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The Rockballet Dancers Present “Jet Set To Wonderland” June 20-21

 

Reserved Tickets are now on sale for a show of talent you
do not want to miss! Call 855-222-2849 (the number on the flyer is not correct)

https://www.etix.com/ticket/o/8277/rockballet

Kristin Lewis Gorman will present her Rockballet dancers
in their 5th annual production, “Jet Set to Wonderland” ,
this Friday and Saturday, 7:30 PM at the Ellis Family Fine
Arts center, in Fort Scott.

Kristin was a New York City based career performer and
choreographer for 25 years before coming back to open
Rockballet, sharing her knowledge and love of singing,
dancing and acting with students in her hometown.
Kristin teaches every genre of dance and every class at
Rockballet.

As always, each number in the show is her original
choreography, created exclusively for her students.

Meredith Reid Named 2025 National Lowell Milken Center Fellow

This is part of a series on

 2025 National Lowell Milken Center Fellows.

 

FORT SCOTT, KS – June 1, 2025 – The Lowell Milken Center (LMC) for Unsung Heroes in Fort Scott, Kansas, an international educational non-profit, has awarded its prestigious Fellowship to Meredith Reid, a middle and high school choral music educator at Girard public schools in Girard, KS. Meredith will arrive in Fort Scott on June 22nd for a week of collaboration with LMC staff and the other members of the Fellowship.

 

The LMC Fellowship is a merit-based award for educators of all disciplines who value the importance of teaching respect and understanding through project-based learning. The Center selects exemplary teachers from the United States and around the world who will collaborate on projects that discover, develop, and communicate the stories of Unsung Heroes in history.

 

Meredith Reid, a choir teacher from Girard, KS, was recognized in January 2025 as a Kansas Milken Educator. The choir program was nearly non-existent when Meredith was a student at Girard High School. When she returned to her alma mater as an educator, she re-established the choir program, where students now have opportunities to succeed at state-level contests and are accepted into many different honor choirs.

Outside of her classroom, Meredith is an active member of her community, both locally and beyond. She serves as the Kansas Choral Directors Association Secretary and Kansas Music Educators Southeast District President-Elect. She is also an officer in the Girard P.E.O. chapter. In the last three years, she has developed a community choir, “Generations,” which reflects her goals of sustaining music as a lifelong passion for all ages.

LMC Executive Director Norm Conard says, “Meredith has re-established and rebuilt the choral music program at Girard Middle and High Schools, making them both successful and award-winning programs. With her previous experience and knowledge of unsung heroes, she has begun plans for unique ways of developing projects with her students.”

While in Fort Scott, LMC Fellows gain knowledge, educational resources, and support in helping students cultivate a passion for learning by creating projects that initiate positive change. Fellows will be equipped to develop Unsung Heroes projects with their students, applying and evaluating the stories of these role models who have changed the world throughout history.

 

 

 

The 2025 General Funds application is available until June 30th!

CFSEK Grantee Story Series:

Columbus Schools Park Elementary, Sensory Room Success

The Community Foundation of Southeast Kansas (CFSEK) is excited to continue our series of articles highlighting the great work done by some of our grantees in Southeast Kansas communities. Our next grantee to highlight is Columbus USD 493 Park Elementary School, recipient of a 2024 General Funds grant focused on Youth Activities for their sensory room project.

Have you ever seen a space that just wasn’t put to full use? You don’t even have to have a plan for it; you just know that it isn’t being used to its full potential? Well, Park Elementary Special Edudation (SPED) teacher Rylee Crain saw an empty office space in her classroom and had an idea. Park Elementary had a “quiet room” for students who needed that space, but the data showed it wasn’t having the intended effect.

“I looked at this office turned storage room in my classroom and thought I could do something exciting,” Crain said. Crain went to her principal to share her idea for a sensory room in this space, and her principal was on board. “She really encouraged me to apply for grants and to move forward with the project.”

With grant funding, Crain was able to purchase a couch, a ball pit, soft lighting, and several other items that would have been hard to get without grant funding. All of these are tools to help children to re-regulate and work through their emotional state.

