of The Active Age. She can be reached at teresa@theactiveage.com.

Photo by Teresa Schmied

Eggplant parm delivers summer flavor

Skipping one step in the traditional method of preparing eggplant parmesan saves time and mess and makes for a tastier result, at least if you really want to savor the star ingredients. That step is breading the eggplant before

Eggplant Parmesan

2 medium eggplants

Olive oil

1 onion, chopped

2 cloves garlic, minced

1 can (28 oz.) tomato sauce

1 can (6 oz.) tomato paste

1 fresh tomato, chopped

About 1/3 cup dry red wine, optional

Handful fresh basil leaves, minced

Salt, sugar and pepper, to taste

1 lb. fresh mozzarella, sliced

2/3 cup to 1 cup grated parmesan

Fresh bread crumbs

Directions:

sauteing it. Generally, that breading is just a soggy mess by the time the dish is assembled and baked. Instead, this version is topped with fresh bread crumbs, which stay crunchy and let the fresh produce in this dish shine.

The second recipe here is for Caponata, a Sicilian specialty used to top bruschetta, pasta, polenta and more.

Peel eggplant and slice about ½ inch thick. Season with salt and pepper. Heat olive oil in large skillet and saute eggplant on both sides about 3-5 minutes, or until lightly browned and softened. Set aside on paper towels.

In same skillet, heat more olive oil. Saute onion about 3 minutes, or until soft, adding garlic near end of cooking time. Add tomato sauce, tomato paste and a tomato paste can full of red wine, if using. Bring to a boil, then reduce and simmer about 10 minutes. Add basil and season to taste with salt, pepper and sugar.

To assemble, spread about ¾ cup tomato sauce in the bottom of a 13x9 baking dish. Top with eggplant slices, cutting pieces to fill any gaps. You just want one layer. Top that with mozzarella slices, the remaining tomato sauce and parmesan. Bake at 400 degrees about 30 minutes or until bubbly, covering with foil if bread crumbs start to brown too much.

Caponata

1 lb. eggplant, cut into cubes

Extra virgin olive oil

1 yellow onion, chopped

2 small celery stalks, thinly sliced

1 cup crushed tomatoes

2 tablespoons capers

¼ cup each: raisins and chopped green olives

½ tsp crushed red pepper flakes

1/4 cup balsamic or red wine vinegar

Salt, pepper and sugar, to taste

Chopped fresh herbs (such as basil or parsley)

Directions:

Coat eggplant pieces with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Roast in 425-oven about 30 minutes, turning once, until browned and tender.

In a skillet, saute onion and celery until soft. Add roasted eggplant and remaining ingredients. Cover and simmer about 10 minutes. Season to taste with salt, pepper and sugar. Serve warm, cold or at room temperature.

so many activities to take part in. The staff is awesome & so helpful. I am so glad I made the move to Oxford Villa.

Veteran honored to lay wreath at Tomb of the Unknowns

When John Person of Wichita boarded a 737 in June at Eisenhower National Airport, he had several surprises awaiting him.

Person, who served in the Air Force from 1971-1993, arrived in Washington, D.C., on an all-expense-paid charter flight with more than 100 other military veterans.

They were part of the 13-year-old Kansas Honor Flight program. Since its inception, more than 4,400 veterans from World War II, the Korean War and the Vietnam War have visited memorial sites in the nation’s capital.

As part of their Kansas Honor Flight experience, John Person, left, and Kent Ifland of Junction City helped lay a wreath with a sunflower at the top at the Tomb of the Unknowns.

Lavonna Schlageck, who coordinates the schedules and flights for the veterans, also asks four veterans to lay a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns. “I get a good feeling about a veteran,” she said before she chooses.

colonel who lives in Virginia, makes the wreaths for the Kansas flights.

Using grapevine from a vineyard he owns, he adds a small Kansas sunflower to the top of it.

