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Bring on the Alumni

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McPherson, Kan. – The McPherson College basketball teams will be having their annual Alumni Basketball games on October 25th in the Sport Center; games will be at 5:00 p.m. (CT) for the women and 7:00 for the men.

Athletes from the past decade and beyond will be playing for the alumni teams.  They will travel in from all across the country for their chance to take down their Alma-Mater.

Make sure to follow Bulldog Nation on Facebook (MCathletics) and Twitter (@MAC_Bulldogs)

McPherson College is a Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference member school and a part of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics.

Harvesting and curing black walnut

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Black walnuts are ready to be harvested when the hull can be dented with
your thumb. You can also wait until the nuts start falling from the
tree. Either way it is important to hull walnuts soon after harvest. If
not removed, the hull will leach a stain through the nut and into the
meat. The stain will not only discolor the meats but also give them an
off flavor.
There are several ways to hull walnuts including running them through a
corn sheller or pounding each nut through a hole in a board. The hole
must be big enough for the nut but smaller than the hull. An easier way
is to run over the nuts with a lawn tractor. This will break the hull
but not crack the nut.
Note that walnut hulls contain a dye that will stain concrete, your
hands or about anything else it touches. Wear gloves as the stain is
almost impossible to remove. Wash hulled nuts by spreading them out on
the lawn or on a wire mesh and spraying them with water or placing them
in a tub of water. If you place them in a tub, the good nuts should
sink. Those that float are probably not well-filled with kernels. Next,
dry the nuts by spreading them in layers no more than three deep in a
cool, shady and dry place such as a garage or tool shed. Drying normally
takes two weeks.

 

By: Ward Upham

A happy anniversary for a critic’s work

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john marshal

A couple of years ago this spring, a woman

stopped at the News-Record office, announced

that she had moved to Lindsborg and would

like to write for the paper – “reviews,” she said,

“I’m interested in performances, what’s happening

locally.” It would be a cousinly arrangement,

informal, with the reviews submitted on a casual,

as-I-get-around-to-it basis.

Lois Carlson has been around to it a lot these

past two years, covering concerts, recitals and

much of the abundance of artistic talent in the

Smoky Valley. The News-Record is far better

for her effort and its readers are more informed

because of it.

Lois is the consummate observer, her reviews

nailing a critic’s essential mission: providing those

who attended an event or performance with even

finer details and hidden highlights they may have

missed, and for those who could not attend, a vivid

account of what they had missed.

Lois’s work elevates the content of this newspaper,

and it’s not a leap to say that her talent

matches, even surpasses, that of other critics in this

part of the country.

Lois was born in Lindsborg, divided her growing-

up years between here and East Africa, graduated

from Bethany College and, over the years,

maintained connections in and around Lindsborg.

Since then, she has met a delicate challenge

with the touch of a master. Much of the visual

and performing arts in Lindsborg and the Smoky

Valley are excellent, often riveting and compelling

work; nonetheless it is the work of amateurs, in

the sense that most are students or have day jobs.

Their efforts stem from a passion for art and love

of community. The local reviewer is challenged to

keep this in mind, but at the same time not mislead

readers.

Lois reminds us that the arts are a footing of life

in Lindsborg and the Smoky Valley, and that local

artists add to the texture and hue of this community.

Her reviews explain the need to appreciate their

work, bringing color to our world when so much

of it seems consigned to black and white.

***

For Republicans, a president’s

failure is guaranteed

When Barack Obama was first inaugurated six

years ago the new president promised, with clarity

and passion, that his administration would restore

public faith in government as a force for good in

our lives. Our reliance on war as a foreign policy

mission would end; at home he would revive a

long-standing, if forgotten, promise in our savage

political culture: that in a modern industrial

society, all individual effort must be braced by

a government that guarantees opportunities for

those who want to work, food for those who would

otherwise starve, pensions for the old and medical

care for the sick.

At each turn, opposition in Congress has stiffened.

In recent years the filibuster became a

primary parliamentary force in the Republicans’

mission to ensure the president’s failure, no matter

his objective, no matter public sentiment, no matter

the desires of a citizenry.