“This room allows kids to re-regulate their emotions, and work on strategies to help them self-regulate,” Crain said.

The data from kids using the quiet room showed repeated use with little to no improvement in behavior or academics, whereas data from usage of the sensory room showed progress in frequency and improved behavior and academics.

“There was a little boy that would use the sensory room early in the year, and we worked on strategies to help him self-regulate his emotions while in the sensory room,” Crain said. “Eventually, he didn’t need to use it. He came and saw me at the end of the year to thank me, and we had the biggest hug! I’ll never forget that!”

While the sensory room is located in the SPED classroom, Crain wanted to make the space available to everyone.

“I sent out a building-wide email saying that the space is open and available to every kid,” she said. “We want every child to have the tools they need to be successful, and the sensory room can and should be one of those tools!” Teachers can even use the space as a reward for their students. “I have seen so many relationships grow throughout the building because of this, and it makes it feel so worth it!”

Crain talked about improving the check-in/check-out system next year as well. “We want to add a folder system on the door so kids can identify how they are feeling and then have a list of tools they can use in the sensory room,” she said. “This lets each kid get what they need!”

Crain helped complete the project and is now moving to another school in the district for the upcoming year. “I won’t be teaching SPED next year, but I already plan to replicate this project in my new building because I’ve seen the results firsthand!”

Crain stressed that the grant funding received made this project possible. “While we had some funds, without this grant money, we would not have been able to have the completed room within the year. This gave kids the best opportunity to be successful all year long,” she said.

CFSEK’s 2025 General Funds grant cycle application is available until June 30th. More information about the General Funds cycle is available at SoutheastKansas.org/GF.

The Community Foundation of Southeast Kansas awarded over $2 million in grants from all foundation funds in 2024 and has facilitated over $25 million in total granting to Southeast Kansas since its inception in 2001. CFSEK serves the region by providing donors with various charitable interests and encouraging charitable giving, which addresses present and future needs in our area. The Columbus Area, Fort Scott Area, and Girard Area Community Foundations are affiliates of CFSEK. More information about CFSEK is available at SoutheastKansas.org.

ArtEffect 2025 Winners

Presenting the
2025 High School Best in Show!
The $3,000 High School Best in Show prize was awarded to Lauren Kim, an 11th grade student at Horace Mann School in Bronx, New York. Lauren’s relief sculpture entitled Vivid Resilience—which she created with clay and acrylic paint on a wood panel—honors civil rights activist and teacher, Clara Luper. “The outlawing of segregation in 1964 was a collective, momentous effort that largely came into being through the persistent action of grassroots organizations, and persevering will of the people,” reads Lauren’s impact statement. “Especially as a student who loves history, art, and culture, I am constantly reminded that in order to coexist, we must always take our time to learn about the people. Who are the people who represent this beautiful art and culture? Who are the faces behind this historical movement? Humans are social, empathetic beings—something which Luper recognized and sought to communicate to others.”
Congratulations, Lauren Kim!
View “Vivid Resilience”
Photo courtesy of Lauren Kim.
Winning the $2,000 High School Second Place prize was Katelyn Lowe, a 12th grade student at George Washington High School in Charleston, West Virginia. Her acrylic painting, An Artist’s Modernization of American Indian Artfeatures meticulously rendered recreations of artworks by Oscar Howe, a Yanktonai Dakota modernist painter. “I believe Oscar Howe was an artist of great spirit,” Katelyn writes in her impact statement. “It was his desire for Indian culture to live forever through art.” Her artwork is a reflective tribute to Howe’s powerful artistic legacy. Katelyn is a returning ARTEFFECT awardee, as her artwork, A Woman Ahead of Her Time, won High School Best in Show in the 2024 ARTEFFECT Competition.
Congratulations, Katelyn Lowe!
View “An Artist’s Modernization of American Indian Art”
Read all Impact Statements
2025 Winners and Finalists
Congratulations to all the 2025 Awardees! The Impact Statements for the 2025 winners and finalists are now posted for each project on the ARTEFFECT Website. Read the Winners and Finalists to read about the young artists’ inspiration in choosing their Unsung Heroes as a roles models, and their creative process and interpretation.
View 2025 Winners
View 2025 Finalists
Ambassadors in Action!
Meet our featured Ambassador in Action Sudi Memarzadeh, Visual Art Teacher at Del Lago Academy in Escondido, CA.