What Person also didn’t expect when he arrived at the tomb was meeting his nephew, Derek Person, who’d been alerted by John’s wife, Kathy. He hadn’t seen him in 30 years. “That was a personal highlight,” Person said.

Returning to Wichita, Person was among the group of veterans greeted by cheering family and friends. There

Person said he was surprised when Schlageck asked him to lay the wreath but “jumped at the chance.”

The wreath itself also has a Kansas connection. Neal Johnson, a former Colby, Kan., resident and retired Army

was one more surprise for him: In addition to his wife, their daughter, Kristin, and grandchildren came from Topeka to welcome him back and thank him for his service.

Why was it important for him to go on the Kansas Honor Flight? “To pay homage to those guys who died,” he said.

For more information about Kansas Honor Flight, go to kansashonorflight.org

Tom Schaefer is a former editor and columnist at The Wichita Eagle. Contact him at tomary70@cox.net

Masterson, Schmidt running for governor

Two elected officials from the Wichita area have entered the Republican primary race for governor. Kansas Senate President Ty Masterson of Andover and Insurance Commissioner Vicki Schmidt of Wichita declared their candidacies last month.

Masterson started his political career on the Andover City Council 20 years ago, going on to serve in the Kansas House and Senate. He became Senate leader in 2021.

Schmidt is a graduate of Wichita

South High School and worked as a pharmacist for more than 40 years. She served in the Senate from 2005 to 2019 and won election as insurance commissioner in 2018 and 2022.

The primary will be held in August 2026. Others seeking the party’s nomination include Secretary of State Scott Schwab, former Gov. Jeff Colyer and former Wichita school board member Joy Eakins.

Thank you to my patients for the opportunity to serve you over the last 20 years.

Every day my team and I are dedicated to providing the best care for your feet in the region and we look forward to serving you for many years to come!
Dr. Weaver
Ty Masterson Vicki Schmidt

Her glass works are ‘imperfectly beautiful just like you and me’

A lot of times when people buy art, they’re looking for the perfect piece to, say, hang above their mantel or the perfect color to match their dining room walls.

However, for artist Becky Manson, her glass creations are about celebrating imperfections.

Her Imperfectly Beautiful line is “imperfectly beautiful just like you and me,” she said. “But it’s still beautiful.”

Manson has created a lot of pictures on clear glass featuring flowers, trees and whimsical buildings that are fun to put in windows so light can shine through them.

She also makes plant stakes, including some that look like mushrooms, which was someone else’s suggestion.

The glass holds up well outside, she said.

Manson always has dabbled in crafts, though never seriously until she retired six and a half years ago.

She’d been a physical therapist for almost four decades when she had to stop at age 62.

“I retired because my body was giving out on me. That’s a pretty physical career.”

She didn’t have specific plans for retirement, but Manson had kept artistic pursuits in mind. Even before

creating anything or having a plan for a particular medium, Manson had an idea of what she wanted the outcome to be.

“I always thought it would be fun to make something that somebody else wanted,” she said. “It’s always been my dream to have somebody buy something I made.”

She took some CityArts glass classes that she said were a lot of fun. When the pandemic hit, and CityArts

had to close, Manson still wanted to create, so she found a half-priced kiln, which she and her husband picked up from a woman in Tulsa who’d never taken it out of the box, and got to work.

“It was something kind of unique that a lot of people didn’t do,” Manson said.

A lot of artists keep their kilns outdoors, but Manson keeps hers in her basement.

“When I first got it and turned it on, it blew a fuse.”

She now has a dedicated plug for it. On hot summer afternoons, she can be in the cooler basement working.

She buys glass in sheets in all different colors. She also buys small pieces called frit. Then, she starts designing what she’ll fuse in the kiln.

“It’s just kind of creative. It’s just kind of what you want to do?”

A hazard of the trade is getting cut, Manson said.

“The little pieces will cut your fingers, and you don’t even notice it until you’ve got blood on something.”