The Republican leaders, Mitch McConnell in

the Senate and John Boehner in the House, long

ago announced the party’s fundamental goal: that

President Obama fail, no matter the policy at hand,

no matter the intent or purpose of legislation, no

matter any risk. The good of the country seems to

them of little importance. Obama must fail. The

Republicans proudly declare their primal urge to

prevail, and no matter the costs.

So it comes as no surprise that the president

once again is marked as a dud, his POW-prisoner

exchange with the Taliban now at the top of critics’

lists of unpardonable offences; and this follows a

Veterans Administration scandal, another yoke for

the president’s bearing. The fundamental cause

in this case – Congressional incompetence – is

ignored: The VA has for decades been denied the

funding for doctors, nurses and equipment it needs

to meet surging patient rolls as the Congress and

preceding presidents pack generations of soldiers

off to senseless, futile wars; and on their return,

the maimed and injured find no one available to

treat them because Congress insists on bragging

rights for cutting budgets, denying help for those

who sacrificed.

So what? The Republicans’ goal, a country

divided and a president failed, is on track. The

good of the nation is subordinate to the good of

a political party, its overriding lust for power.

Barack Obama is blamed for the VA, blamed for

health care reform, blamed for our fragile stature

abroad, blamed for our weak economy, blamed for

our imbalance of trade with China. He is blamed

for embracing cap and trade, originally a GOP proposal;

he is skewered for the Affordable Care Act,

wholly patterned on Mitt Romney’s successful

reforms in Massachusetts. He is even blamed, in

Kansas, for the state’s looming, enormous budget

deficit, its sour economy, its emaciated bond ratings,

its failure in school finance.

The Republicans have offered no plans in foreign

affairs, no destination for domestic policy,

no rational resistance or alternative for, say, the

Affordable Health Care Act or the president’s

transportation budget, or his Medicaid expansion,

or his foreign policy initiatives in Europe and the

Middle East.

They don’t have to.

They know that they will win and the president

will fail. This is because Barack Obama cannot

hope to do the one thing that would please

Republicans most: change the color of his skin.

***

Ball games: the good, the bad

and the obscene

It has been a delight to watch the NCAA softball

championships. Thanks to Title IX, we long ago

erased the myth about boys being the overall superior

gender – genetically or otherwise – in competitive

sports, especially at this advanced level.

As the basketball championships concluded, we

were shown once again that women overall are

better shooters, more sophisticated team players,

and far more skilled in clutch situations. Put simply,

they’re smooth. They don’t panic. They make

shots when they’re supposed to, especially and

nearly always at the free throw line.

Back to softball: These women can play. And

they look good; their uniforms are tidy, their hair

or visors (or both) are clean and in place, and they

handle their overall appearance with pride and

assurance. These are signals that they appreciate

the opportunity to compete.

Now hit the remote: Major League Baseball,

major league slobs. Our impression is that most of

these men haven’t shaved in at least a week, and

who knows when any of them last bathed? Their

uniforms are worn with all the pride of a Battery

Park derelict – pants hanging half-off, cuffs dragging

in the dirt, shirts unbuttoned, shoes flopping,

shirttails flapping in the breeze.

When these men are not in a dugout spitting,

they are on the field spitting – great gobs of library

paste, long strings of tobacco juice, the ceaseless

splatter of sunflower seed shells. And they scratch

themselves everywhere, constantly “adjusting”

themselves as though they had fleas.

Major leaguers have perfected the single-handed

nose-blow, an especially vibrant spectacle while

trotting along the outfield track or during those

idle moments while pitchers are fiddling with a

rosin bag or a hitter is busy at the plate scraping

trenches in the batter’s box with his cleats. All this,

before fiddling with their batting gloves or pulling

at elbow pads or shin guards, or countless other

shields, braces and guards. (For baseball? Hitters

wouldn’t need all that body armor if pitchers were

severely punished for throwing at hitters, rather

than to them.)

