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Kansas

This is the state’s flag here. Kansas. This here is the state’s shape. By : Dalton Dickson. State Motto and Nickname. The state of Kansas’ motto is “To the stars through difficulty ” and the nickname is “The Sunflower State” and “The Jayhawk State.”. State Governor ,Mark Parkinson.

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Kansas

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  1. This is the state’s flag here. Kansas This here is the state’s shape. By : Dalton Dickson

  2. State Motto and Nickname • The state of Kansas’ motto is “To the stars through difficulty ” and the nickname is “The Sunflower State” and “The Jayhawk State.”

  3. State Governor ,Mark Parkinson Mark Parkinson became Kansas’ 45th A successful businessman and former Governor on April 28, 2009.egislator, Governor Parkinson is a native Kansan and was born in Scott City, where the Parkinsons still own the family farm. Born in Wichita, Governor Parkinson attended Wichita Public Schools and graduated from Wichita Heights High School before going on to graduate from Wichita State University in 1980. He graduated first in his class from the University of Kansas School of Law in 1984. Governor Parkinson then entered private practice, forming his own law firm in 1986. He also served as president of the Johnson County Bar Foundation. Governor Parkinson was elected to the Kansas House of Representatives in 1990. Two years later, he was elected to the Kansas Senate. While in the Legislature, Governor Parkinson was known as someone who bridged party lines. He worked to strengthen Kansas schools and enhance local control. In 1996, Governor Parkinson’s career path focused on a new passion: helping enhance older Kansans’ quality of life through first-class elder-care retirement facilities. One of his assisted living facilities received national recognition for its design and his company was named as an outstanding business in Northeast Johnson County. Governor Parkinson served as chairman of the Shawnee Area Chamber of Commerce board in 2004, and in 2005 was the “Chair of the Chairs” of the nine Chambers of Commerce in Johnson County. In 2006, he joined Governor Kathleen Sebelius as her Lt. Governor. Under Governor Parkinson’s leadership, Kansas has a balanced budget which protects our schools and our communities; our state’s economy is continuing on the road to recovery; Kansas now has a comprehensive energy policy and a new ten-year transportation plan to maintain their strong infrastructure. In 2009 the Topeka Capital Journal named Governor Parkinson ‘Kansan of the Year’ citing his bipartisan support and ability to move the state forward even in challenging economic times. Following his term as Governor in January 2011, Governor Parkinson will become the new President and CEO of the American Health Care Association and National Center for Assisted Living (AHCA/NCAL), the national non-profit organization which represents assisted living, nursing facility, developmentally-disabled and sub-acute care providers.

  4. State Capital • The capital city of Kansas is the city of Topeka.

  5. State Landmarks • He Killed Lincoln's Killer, Then Lived In A Hole • Concordia, Kansas • Boston Corbett was a wacko. He was also a soldier, and was assigned to the Federal Army unit that was ordered to track down (but not kill) John Wilkes Booth, who had just assassinated President Lincoln. Booth was soon cornered in a barn. Corbett shot (and killed) him through a crack in the barn wall. Corbett alternately claimed that Booth had made threatening moves, or that he was acting on personal orders from God. • Boston Corbett had a history of unorthodox actions. He wore his hair long in imitation of Jesus, changed his name from Thomas to "Boston" because he once lived in Boston, and castrated himself with a pair of scissors to avoid temptation from prostitutes. • He moved to this spot on the Kansas prairie in 1878 and lived in a hole that he had dug into the ground. Apologists call this a "dugout" -- as does his memorial here -- but it was just a hole in the ground. Corbett was still a good shot, and was known for his ability to kill birds on the fly and for threatening the locals with his gun when he felt that they were disobeying God's will. • Corbett was later thrown into an insane asylum in Topeka, escaped, and disappeared. Some say that he died in the great fire of Neodesha, Wisconsin, in 1894, but no one knows for sure. • Boston Corbett's monument was built by Boy Scout Troop 31 of Concordia in 1958, which was roughly the centennial of Corbett's rendezvous with the scissors. The monument once had two six-shooters mortared into it, but they have been stolen. Sixty yards away, a small wood sign marks the spot where Corbett's hole used to be.

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