Film tells story of election that changed American politics

“The Front Runner,” a film about a race for U.S. President. Starring Hugh Jackman, Vera Farminga and J.K. Simmons. Directed by Jason Reitman. Based on the book by Matt Bai, “All the Truth is Out: The week Politics went Tabloid.” A Columbia Pictures production, 113 minutes. As seen at the Town Center AMC, Leawood, Kan.

by Murrel Bland

It was the fall of 1953. I was a seventh grader at Ottawa (Kan.) Junior High School. It was a new experience—coming from a one-room country school of about 20 students in the north-central area of Franklin County to a junior and senior high school with more than 700 pupils.

Little did I know that one of my schoolmates was destined to run for the president of the United States. His 1987 campaign changed the way mainstream media would cover politics.

Gary Warren Hartpence was born on Nov. 28, 1936, in Ottawa. His parents were Carl Riley Hartpence and Nina Pritchard Hartpence. His family changed its last name to Hart in 1961 because it was easier to remember.

Ottawa was a town of about 10,000 people in the 1950s. It had a prosperous downtown with numerous Main Street merchants. Nearby farms in Franklin County created a successful agricultural industry. The town was known for its strong support of churches including Methodist and Baptist congregations and conservative Republican politics. It was also famous for defeating school bond issues.

Hart was the “All American boy.” He was a member of the football, basketball and track teams. He also was vice president of his junior class and a delegate to Boys State—a mock government workshop sponsored by the Kansas American Legion.

Florence M. Robinson, a career journalism teacher at Ottawa High School, chose Hart as managing editor of the school newspaper, The Ottawa Record. It was that same teacher that would influence my career in journalism.

Hart attended what then was Bethany (Okla.) Nazarene College (now Southern Nazarene University); he graduated in 1958 with plans to become a clergyman. He met his wife, Oletha (Lee) Ludwig at Bethany. He then received a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Yale University at New Haven, Conn., in 1961. He then received a law degree from Yale in 1964. He practiced law in Washington, D.C., and Denver.

Lee Ludwig is the sister to Martha Ludwig Keys who served in Congress from what was the Second District in Kansas in the 1970s. That district included part of Wyandotte County.

In 1972, I was visiting with a high school and college classmate at a reception for a former journalism professor.

“Do you remember Gary Hartpence?” the friend asked.

“Yes,” I said.

“Well, he is the national director for the McGovern for President campaign,” my friend said. “But his name now is Gary Hart.” Hart had volunteered for the campaigns of John F. Kennedy in 1960 and Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. McGovern won the Democratic party’s nomination, but lost in the General Election to Richard Nixon in one of the most lopsided elections in U.S. history.

Hart was elected U.S. Senator from Colorado in 1974 and again in 1980. He first ran for president in 1984. Despite a slow start, he became the main challenger to Walter Mondale. Hart ran again for president, becoming the Democratic front runner in 1987. This is where the film concentrates its coverage; much of the film is in a semi-documentary style.

In April 1987, reporters and a photographer from The Miami Herald followed Donna Rice from Miami to a Washington, D.C., town house where she met with Hart. The scandal spread through the national media along with another damaging story that Hart had incurred a $1.3 million campaign debt.

In May that year, Hart called a news conference and announced the end of his campaign.

“I refuse to submit my family and my friends and innocent people and myself to further rumors and gossip,” Hart said. Hart then paraphrased President Thomas Jefferson who said he trembled for his country when he thought we may get the kind of leaders we deserve. Hart said his situation will provoke a needed debate on whether the system has gone out of control. Gossipy articles about who is sleeping with whom, previously restricted to The National Enquirer and its ilk, was now in the mainstream media.

The film does an excellent job of portraying the inside, gut-wrenching details of American politics. Hart is portrayed by Hugh Jackman, an Australian actor known for his role as Wolfman in the X-Men film series. Other excellent performances are turned in by Vera Farminga who portrays the long-suffering Lee Hart and J.K. Simmons who is the cynical yet savvy veteran campaign manager, Bill Dixon. Farminga stared in Sundance award-winning films including “Down to the Bone” and “Love in the Time of Man.” Simmons is probably best known as the professor in Farmers’ Insurance television commercials.

There certainly is a strong message in this film—that the media is more concerned with sexual misdeeds than more important issues such as world trade and the environment. But there is also a matter of character; the film speaks to that matter in the way Hart treated women.

Hart wrote an article for The New York Times in 2004. He admitted to being a sinner. He said he was asking for the same degree of forgiveness from his many critics that they were willing to grant George W. Bush for his transgressions.

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press. He is a 1959 graduate of Ottawa High School.

Several Wyandotte County students to graduate at Emporia State University

Several Wyandotte County students are among the December graduation candidates at Emporia (Kan.) State University.

They include:

Jordan Joseph Jackson of Bonner Springs, Kansas, cum laude with a Bachelor of Science in Business degree in Business Administration and Information Systems.

Jodi Marie Smith of Kansas City, Kansas, cum laude with a Bachelor of Science in Business degree in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing Communication.

Hannah R Baughman of Kansas City, Kansas, summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Science in Education degree in Elementary Education.

