Category: Featured

Share the Season stepped up when cancer victim needed help. Will you?

November 1, 2023 | By The Active Age

This year will be the 23rd in which Share the Season serves families in our community. Funds raised through this program are used to fill the gaps left by other assistance programs. Since its start, Share the Season has raised over $4.4 million dollars and help more than 4,200 families thanks to the generosity and […]

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Caregiving better when it’s a ‘team sport’

| By Monica Cissell

We’ve heard in recent months from the Surgeon General and others about the importance of connection and the devastating impact social isolation can have on people’s health and well-being. Caregivers often feel like they are alone in the caregiving journey but there are 69 million others — 29 percent of the population — who are […]

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Many thanks to go around at The Active Age

| By Joe Stumpe

This time of year, the staff and board of The Active Age have plenty to be thankful for. We’re thankful for our readers and donors. Readers are, simply put, why we do what we do. Donors provide around 20 percent of our operating budget, so you can imagine how crucial that is. We’re thankful for […]

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Wichita YMCA to open pickle ball center inside West location

October 31, 2023 | By The Active Age

The Greater Wichita YMCA will open the “Pickle Center” inside the West YMCA this weekend. According to a news release, “The new pickleball hub will give Y members and guests the entirely new experience of utilizing dedicated regulation pickleball courts for open play, classes, workshops and tournaments.” Te West Y’s gym has been converted into […]

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United Way needs 160 volunteers for income tax preparation services

October 27, 2023 | By The Active Age

United Way of the Plains is recruiting 160 volunteers for the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program that will operate Jan. 31 through April 15 in 2024. The service is offered at no charge to households making $64,000 or less annually. Funded through an annual grant secured from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and managed by […]

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Retired prof captures crowd, spelling bee title

October 2, 2023 | By Joe Stumpe

Think all spelling bee champions are overachieving middle schoolers with minds racing as fast as their metabolisms? Meet Charlie Hunter, who won KMUW’s first spelling bee last month at age 77. Granted, the event was an adult spelling bee, but Hunter still bested a field made up largely of twenty-, thirty- and forty-somethings. He became […]

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15 years of early-morning workouts bind group

| By Amy Geiszler-Jones

More than just physical fitness motivates a group of Wichitans to hit the gym at 5:45 a.m. three days a week. They’ve found friendships and — whether they know it or not — maybe a boost of mental health wellness. The group’s members first came together in September 2008 when Steve Rainbolt, Wichita State University’s […]

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Park newly honors civil rights pioneer

| By Joe Stumpe

Standing near where he and other young Wichitans made history 65 years ago, Galyn Vesey recalled the steadying influence of lawyer Chester I. Lewis during the Dockum Drug store sit-in. There had been threats from some white residents opposed to the lunch counter’s desegregation, and if violence broke out, the police response wasn’t hard to […]

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Fall Flair: Dressing for that most fickle of seasons

| By Bonnie Bing

We are in that season where some days it’s tough to know what season we’re in. Cool in the morning, very warm in the afternoon, brisk in the evening and even cooler at night. There’s also the problem of some people not knowing when to turn the air conditioning off until next year. But on […]

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Things to do in October: Holiday Tables, Taste of Newton and more

| By The Active Age

Holiday Tables returns for 56th year The table decorating creativity of local businesses and residents will be on display next month during Mark Arts’ annual Holiday Tables fundraiser. It’s the 56th year for the event, which is organized by Designing Women, an auxiliary of the community art center. The event runs from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. […]

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It’s not serious: Sleep,walking not good combination

| By Ted Blankenship

A few years ago, while working on a story about Wichita at night, I interviewed a pharmacist who worked across the street from a hospital. I asked him about his most unusual experience working nights.  “Well,” he said, “one night just before closing time, a tall senior citizen showed up holding a flower pot containing […]

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Kolaches connect this Kansan to her Czech heritage

| By Tammara Fogle

Congratulations to Joan Stadler of Derby, winner of a $25 gift certificate to The Spice Merchant for this month’s international recipe.  Kolaches are a pastry filled with sweet or savory ingredients that Stadler describes as the most popular recipe among people of Czech descent. They can be served as a bread or roll at any […]

