Sumner Academy orchestra raising funds to attend festival

Window on the West

by Mary Rupert

In the past few years, the Sumner Academy Symphonic Orchestra took top honors in Heritage Music Festivals and was invited to the prestigious WorldStrides Heritage Performance Festival of Gold competition.

Only a select few outstanding groups were invited to the competition. The Sumner Academy orchestra turned down the opportunity to attend the Festival of Gold for a few years, but this year, accepted it.

The challenge now for the orchestra is to raise funds for the 40 student members to attend the Festival of Gold competition in Nashville, Tenn.

Michelle Sweeten, orchestra director at Sumner Academy, said students have been holding fundraisers all year, selling products to raise funds and accepting donations. However, with a cost of $810 per student for the March 31-April 4 trip, there is still a lot of money that has to be raised, she said. Only four students have been able to pay for their trip in full, so far. The group is trying to raise the funds by the first week of February, she added.

The Sumner Academy orchestra performs classical contemporary music at the festival, at a difficult level, she said.

“The group plays with a lot of passion and emotion,” she said.

Sweeten said at the Heritage Festival last year, the Sumner Academy orchestra won the top prize, playing a Richard Meyer piece, “Of Glorious Plumage,” and a Brahms serenade. Sumner Academy received a gold first place award, and the outstanding orchestra award, as well as an award for the school with the top score at the entire event, including the choir as well as orchestra.

At the Festival of Gold, the students will get to work with a renowned clinician, and will work with a choir, she said. The students will get to perform in a Nashville symphony hall, she added.

Sweeten said going to the Festival of Gold would help students continue building their technique, skill level and musicality, especially when they work with the clinician on their music. The students will learn different skills from the conductor and clinician, and will be able to apply it to their music, she said.

While in Nashville, the students also are scheduled to visit a college.

“It builds them educationally, academically and musically,” she said about the orchestra trip.

Some of the Sumner Academy orchestra students in the past have gone on to careers in music, including music education and music therapy, she said.

The orchestra is reaching out to the community to ask for donations for the trip. Recently, the Kansas City, Kan., West Kiwanis Club contributed $500 toward the effort, she said.

Those who would like to participate in the fundraiser or to make a tax-deductible donation to the Festival of Gold trip may contact Sumner Academy at 913-627-7238 or send a check to “Sumner Academy” with a memo that it is for the orchestra’s Nashville trip, to Sumner Academy, 1610 N. 8th St., Kansas City, Kan. 66101.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].

Review: Try Jamz restaurant for good home-cooking

by William Crum

There is a place in western Wyandotte County that is known for its good food and service. It’s a place where everybody knows your name and a place you can relax and unwind.

The place I’m referring to is Jamz, at 11657 Kaw Drive in Bonner Springs, Kan.

As you enter Jamz, a bar and grill, the first thing you notice is how clean it is. The atmosphere is warm and friendly. It is truly a place you can unwind and be yourself.

The owner, Janice Barnes, who I’ve known for number of years, and her sister had a restaurant by the name of Sisters. Her sister decided to sell her shares of the business to Janice. Janice is known for her superior customer service, and she makes you feel at home. The staff is well-trained, the servers, bartenders and kitchen staff are truly professionals. They definitely know what they’re doing.

The menu has a wide range of items to choose from. On their breakfast menu are fluffy hotcakes, which they are known for. One couple I overheard said they traveled miles just to have the hotcakes. Jamz has other items on the menu that are equally as good, such as a sunrise breakfast, two eggs, your choice of potato and a choice of toast or biscuit.

Another breakfast favorite is the meaty sunrise, which is two eggs with your choice of bacon, ham or sausage, choice of potato and a choice of toast or biscuit. And for those of us who enjoy steak and two eggs, they have the Jamz steak and eggs, which is a 12-ounce Kansas City strip steak, two eggs served with choice of potato, toast or biscuit.

On the sandwich menu, Jamz has a pork tenderloin, which is a 6-ounce cubed pork, breaded and golden fried, topped with lettuce, tomato, onion, and a choice of cheese and served with French fries or homemade chips. Another all-time favorite is the Jamz burger, charcoal broiled certified Angus beef burgers served on toasted bun with your choice of American, Swiss or pepper jack cheese. All sandwiches are served with French fries homemade chips. You can even substitute a cup of soup and side salad if you want. And for those of us who enjoy sweet potato fries or onion rings, it costs a mere $1.25 more.

On the menu they also have some of the best appetizers such as sweet potato fry basket, jalapeno cheese bites, mozzarella sticks and breaded vegetables, all reasonably priced.

For those of us who like good home cooking, this is definitely the place to go. Such items as homemade meatloaf, turkey dinner and chicken fried steak, not to mention fried shrimp, all are served with two sides and a dinner roll.

For the younger members of the family, they have a kids’ menu with such items as pizza sticks, grilled cheese sandwich cheeseburger, chicken nuggets and hot dog. Each comes with your choice of one side.

Monday night is a special night at Jamz they call Mexican Monday. On that day they have such items as a pork burrito platter made with their own special recipe served with Spanish rice and refried beans. Another all-time favorite is the enchilada platter, with two enchiladas smothered in their signature sauce served with Spanish rice and beans.