Each ARTEFFECT Ambassador culminates their online fellowship with a capstone project that brings the inspiring stories of the LMC Unsung Heroes into their classrooms and communities. As we conclude this year’s fellowship, Sudi shared a little bit about her capstone project. Here is an excerpt from her narrative:

“The most meaningful part has been witnessing students realize that their art can speak to real-world issues and celebrate individuals who often go unrecognized.”

The ARTEFFECT Team joined Sudi and her students for an exciting virtual field trip earlier in the year. Thank you to Sudi and the students at Del Lago Academy for your creativity and inspiring exhibition of ARTEFFECT projects!

Read more about Sudi’s capstone project
Congratulations to Sudi for sponsoring a 2025 Finalist, Mary Ann Bickerdyke by Sienna DePonte, and a 2025 Certificate of Excellence winner, Lily Manoocheri Farr and her project The Life of Mary Bickerdyke. Both these projects focused on Unsung Hero Mary Bickerdyke.
Photo courtesy of Lily Manoocheri Farr.
Stay connected through social media:
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For inquiries, contact: [email protected]
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Critical Shortage of Housing and Skilled Labor Response

FRAME Grant Land Donation
Request for Proposal

Fort Scott Community College (FSCC), in collaboration with The City of Fort Scott, is seeking proposals for the donation of land to support a new workforce training initiative under the FRAME Grant program.

The FRAME Grant was developed in response to a statewide housing study conducted by the Kansas Department of Commerce and the Kansas Housing Resources Corporation. This study identified a critical shortage of both quality housing and skilled labor across Kansas. With current contractors operating at capacity, there is an urgent need to recruit and train a new generation of workers to ensure our communities can build, grow, and thrive.

As part of this initiative, FSCC is seeking the donation of at least 2 acres of land located within the City of Fort Scott. The proposed site will be used for the construction of two new residential homes, which will serve as part of FSCC’s hands-on training program for students entering skilled trades.

Proposals for land donation are now being accepted at the City of Fort Scott to advance this vital collaboration with Fort Scott Community College through the FRAME Grant program.

Submit proposals in writing no later than Monday, June 30, 2025. To Lisa Lewis, City Clerk, City Hall, 123 S. Main Street. Fort Scott KS 66701.  For questions, please reach out to Lisa Dillon 620-223-0550 x 250 or [email protected].

The city reserves the right as judge of all values of selection.

 

2025 Lowell Milken Center Fellows Receive Keys to the City

Front row: Meghan Menchella, Kelly Ryan, Theresa Cantwell, Valerie Conklin
Standing: Jay Weisman, Alex Lahasky. Submitted photo.

 

The Lowell Milken Center (LMC) for Unsung Heroes in Fort Scott, Kansas, has awarded its 2025 National Fellowship to 6 educators. As part of their week-long experience in Fort Scott, each of the six fellows for June 15 – 20 was given the key to the city on Tuesday, June 17th, by Lindsay Madison, Tourism and Chamber Director. (Six more Fellows will arrive on June 22nd.)

 

Upon presenting the keys, Madison said, “On behalf of the City of Fort Scott and the Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce, it is our honor to welcome you to our community. The tradition of presenting a key to a city represents the highest expression of civic gratitude and trust, honoring outstanding impact through leadership and service. As Lowell Milken Fellows, you are transforming lives into not just what students know but in who they become. Through Unsung Hero projects, you inspire students to gain purpose and vision to grow into stars of the future. May the key serve as a lasting reminder of Fort Scott’s appreciation for your dedication and impact.”