She now keeps Band-Aids in the basement, and when she’s taught classes there, she makes sure participants wear closed-toe shoes.

She and some friends began selling their works in a variety of places, such as the Church of the Magdalen’s bazaar.

“It was really a rush. It was really exciting when people started buying it.”

Her glass ornaments have been popular there.

She’s also done artisan fairs at Grace Hill Winery.

“Those are really fun to do, too.”

Some of her pieces are in the Workroom on consignment and at the

See next page

Courtesy photo
Becky Manson said it was "really a rush" when people started buying her glass creations.

Wildflower Mercantile in Delano.

Manson said she gets checks once a month.

“It’s really cool. I’ve made some pretty good money over the months.”

She’s also sold her work at the Holiday Galleria and at the Women’s Fair. She said she’d like to do more craft shows, too.

Manson finds a variety of inspirations for her glass pieces.

“It’s just life sometimes gets busy.”

Manson creates glass works usually about four days a week as her schedule allows.

She said she’ll take commissions. For instance, one person requested the K-State logo on glass. Manson said she always cautions buyers that her creations are one of a kind, and she can’t simply duplicate them. That’s all

part of what makes them Imperfectly Beautiful.

Manson doesn’t have a website, and she admits she’s not so good about keeping up her Facebook page.

The various places she does find to sell are enough for her at this point, she said.

“It’s just nice to support my habit.”

City clarifies tree planting plans

In response to concerns raised by community members, Wichita City Manager Robert Layton says the city’s 2026-27 Forestry Division budget will contain money for tree planting. Below is the email Layton sent to one member of the pro-planting group ICT Trees:

“Thank you for the email. There is some misinformation circulating about the 2026 and 2027 tree planting budget that should be addressed. Although preliminary budget discussions included an elimination of tree planting for those two years, the City Council asked for a reconsideration of that action. As a result of that feedback, my

recommended budget will restore the tree planting funding for both years.

I hope that this will address your concerns. I would appreciate your help in sharing the message.”

Another member of that group told The Active Age that the city has access to non-potable groundwater so maintaining young trees should not affect the city’s supply of drinking water.

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Triumph and Tragedy | Tuesdays, Oct. 21, 28 & Nov. 4, 11

Wu, that’s some story!

To understand George Theoharis’ quirky quests, it helps to know something about him.

He’s not afraid to put it out there, is one way to put it.

For instance, when comedian Jay Leno visited Wichita in May for a show at the Orpheum, Theoharis sent a message offering to pick Leno up at the airport, put him up in his basement and serve as his personal valet.

For some reason, he never heard back from Leno.

But his persistence occasionally pays off, and this is a story about two of those times.

Shortly after Lily Wu became mayor of Wichita in January 2024, Theoharis conceived of a plan to obtain photos of himself with her and another Mayor Wu — Michelle Wu of Boston, Mass., probably best known for tangling with President Trump over immigration enforcement.

Why? Well, it has something to do with the fact that George and his wife, Janet, are proud graduates of Wichita State University.

Catching up with Wichita’s Wu was no problem. Theoharis and his wife snapped a picture with her at a neighborhood association meeting.

But when Theoharis visited Boston earlier this year, he found that access to its Mayor Wu was more limited. Or, as he says: “I played hell trying to get a picture with her.”

George and Janet were staying at the hotel in Boston’s former Custom House, located a few blocks from City Hall. “I just kept pushing, ‘Come on. Please. Please.’”

Theoharis has some experience pushing the levers of municipal government. In Wichita, he's served on the city's bicyclng and animal control advisory boards — stirring a little

controversy on both — is president of both the Grandview/Meadowlark and Mead neighborhood associations and has been known to speak his mind at City Council meetings.

Also, Theoharis grew up in Haverhill, Mass., about 35 miles north of Boston, and still sounds like it. So his dropped r’s would have been right at home in Boston City Hall.