There is even carry-out service available on all their items.

If you want to go to a place where you can bring the whole family or you just want to unwind after work this Jamz is the place to go.

I tip my hat to Jamz. The customer service, the food, the overall cleanliness and the overall atmosphere is second to none. I give this restaurant, five stars with its superior customer service, food, cleanliness and superior staff.

They’re located at 11657 Kaw Drive in Bonner Springs, Kan. Hours are 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 7 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. Friday and Saturday, and 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday. The telephone number is 913-441-2900.

Opinion column: Looking at a more expensive 2016

Window on the West
by Mary Rupert

Let’s face it – 2016 might be a more expensive year than 2015, for many of us.

I had a phone call earlier this week from a woman who lives in Wyandotte County who was very worried about high property taxes and other taxes, and who wanted to do something about it. She was trying to live on a fixed income. Her idea was to cut government waste.

I was told that this year, there was no raise for people who live on fixed incomes and are receiving Social Security payments.

But there will be increased costs, we know, from several areas, including Board of Public Utilities’ bills that are increasing to reflect the more expensive pollution equipment at the local power plant required by the federal government. Other costs, such as the price of gasoline, could stay somewhat low this year, experts are saying.

There are some national and world economic forces that are having an effect on our budgets. I am never confident that our costs will decrease – if one government program cuts our taxes, another will probably increase it, or economic forces will require us to come up with more. Personally, I think of myself as the opposite of a tea-partier, with a belief that usually there are good reasons for government expenditures. Every now and then, I’ll notice a few examples of bad government spending decisions, however.

Sure, I support higher wages for jobs that currently don’t pay a living wage, and I support an increase in Social Security payments to those on fixed incomes. But until we get there, maybe we’re forced to go back to our humble roots.

What to do? There’s really not much an individual can do to change the overall picture. Some people, such as a pastor who gave the invocation at the Unified Government Commission meeting last night, are praying for tax relief, and that’s as good a solution as any.

The Rev. Artrell Harris of Roswell Church of Christ included a divine request for tax relief at the invocation for the UG meeting, praying “That you will continue to bless Kansas City, Kan., and Wyandotte County. We thank you for all the industry you’re sending our way, Lord, we thank you for all the new development you’re sending our way and send us more, Lord, for we need to expand. Hopefully Lord, when we expand, Lord, selfishly speaking, Lord, maybe our property taxes will go down, just a little bit, Lord, just help us Lord, we’re just praying now, because we know if we ask anything, you’re able to do it.”

It’s good for elected officials to be reminded every now and then that the decisions they make affect the lives of everyday people.

There is a chance that the UG’s portion of the property tax could decline a little this coming year or in 2017, if an expected windfall from the sales tax revenue (STAR) bonds at The Legends maturing takes place. At that point, some sales taxes collected from purchases at The Legends will stop going to the Legends project and will go to the UG. We’re hearing some cautions from UG officials, however, that the state’s property tax lid actually is a disincentive to lowering property taxes, because if they are lowered because of a windfall one year, the next year they cannot be raised if needed.

Some people this year, who are able to do so, may seek a second job or a part-time income, such as mowing lawns, babysitting or running errands for people. Some may seek a better-paying primary income. Some may move to a lower cost home; others may take in a relative who could pay rent.

We all know what to do to cut costs – first, see if you can trim some of your discretionary spending, such as cutting items you don’t really need, entertainment or dining out. Some will cut out their daily coffee expense, or start brown-bagging their lunch at work. Some will shop around more for better prices on items they need. Some people will be like their grandparents and will plant a vegetable garden in their back yards or in containers on their porch this year and reduce their food expenditures. Another smart thing many of our grandparents did was to spend what money they had with people who were in small businesses in their own community. That way the profits often remained in the community, where they were spent again, helping the local economy.

Some people will choose to trim their gift expenditures in the coming year. While I continued to buy gifts this past holiday season, I also enjoy occasionally making a gift as a hobby, taking a cue from the way our grandparents lived. In my case, it’s not to save money, but because I enjoy the feeling of making a gift, of doing something different such as a craft project, walking around, or reading a book after several hours of looking at a computer screen. This year, with little time for making gifts, I embroidered an initial on a few handkerchiefs and gave them as inexpensive little gifts to some family members.

This is a fairly inexpensive, personalized gift. If you are making the item for yourself, you may recycle old fabrics you already have at home, but if you are making it for a gift, it’s better to use new fabrics. Another time-honored traditional gift made by some of our grandparents, especially in the Depression era, was to embroider a picture of flowers or a message on a cloth napkin, tea towel or pillow case. While I’m not completely convinced that using cloth instead of paper products will save you money, it might be worth a try for some households.

When woodworking was more widely taught, people would make small household gifts from wood. I would recommend to those who are thinking of trimming their gift budget this year to get started now on their favorite hobby. Others may find the same savings from compiling a budget and looking at where their dollars are going to find out where they can save.

I’ll have to admit that I don’t always practice what I preach when it comes to budgeting, but in a new year, there is always hope for the future.

To reach Mary Rupert, editor, email [email protected].