 

The Fellows honored this week were Theresa Cantwell from New York, Valerie Conklin from ­­­­New York, Alex Lahasky from Kansas, Meghan Menchella from Missouri, Kelly Ryan from Louisiana, and Jay Weisman from Louisiana. LMC Director Norm Conard praised these outstanding individuals, saying, “It is an honor to be able to network and collaborate with these exceptional educators and provide this opportunity for them to reflect, reenergize, and strategize with each other as they seek new ways to inspire their students.”

Every summer, the Lowell Milken Center for Unsung Heroes awards its Fellowship to national and international award-winning educators from America and around the world. As National LMC Fellows, they deepen their understanding of Unsung Heroes and project-based learning in preparation for developing Unsung Heroes projects with their students. They also learn the stories of powerful role models who have helped to change the world and can be life-changing examples for students today. Along with the time spent deepening their professional skills at the LMC, the Fellows enjoy visiting the Fort Scott area.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Gordon Parks Museum: Extended Hours During FSHS All-Class Reunion Weekend

The Gordon Parks Museum Open with Extended Hours During

Fort Scott High School All-Class Reunion Weekend

FORT SCOTT, Kan. June. 17, 2025 – The Gordon Parks Museum at Fort Scott Community College will be open with extended hours during the Fort Scott High School Alumni Association All-Class Reunion, taking place the weekend of June 27–29, 2025.

The museum invites all returning alumni and visitors to stop by and experience the powerful legacy of Fort Scott native Gordon Parks, a trailblazing photographer, filmmaker, writer, and musician.

Extended Museum Hours:

  • Friday, June 27: 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
  • Saturday, June 28: 10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

This is a unique opportunity to learn more about Parks’ impact on American culture and civil rights, and to explore exhibits highlighting his career, from his early life in Fort Scott to his renowned work with LIFE Magazine and films.

In addition to museum exhibits, visitors are encouraged to take part in the Learning Tree Film Scene Sign Trail, a self-guided tour that highlighting key locations from the 1969 film The Learning Tree, directed by Gordon Parks and filmed in Fort Scott in 1968.

Trail brochures are available at:

  • The Gordon Parks Museum
  • Fort Scott Visitors Center / Chamber of Commerce
  • Local area hotels

“We’re excited to welcome back so many Fort Scott alumni and visitors,” said Kirk Sharp, Executive Director of The Gordon Parks Museum. “This is a perfect time to reconnect not only with old classmates but also with the rich history and legacy of Gordon Parks.”

For more information, visit www.gordonparkscenter.org or follow The Gordon Parks Museum on Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn.

 

 

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Chamber Coffee Hosted by State Farm Insurance on June 19

Join us for Chamber Coffee

hosted by

State Farm – Kale Nelson

Celebrating 20th Anniversary

Thursday, June 19th

8am

at

1805 S. National Ave.

The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce invites members and guests to a Chamber Coffee hosted by Kale Nelson State Farm, celebrating twenty years in business in Fort Scott. The Coffee and celebration will be held at the State Farm office, 1805 S. National Ave., this Thursday, June 19th at 8am. Coffee, juice, and refreshments will be served, and attendees may register to win a special drawing.

Kale Nelson is excited to celebrate twenty years with State Farm along with his wife, Kelly, and his team members, Peter Brody, Rita Schroeder, and Monica Walden. Kale opened his agency on July 1, 2005, at 20 W. Wall St., which is now the site of the new Kansas Department for Children and Families. In 2012, Kale moved his office to the 5 Corners complex at 12th and Hwy. 69 and finally settled at his current location, 1805 S. National Ave., in 2019. Kale and his team offer auto, home, life, health, and other insurance and financial services.

Contact the Chamber of Commerce at (620) 223-3566 for more information. Visit the Events Calendar and category of Chamber Coffees on fortscott.com for upcoming locations.

Click HERE to visit State Farm – Kale Nelson

Facebook Page!

Click HERE to visit State Farm – Kale Nelson website!

Thank you to our Chamber Champion members shown below…
Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce

231 E. Wall St., Fort Scott, KS 66701

620-223-3566

fortscott.com

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