Sunday, February 15, 2015

Don Jones Found Peace

From The Columbus Dispatch:
It didn’t take death for Don Jones to find peace.
It followed him for 91 years.
For Jones, peace often came through art, and through art Jones found his calling, touching thousands of lives as one of the pioneers of art therapy.
Jones, of Worthington, died at Kobacker House on Jan. 28. A memorial service is scheduled for 11 a.m. today at the first Unitarian Universalist Church in Clintonville.
The bullet points of his life would by themselves tell the tale of a life well-lived: an artist, a therapist, a minister, a professor. He worked alongside noted psychiatrist Karl Menninger at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kan., for 16 years. While there, he became an ordained Methodist minister and pastor of a church in Rossville, Kan. There, he also joined forces with the NAACP during in the Brown v. Board of Education trials of the early 1950s. His illustration, “The Equality Kids,” became a poster used by supporters of desegregation.
“He was a radical liberal at a time when it wasn’t so easy to be that,” said longtime co-worker Bruce Moon.
Jones moved to Worthington in 1967 and started the adjunctive therapy program at Harding Hospital, where he worked for 20 years. He founded the Worthington Area Arts League in his basement. He taught art therapy at Capital University and the Columbus College of Art & Design, and ministered two central Ohio Unitarian congregations.
“He called himself a secular mystic,” said his widow, Karen Rush Jones.
It’s a life’s work, however, that happened almost by accident, ignited by the flame of peace.
Jones was drafted when the United States entered World War II. A pacifist, he became a conscientious objector and served four years in the Civilian Public Service with a group of Mennonites assigned to be aides at Marlboro State Hospital in New Jersey.
Because most able men were drafted into the military, there was a severe staffing shortage.
“He went to Marlboro as a 19-year-old,” Mrs. Jones said. “When he got there, the aides handed him the keys and said, ‘See you.’ He oversaw three wards of 150 people each, working 12 hours a day serving the severely mentally ill with no psychotropic drugs.”
He turned to art as a way of coping with the misery that surrounded him, and noticed that not only did patients respond to it, but some who hadn’t communicated verbally in years were creating their own art, with whatever materials they could find — usually blood or feces.
“He called it soul language,” said Mrs. Jones.
“His art and their art were based in the same desire, to express,” Moon said. “It was a dramatic acknowledgement that talking isn’t enough. Art was therapy.
“There’s no way to estimate the countless number of people he helped and influenced, from the thousands of patients to the hundreds of students and colleagues, and that doesn’t even begin to count friends and family,” Moon said.
“Boy, the world was a better place because he was in it, and will continue to be for years to come.”

Saturday, February 14, 2015

RHS Girls Lose to Eagles

     The RHS girls lost to the  Eagles at Silver Lake on Feb. 13.
Rossville      13 12   11   12   =   48
Silver Lake   13   9   17   18   =   57

Rossville scoring:

Nitsch                 5  (1)    0-0      11
Conley                4          2-4      10
Hill                      4          1-1        9
Kirk                     3          3-4        9
Steckel                2 (2)     0-0        6
Shinn                   0          2-2        2
Shinn                   0          1-2        1. 

Totals                18  (3)    9-13      48.

RHS Boys Lose to Silver Lake

    The RHS boys lost at Silver Lake on Feb. 13.

Rossville         7   8   7   11   =    33
Silver Lake     7  15 12   14   =    48

Rossville scoring:
Horak                   6 (1)      1-2      14
Sowers                 3           3-6        9
Schultz-Pruner      1           1-3        3
Horak                   1           0-0        2
Roduner                0           2-7        2
Woodcock             0           2-2        2
Horak                   0           1-2        1 


Totals                 11 (1)    10-22      33.