A word about Janet Theoharis’ patience in all this seems appropriate. Michelle Wu “is far, far left” politically, Theoharis said. “My wife is right. Not far, but right.”

Finally, Theoharis got word that Michelle Wu would be attending an event outside City Hall and he might snag a photo with her if he was willing to wait. Which he was.

“We hung around for about an hour and a half but I got my picture.”

There wasn’t much time for small talk, but Theoharis did learn that Michelle Wu knew about her counterpart in Wichita and had in fact called Lily Wu to offer condolences after the Jan. 29 crash of the American Eagle airplane in Washington, D.C., that killed a dozen Wichitans earlier this year.

By contrast, Theoharis heard plenty at his next stop — the Boston home (actually, a modest condo in Brookline, Mass.) of the oldest living presidential candidate, Michael Dukakis.

As Theoharis tells it, he simply called Dukakis to make an appointment, then jumped on the subway the next day. “I’m a seat-ofthe-pants kind of guy. He’s still got a phone, a landline, and he answers it.”

Dukakis, who lost the 1988 presidential election to George W. Bush, was also the longest-serving governor of Massachusetts and, after former Vice President Spiro Agnew, the only Greek-American governor in

U.S. history. Theoharis guesses his own last name “is the only thing that got me in the door. I was a Greek guy.”

Dukakis, he said, “talked to us for an hour and 15 minutes.” Theoharis barely got a word in, which is uncharacteristic.

When it came time for a photo, Theoharis said, “I gave him a little slap on the shoulder and said, ‘You better be smiling.’ He’s an old Greek guy so his smile isn’t exactly what I’d call a smile, but we got it done.”

The Dukakis photo gives Theoharis a photo of the only Democratic presidential candidate he remembers voting for. As for the photos of George, Janet and two Mayor Wus, Theoharis explained that he and his wife are big fans of the Wichita State mascot, WuShock, a sort of humanoid bundle of wheat.

So the photos are going on his mantel as — maybe you guessed it — “bookend Wu Shockers.”

Michelle Wu, naturally, “is going to be hanging off the left side.”

That might have been the end of

the story except that Theoharis was recently informed that there are more than two Mayor Wus. Indeed, a quick Google search found two more in California alone.

“Now I’ve got to fly out to California,” he said.

Evergy Kansas agreement would raise residential rates 9.6% if approved

TOPEKA — A settlement agreement filed last month at the Kansas Corporation Commission would raise Evergy Kansas residential base rates by 9.6%.

A residential customer using about 900 kilowatt hours would see a net increase of about $9 per month on their bill, said Evergy spokeswoman Gina Penzig.

The next move is in the hands of the three-member KCC board, which is holding hearings on the rate case. The board is required to sign off on the agreement and may make changes. Multiple parties intervening in

the case signed off on the agreement, including attorneys representing industrial consumers, school districts, Walmart and businesses.

Jim Zakoura, representing the Kansas Industrial Consumers Group, raised concerns about how Evergy customers are seeing rates go up consistently.

“While we worked hard, along with others in the case, to reduce the amount of Evergy’s rate increase, because Kansas law permits increases to be based on spending levels by electric utilities, a rate increase on retail ratepayers could not be prevented,” Zakoura said in a statement.

Evergy recently won KCC

approval to build two natural gas plants and a solar plant, which expected to increase residential rates by another 9.3% starting in 2029. Consumers saw increases of 3.6% in 2023 and 5.98% in 2025.

“This is ‘rate shock’ not seen by Kansans since Wolf Creek began operation in 1985,” Zakoura said. “The extraordinarily high spending levels of Evergy, and the extraordinarily high spending levels directed by the Southwest Power Pool, will continue to require even higher retail electric rates for EKC retail ratepayers in the future.”

The Southwest Power Pool is the regional transmission organization that ensures reliable power supplies and

infrastructure.

Since the company's formation in 2018 — when Westar Energy and Kansas City Power & Light merged — it has kept rate increases “well below the rate of inflation,” Penzig said. The company was not allowed to ask for any rate increases for five years after the merger.

