Archive for Sunday, January 18, 2009
Teacher, students from Colorado county of 2,500 prepare for Inauguration
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Everybody knows everybody in this speck of a town too small for a stoplight, a place tucked so far into Colorado's northeastern corner that Nebraska is just a thought away.
Charlie and Emily Hartman grew up here on their family's ranch, wide open spaces sliced by ribbons of fence. They attend Revere Junior/Senior High School, home of the Raiders - all 40 of them, from seventh grade on up - in a tan-brick building on the edge of town, where the road turns from asphalt to gravel.
On Tuesday, these teenagers from the middle of nowhere plan to be smack dab in the middle of the nation's biggest somewhere, watching President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration in a crowd expected to be as much as 1,000 times the size of tiny Sedgwick County, population 2,500.
It's an event of such magnitude that it might overwhelm anyone. But for youths from a place where there are five people for every square mile and four cows for every person, it's unimaginably huge.
"I don't think I've ever even been in a building with more than 100 people," said Charlie Hartman, 18. "Even when I was in New York, walking down the street, bumping into everybody everywhere you went, that was disorienting for me. I'd never even seen that many people before. So this is going to be insane."
First trip to Washington
Charlie and his 15-year-old sister, Emily, a freshman, have been to Washington before, but it will be a first for sophomores Makenzie Ault and Bradon Schneider, both 16.
"I think he's looking forward to the social aspect because we are here out in the middle of nowhere, and he has the same 30 to 40 people he sees day in and day out," said Tammy Schneider, Bradon's mom. "I think it's going to be neat for him to see the real world."
Social studies teacher Samantha Jacobs organized the trip last spring, long before the Democratic nominee even had been decided. It's part of the Smithsonian Student Travel and costs about $1,200 a person, which was too pricey for many Revere students, more than half of whom qualify for free or reduced lunch.
Coming from a place as small as Ovid, with its 330 residents, sets these teens apart. But they have another distinction: In this always-red county, three of the four have parents who voted for Obama. For Lisa Ault, Makenzie's mom, it was a last-minute decision; but the Hartmans are die-hard Democrats who love to discuss politics, at least in the confines of their home.
"My parents get pretty worked up," Charlie said. "They watch news all the time, comment on every subject, try to explain why their opinion is this way. Beyond the household, there isn't much talk of politics. We tend to say our opinions but try to keep the arguments down because there are more important things to do than argue about politics."
There's a ranch to run, a 16-hours-a-day, seven-day-a-week job that involves the whole family and often their friends, too.
"It's nice, because in this small community, you can get just about anybody to help you, anytime," Charlie said. "All my friends, I could invite them over for a day to hang out, and they know they're probably going to end up helping me put up electric fence or vaccinate some cows or something."
City youths don't understand what it's like to know everybody's name everywhere you go, or to consider branding calves a festive event that brings together family and friends, or to have a rumor that starts in the morning be common knowledge by midafternoon.
And the Revere students know their experience isn't easy to explain.
"They don't understand how a school can survive with that few of kids in it," said Charlie, one of seven seniors in the Class of 2009. "Conversing with these people, it's almost like trying to speak in another language to get them to understand. It's something you have to see or live."
Most leave, a few return
Elections come and go, but things change little around here. In 2008, Sarah Palin was much admired, and she and John McCain won the county with 63 percent of the 1,351 votes cast.
For many folks, politics boils down to guns and agriculture, and they have little use for politicians who don't understand the need for both.
"Most people are so removed from the farm and ranch now that they have absolutely no idea what it's like to try to make a living," said Charlie's mom, Dale Parker. "They don't realize that if they think it's bad importing our oil, try importing all our food."

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