Joe Campbell Stadium On List

    Below is a link to all historical baseball stadiums in Kansas.   Joe Campbell Stadium is listed as one of the few historical wooden baseball stadiums in the USA,  and the only one in Kansas.
http://www.fhsu.edu/biology/Eberle/Historical-Baseball-Sites-in-Kansas/

Keara Lenard At KWU


    Keara Lenard of Rossville is a sophomore at Kansas Wesleyan University.  She is majoring in chemistry and secondary education and is on the women's cross country team, indoor track team and outdoor track team.
    Her bio can be read at:  http://www.kwucoyotes.com/roster/12/16/4279.php

Eagles Get Two Wins (updated)

    The Silver Lake girls beat the RHS girls 57-48 on Friday,  Feb. 13.  Later the SL boys also triumphed by a score of 58-33.
    WIBW has a  longer than usual video of both games at:  http://www.wibw.com/sports/ksprepzone/headlines/February-Rossville-At-Silver-Lake-291885201.html

Friday, February 13, 2015

Dawgs Get Love At Statehouse

     Here is an article and WIBW-TV video of the Dawgs visit to the State House.
http://www.wibw.com/home/headlines/Bulldawgs-Get-Love-At-Kansas-Statehouse-291763431.html


Thursday, February 12, 2015

Winter Royalty At RHS

Rossville High Winter Royalty
2015
For additional photos of the crowing and beforehand activities,  go to:  http://rossvilleksphotos.blogspot.com/2015/02/rossville-high-winter-royalty-2015.html
 Queen Breanna Hill and King Corbin Horak

2014 King Jacob Gentry and Queen Samantha Thompson getting ready to present the crown
Candidates Brooke Fairbanks and Corbin Horak
 Candidates Breanna Hill and Luke Hurtig
 Candidates Michaela Little and Lake Schultz-Pruner

Winter Royalty


   Winter Royalty was crowned Tue. night during the half-time of the Boys basketball game.  The candidates were ( L. to R above) Corbin Horak, Brooke Fairbanks, Luke Hurtig, Breanna Hill, Lake Schultzx-Pruner and Michaela Little.
    If anyone has pictures of the festivities,  please e-mail them to frank.ruff@juno.com.

Dawgfeed 14

    Latest version of Dawgfeed is  on-line at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NXfJlohwQ50&feature=em-subs_digest

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Dawgs Lose To Osage City In BB

    The boys basketball team was greatly outmatched in their Feb. 10 game against Osage City,  losing by a 73-25 score.  The Dawgs are now 8-8 for the saeson.

Osage City     21   20    22   10    =   73
Rossville          6     5     4    10    =   25


Rossville scoring:

Roduner           2          5-6      9
Schultz-Pruner  2          0-0      4
Woodcock        2          0-0      4
Horak               1          1-3      3
Hammes           1          1-2      3
Anderson          1          0-0      2

Totals                9 (0)    7-11   25.

RHS Girls Trample Osage City

   The RHS girls had an impressive win against Osage City on Feb. 10.  Nine girls put points on the board.  The RHS girls are now 8-8 in basketball

Osage City        4     8    5    1   =   18
Rossville          17   18 12     7   =   54

Rossville  scoring:
Nitsch               6 (1)     0-0        13
Hill                    4          2-2        10
Kirk                   2          3-4          7
Day                   1          4-6          6
Zemek               2 (1)     0-0          5
Shinn                 2          0-0          4
Shinn                 2          0-0          4
Little                  1           1-2          3
Porter                1           0-0          2

Totals              21 (2)    10-14      54

Dawgs Ranked Number One

There were a few small changes in the Top 10 3A schools rankings this week,  with Norton and Rossville switching places at the top of the chart.. Nick Reesor moved up one notch to #2.    Mid-East rivals St. Marys, Silver Lake, and Wabaunse are also in the top 10.   

1.  Rossville
2.  Norton
3.  Hoisington
4.  Oberlin
5.  Silver Lake
6.  Marysville
7.  St Marys
10. Wabaunsee

113 lb.   Bryce Gfeller       #1
126 lb.  Alex Cavanaugh   #2
160 lb.  Nick Reesor         #2
182 lb.  Isaac Luellen        #1

For details of each class,  click on below image:


Sunday, February 8, 2015

Wendy Madere Is Horizon Award Winner

    Wendy Madere,  a teacher at Rossville Grade School, is a 2015 Kansas Horizon Award Winner.
http://www.ksde.org/Home/QuickLinks/NewsRoom/tabid/586/aid/85/Default.aspx