Americans for Prosperity-Kansas criticized the proposed rate increase in a statement, calling it “a money grab by a state-backed energy monopoly” and urging lawmakers to “introduce reforms that allow for true competition and lower prices.”

Courtesy photos
George and Janet Theoharis are shown with Wichita Mayor Lily Wu, above left, Boston Mayor Michelle Wu, above right, and former Democratic presidential candidate Michael Dukakis, below.

Where to find senior discounts in 2025

My husband and I are in our 50’s and would like to know what resources you recommend for locating senior discounts, and what age do they kick in?

Frugal Fay

Dear Fay,

One of the great perks of growing older in America is the many discounts that are available. There are literally thousands of senior discounts on a wide variety of products and services including restaurants, travel and lodging, entertainment, retail, health, grocery stores, automotive services and much more. These discounts — typically ranging between 5 and 25 percent off — can add up to save you hundreds of dollars each year.

So, if you don’t mind admitting your age, here are some tips and tools to help you locate the discounts you may be eligible for.

Always Ask

The first thing to know is that most businesses don’t advertise them, but many give senior discounts, so don’t be shy about asking.

You also need to know that while some discounts are available as soon as you turn 50, many others may not kick in until you turn 55, 60, 62 or 65.

Search Online

Because senior discounts

frequently change and can vary depending on where you live and the time of year, the internet is the easiest way to locate them.

A good place to start is at

TheSeniorList.com (click on the “Money” tab), which provides a large list of discounts in restaurants, grocery stores and retail stores, and for prescription medications, travel and more.

You can also search for discounts by provider. Go to any standard search engine like Google or Bing and type in the business or organization you’re curious about, followed by “senior discount” or “senior discount tickets.” Or use an AI tool like Chat GPT or Gemini to do a search.

If you use an iPhone, you can even use the “Senior Discounts & Coupons” app (available in the App Store), which categorizes discounts by age and type.

Join a Club

Another good avenue to senior discounts is through membership organizations like AARP, which offers its members age 50 and older a wide variety of discounts through affiliate businesses. See AARP.org/ ViewMyBenefits.

Active Age changes going into effect this month

In our July issue, we asked readers to contact us if they were receiving copies of The Active Age addressed to someone else. Thanks to everyone who did so for helping update our subscription list. A bonus was hearing from many people who let us know they enjoy the publication and want to keep receiving it.

With the updated list and help from the U.S. Postal Service, we’ve been able to identify a significant number of households that have been receiving The Active Age despite subscribers no longer living there. (Our office manager, Tammara Fogle, has worked long hours on this.)

Starting with this month’s issue, those households will no longer receive the publication. That will save us money on postage and printing and help us keep delivering The Active Age to people who want it.

Unfortunately, the postal service also announced an overall 7.4 percent rate increase last month — the seventh

From

the Editor

postage hike since 2021. We are now paying more than twice as much to mail The Active Age as we did in 2021.

If you are in a position to do so, please consider making a donation to the active age to help us defray the rising postage cost. The Active Age is a 501(c)(3) organization that relies on donations for an important portion of our revenue — about 25 percent last year. Without your gifts, we simply could not continue publishing the active age in its present form.

Our goal is to continue bringing you The Active Age for as long as we can. It’s been a part of the community since 1979, and the readership it serves has never been a bigger or more vibrant part of that community.

Let’s stay active together!

Have a question, comment or story idea for The Active Age? Contact Editor Joe Stumpe at joe@theactivegage.com

If, however, you don’t like or agree with AARP, or don’t want to pay the $15 membership fee, there are other organizations you can join that also provide discounts like the Association of Mature American Citizens (AMAC. us), the American Automobile Association (AAA.com), or for retired federal workers, the National Active and Retired Federal Employees Association (NARFE.org).

Types of Discounts

Here’s an abbreviated rundown of some of the different types of discounts you can expect to find.