Lacy Jordan Davison Symmonds of Kansas City, Kansas, cum laude with a Bachelor of Science in Education degree in Elementary Education .

Sara Kay Ferguson of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Bachelor of Science in Education degree in English.

Kiersten Ellen Smith of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Bachelor of Science degree in Rehabilitation Services Education with a minor in Sociology.

Tyrone T Weaver of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Bachelor of Science degree in Recreation.

Joy Lynn Brown of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Instructional Design and Technology.

Kate Ann Dorian of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Business Education with a concentration in Education Pathway.

Anne Elizabeth Hessenflow of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in School Counseling.

Francene Teresa Lopez of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Special Education with a concentration in High Incidence Special Education.

Alyssa Michelle O Neal of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Curriculum and Instruction with a concentration in Curriculum Lead Prek-12.

Timothy Peterson of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Curriculum and Instruction with a concentration in Effective Practitioner PreK-12.

Michelle Kristine Selbe of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Special Education with a concentration in High Incidence Special Education.

Kenneth C. Simmons of Kansas City, Kansas, with a Master of Science degree in Health, Physical Education, and Recreation.

All students earning graduate degrees will be honored at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 14.

Dr. Blake Flanders, president and CEO of the Kansas Board of Regents, will give remarks. Before serving in his current position, Flanders served as the vice president for Workforce Development for the Kansas Board of Regents and provided executive leadership for the Kansas Postsecondary Technical Education Authority.

Students earning bachelor’s degrees will be honored at 9:30 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 15.

Mark Hutton of the Kansas Board of Regents will give remarks during the undergraduate ceremony. Hutton, of Andover, is the founder of Hutton Construction Corp. in Wichita and worked as CEO until 2010. Hutton also served as a state representative in the Kansas Legislature from 2013 to 2017.

Dr. Kevin Rabas, chair of the Department of English, Modern Languages, and Journalism and Kansas Poet Laureate, will address the undergraduates as ESU’s 2018 Roe R. Cross Distinguished Professor.

For those unable to attend, both ceremonies will be streamed on the Internet live. The link for the live stream as well as other information can be found online atwww.emporia.edu/commencement.

Rebounding enables KCKCC women to avenge MCC loss

A determined Lillie Moore split between two Metropolitan defenders on the way to scoring two of her 21 points in KCKCC’s 98-86 win Tuesday. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)
Blue Devil sophomore Kisi Young fought off two Metropolitan players to corral one of her 12 rebounds in KCKCC’s 98-86 win Tuesday. (KCKCC photo by Alan Hoskins)

by Alan Hoskins, KCKCC

Kansas City Kansas Community College got its much anticipated revenge against Metropolitan Community College (MCC) Tuesday but nothing about it came easy.

The No. 6 ranked Lady Blue Devils had to withstand a record 17 3-point goals for a 98-86 win in a furiously fought offensive showdown. MCC ended KCKCC’s unbeaten season 79-74 earlier on the Penn Valley campus.

The win boosted the Blue Devils’ record to 13-2 heading into a home game with Des Moines Area Community College Friday at 6 p.m., the last game before the holiday break.

With three Blue Devils recording double-doubles, total domination of the rebounding was the difference in a game that had five ties and seven lead changes.

KCKCC pulled down 52 rebounds including 19 off the offensive boards to 22 total rebounds for the Lady Wolves. The domination resulted in 54 KCKCC points in the paint and 20 second chance points.

The double-doubles were turned in by Lillie Moore, 21 points and 13 rebounds; Kisi Young, 15 points and 12 rebounds; and Nija Collier, 13 points and 10 rebounds.

Freshman Lenaejha Evans shared KCKCC scoring honors with Moore with 21 points on 9-of-13 shooting. Camryn Swanson added nine points, Brodi Byrd six and Caroline Hoppock three, all on 3-point baskets.

The Blue Devils needed them all because 5-6 sophomore Octavia Lowery was scoring 34 points on 8-of-15 3-pointers while Kaylee Vantrump was 5-of-9 from distance in scoring 19. The 17 3-pointers are the most ever scored by a women’s team in the KCKCC Field House and one more than the all-time Blue Devil record of 16.

Trailing by as many as seven points early, KCKCC led 47-41 at halftime behind 58.1 percent shooting.

The Blue Devils expanded their lead to 14 points early in the third quarter only to have the Wolves pull within five points at 75-70 and it took some clutch KCKCC 3-point shooting to put the game out of reach. Swanson had two treys and Stewart and Hoppock one each in the final five minutes.

“Out-rebounding them 52-22 created a lot of fast break opportunities as well as being able to finish strong around the basket,” KCKCC assistant coach Timeka O’Neal said. The Blue Devils converted 37 of 67 shots for 55.2 percent along with 10-of-27 from 3-point (.370). The Wolves were 42 percent from the field, .472 from 3-point.

Despite 23 turnovers, the Blue Devils had 24 assists on 37 field goals. Stewart led with six; Young and Byrd added four each.

“We moved the ball which made their defense move,” O’Neil said. “We really prepared hard for this game and stressed the importance of playing a full 40 minutes. MCC is a team that is not going to give up and they didn’t.”