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Wichita Public Library opens Family Place Library

| By The Active Age

Wichitans with young grandchildren have a new destination — the Family Place Library located inside the Children’s Pavilion at the Advanced Learning Library, 711 W. 2nd St. It’s designed for babies, toddlers, preschoolers, their parents and caregivers. The Family Place includes: • A specially designed welcoming space in the Children’s Pavilion for families with young […]

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COVID-19, flu vaccines offered by county

| By The Active Age

The Sedgwick County Health Department is offering the updated Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine and flue shots. The vaccine targets the dominant variant for much of 2023. The updated vaccine can be received at the same time as the flue vaccine. Last month, the first flu cases were reported in Sedgwick County, which is earlier than usual. […]

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‘Write for Your Life’ champions the telling of unheard stories

| By Ted Ayres

“Write for Your Life” by Anna Quindlen (Random House, 2022, 215 pages, $26.00) As a new high school teacher in Long Beach, Calif., Erin Gruwell was assigned students with learning disabilities, disciplinary issues and juvenile records — so-called “unteachables.” After Gruwell had them start keeping journals, they wrote about gang warfare, sexual assault, suicide attempts, apartment […]

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Learn to self-manage your health and wellness

| By The Active Age

The Sedgwick County Health Department is offering free training in self-managing disease and wellness. Each 2½ -hour workshop consists of six sessions. Attendance at all sessions is encouraged but not required. Participants need to attend at least 4 of the 6 sessions to receive a certificate of completion. The sessions are: Session 1: Healthy sleep […]

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October Theatre

| By Diana Morton

Empire House Players, at Old Cowtown Museum. Dracula: A Comic Thriller starring Shirley Holmes and Jennie Watson. Oct 13, 14, 20 & 21, 7pm; Oct 22, 2 pm. Tickets $15 adults, $7 children. Buy tickets at Buytickets.at/empirehouseplayers Forum Theatre, at the Wilke Center, 1st United Methodist Church, 330 N. Broadway. Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber […]

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Digital verion of The Active Age offered

| By The Active Age e

The Active Age is now available in a digital edition that allows you to flip through pages and increase the size of the print. It is emailed to subscribers on or before the first of each month. To sign up for it, contact joe@theactiveage.com.

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Why I believe The Active Age is important

| By Tim Marlar

Print newspapers were long a staple in most homes, providing a source of news, information and entertainment. In recent years, however, the popularity of print newspapers has declined as more and more people have turned to digital news sources. Despite this decline, print newspapers such as The Active Age still play an important role. For […]

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Flu hits early in Sedgwick County

September 5, 2023 | By The Active Age

The Sedgwick County Health Department has received reports of influenza (flu) among residents of Sedgwick County with no history of travel. According to a news release, in most years, the first reports of flu begin in October or November. Flu shots are recommended in September or October for anyone 6 months and older, unless otherwise […]

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Melon man makes many mouths happy

| By Joe Stumpe

When Kenneth Simons says he’s been raising watermelons all his life, he’s only exaggerating slightly. He started helping his dad raise them when he was 5 years old, or 85 years ago. “All I could do was walk around and be under his feet,” Simons, of Haysville, recalled. Within a few years, he was driving […]

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Hoarding a ‘generational’ issue for some

| By Rose Conlon; KMUW

Before Beck Bright-Samarzia gets down to work, she suits up: back brace, gloves, N-95 mask. Inching through one of her clients’ living rooms, between stacks of boxes and bins, she explains she used to wear an industrial-grade mask here — before they got the dust under control. “It might look like not a lot has […]

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Local Film wraps filming despite strike, blazing temps

| By Joe Stumpe

Like the protagonists in his current film project, Ken Spurgeon faced some challenges while making “Sod and Stubble” this summer. First came the strike by the actor’s union, SAG-AFTRA. Then came the blistering heat. After shutting down for a few days, Spurgeon received a waiver from the union that allowed him to resume filming, as […]

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