Restaurants: Senior discounts are common at restaurants and fast-food establishments – like Chili’s, Denny’s, Golden Corral, Outback Steakhouse, McDonald’s and Sonic – ranging from free/discounted drinks to discounts off your total order.

Retailers: Many thrift stores like Goodwill and the Salvation Army, and certain retailers like Joann, Kohl’s, Michaels, Ross, Petsmart and Walgreens stores offer a break to seniors on certain days of the week.

Supermarkets: Many locally owned grocery stores offer senior discount programs, as do some chains, which offer discounts on certain days of the week.

West High class of ’56 reunion

Members of the West High School Class of ’56 are trying to determine if there’s interest in holding a reunion later this year. For more information, call Barbara Love at (316) 650-7254.

Quiz answers from page 8

Travel: American, Delta and United Airlines provide discounted senior fares for select destinations in the U.S. to passengers 65 plus, while British Airlines offers AARP members $65 off economy seats. Amtrak provides a 10 percent discount to travelers over 65. Most car rental companies give discounts to 50-plus customers or AARP members. Royal Caribbean, Norwegian and Carnival cruise lines offer senior rates to cruisers 55 and over. And, most hotels offer senior discounts, usually ranging from 10 to 30 percent.

Entertainment: Most movie theaters, museums, golf courses, ski slopes and other public entertainment venues provide reduced admission to seniors over 60 or 65. And the National Park Service offers a lifetime senior pass for those 62 and older for $80.

Send your questions or comments to questions@savvysenior.org, or to Savvy Senior, P.O. Box 5443, Norman, OK, 73070.

Get More Savvy

For more Savvy Senior tips, visit theactiveage.com. Topics for August include:

• How to Find a Great Handyman

• Tips and Treatments for Restless Leg Syndrome

• Does Medicare Cover Ambulance Rides?

Laundry Love brings people together, one load at a time

Every second and fourth Tuesday of the month at Spring Clean Laundry in west Wichita, volunteers from local churches set up tables and hand out piles of quarters to anyone who needs help — no questions asked.

As the washers churn and dryers spin, people line up for the monthly outreach effort called Laundry Love.

“There’s a big need, as you can see with all these people here, so I just want to help out,” said Deb Barngrover, who attends Good Shepherd Episcopal Church.

“They might spend their money on food instead of doing laundry, and this helps them get both.”

Laundry Love is a nationwide network that provides free laundry services to low-income people. There are at least five Laundry Love locations in Kansas, including in Wichita, Newton and Hutchinson.

The effort was launched more than 20 years ago by Greg Russinger of Portland, Oregon. Russinger was spending time with unhoused people in California when he was inspired to help.

“We asked a gentleman by the name of Eric, ‘What would it look like for us to walk alongside you?’” Russinger said. “And he just said, ‘You know, if I had clean clothes, I think people would treat me as a human being.’”

Russinger started showing up at

a laundromat and paying for other people’s laundry. While the washers and dryers did their thing, Russinger and other volunteers chatted with their neighbors and got to know them.

“People who were once strangers become acquaintances, and from acquaintances they become friends,” he said. “It’s in the returning where life really happens inside of the laundromat.”

If you have a washer and dryer at home, you probably take doing laundry for granted. You might even gripe about it.

But for Kim Robertson, Laundry Love seemed too good to be true.

Two years ago, she was living in a travel trailer with no way of doing laundry. She visited Spring Clean on a Tuesday night and noticed the sign.

“So, we started taking advantage of having a little help,” Robertson said.

Clean clothes can get expensive. Robertson does about five loads at a time, which costs at least $3 a load. Add several more dollars for the dryer, and that adds up.

Rosetta Rodriguez agrees. She recently lost her job and doesn’t have ready access to a washer or dryer. Having someone pay for her laundry means she has a little extra cash for food, gas or medicine.

“If you don’t have soap and bleach, they provide it for you. So, it helps a lot,” Rodriguez said.

It’s often church groups who commit to financing and staffing

Laundry Love locations. At the west Wichita location, it’s Good Shepherd Episcopal and Aldersgate United Methodist Church.

Volunteers take their cue from the biblical parable of the Good Samaritan, who takes an injured man to an innkeeper and promises to pay any expenses necessary to care for him.

Russinger, the founder, said Laundry Love isn’t a charity. Rather, it’s a chance for people to spend time together and form friendships.

“The community helps with people dealing with isolation. There are opportunities to help tutor children and help with job placement or housing possibilities,” he said. “There’s so many different things that can

happen inside of a laundromat.”

Robertson said Laundry Love takes care of a critical need and also offers dignity and hope.

“I’m hoping that once I get caught up on everything, I’m able to give back to the program because they helped me so much,” she said. “That’s my goal.”

Laundry Love programs are twice monthly at the west Wichita Spring Clean location, 416 N. Ridge Road, starting at 6 p.m. every second and fourth Tuesday.

To start a Laundry Love site or to make a donation, visit the Laundry Love website, laundrylove.org.

This article is reprinted with permission of KMUW.

Senior jobs program stops, restarts, now ‘partially operational’

A local jobs program for seniors was paused, then quickly restarted in response to action on the federal budget in Washington, D.C. Its operating agency now call it “only partially operational.”

The Senior Community Service Program, run by the Workforce Alliance of South Central Kansas, tries to help unemployed, low-income workers rejoin the workforce by paying them to work for nonprofit agencies with the hope that they will go on to

find a job in the nonprofit or private sector. It typically serves about 100 people a year in Sedgwick, Butler, Harvey, Cowley, Harper and Sumner counties.

According to a statement from the alliance, the U.S. Department of Labor instructed it to pause the federally funded program on June 30. That day, the alliance laid off 67 participants at 37 employers. On July 1, the Labor Department granted the program a 30-day extension for existing

participants. Later that same day, the Labor Department said the program would be funded through June 30, 2026. The alliance said it can’t enroll any new individuals until it receives “official guidance and the formal grant agreement.”

“We are optimistic that full program operations could resume by the end of July, pending official guidance and the release of grant agreements, however if there is a delay, there is still a possibility of

Congress cuts funding for public TV and radio

Congress last month approved a Trump administration plan to rescind all funding for NPR, PBS and their member stations.

Locally, it was reported that PBS Kansas would lose about $1.1 million and KMUW about $225,000 per year as a result of the cuts.

Voting in Congress was nearly totally along party lines, with all

Democrats, two Republican senators and two Republican House members opposing the cuts.

Polls have shown that a majority of U.S. residents support funding of public radio and TV, but some conservatives have long charged that those outlets are biased toward liberal viewpoints.

U.S. Sen. Roger Marshall,

R-Kansas, told Fox News that public media outlets “are getting out a leftist message. These public broadcasts have been turned into another tool of the leftist socialists. Yes, they’ve got some good programs, but we don’t want to use government funding for such a program as this. There are better things to do with the money.”

Victor Hogstrom, president and

another program pause on 8/1/25,” the statement said.

The Trump administration described the Senior Community Services program as ineffective, saying it “has difficulty transitioning even one-third of its participants into unsubsidized employment.”

But Amanda Duncan, the alliance’s vice president and chief development officer, called it “a really impactful program that has served thousands of workers.”

CEO of PBS Kansas, said in an interview with KWCH that the station “has done nothing wrong to deserve this. We have not produced one-sided programming because that is against our philosophy and our policy.”

KMUW, in a Facebook post, said it is “fighting back” against the cuts and urged listeners to support it. “For many stations, this means going dark. Not KMUW. We’re still here, because of you.”

Photo by Suzanne Perez/KMUW
Deb Barngrover, right, attends Good Shepherd Episcopal Church and volunteers with the church’s Laundry Love outreach program.

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