Baseball players have also treated us to more

ways to chew gum than Mr. Wrigley ever dreamed

– especially the chomp-and-dangle, hanging great

long wads of the stuff from their teeth, then slurping

it up for another chewy round.

Score another one for Title IX. The (amateur)

women not only play like professionals, they look

and act like professionals. Major leaguers could

take a lesson; if they can’t act or play like pros,

they could at least look like them.

– JOHN MARSHALL

Rotation of vegetable crops

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Rotating vegetable crops is a standard way of helping prevent disease
from being carried over from one year to the next. Rotation means that
crops are moved to different areas of the garden each year. Planting the
same crop, or a related crop, in the same area each year can lead to a
build-up of disease. Also, different crops vary in the depth and density
of the root system as well as extract different levels of nutrients. As
a rule, cool-season crops such as cabbage, peas, lettuce and onions have
relatively sparse, shallow root systems and warm-season crops such as
tomatoes, peppers and melons have deeper, better developed root systems.
Therefore, it can be helpful to rotate warm-season and cool-season crops.
As mentioned earlier, it is also a good idea to avoid planting closely
related crops in the same area as diseases may be shared among them. For
example, tomatoes, potatoes, peppers and eggplant are closely related.
Also, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage and brussels sprouts share many
characteristics in common. Therefore, do not plant cabbage where
broccoli was the previous year or tomatoes where the peppers were.
So, why is this important to bring this up in the fall? Now is the time
to make a sketch of your garden so that the layout is not forgotten when
it is time to plant next year.

 

By: Ward Upham

Twig dieback

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By: Scott Eckert, County Extension Agent, Horticulture

If you ask me about trees that I recommend for the home landscape I would tell you that most oaks are great!  They are not without a few minor issues however.  One of these issues is a disease we are seeing now.

This disease causes twig dieback on pin and other oaks caused by a fungal disease called Botryosphaeria canker. Affected trees show a wilting or “flagging” of the terminal growth on the ends of branches. Dieback usually extends 4 to 6 inches down the twig with leaves bending back toward the twig before turning brown. Dead leaves remain attached to
the tree. If you look closely at the twig you should see a rather marked transition from healthy to diseased tissue. Take a knife and scrape away some of the outer bark tissue. Healthy tissue is light green, whereas diseased tissue tends toward brown to black.

Botryosphaeria canker differs from oak wilt in that only the tips of branches are affected. Oak wilt affects whole branches. Recommendations for control? This disease causes such minor damage that chemical control measures are unwarranted. Dead twigs on small trees may be pruned off if desired.

Running amuck in the salon

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Sandra Pugh
Sandra Pugh

Kids running loose in a hair salon can absolutely drive hairdressers crazy but more than that it is dangerous for them not to be under control by their parent. There are too many sharp objects in use and too many chemicals.

After beauty school I was working in a small salon and one of the hairdressers allowed a 5 year old to sit on the edge of the hydraulic chair and turn it around and around in circles. I said something to the mother about it being dangerous and she just laughed and said it wouldn’t hurt anything, especially the chair, so I let it drop.

Within a minute the little girl lost her balance as the chair circled around by the shampoo sink and she fell from the seat. She hit the sink with her mouth and lost two of her upper front teeth.

From that day on I decided that is was my job to protect both the kids and the salon when they were not controlled by their parents. I told many kids about the little girl and it did seem to make them understand the danger.

One boy, who was old enough to know better, wanted to ride on the arms of the hydraulic chairs like they were a horse. He would bounce up and down and sway back and forth like he was on a moving horse. The chairs at that time were about $800 and even though I didn’t own the salon I couldn’t see letting him tear them up.

I finally got my bluff in on the little guy after a few weeks and every time he started to get into one of the chairs I would give him one of my famous glares and he would go back to the waiting area and sit down on the couch.

When I gave the glare to Liz when we worked together (usually in fun) she always said she couldn’t look at it straight on and that she wasn’t afraid of anything but it scared the He _ _ out of her. Anyway it usually worked on the kids.

But back to this little boy, one day his mother was sitting at a station in the middle of the room with her back to me. I glared at him because he was going to climb into a chair right behind her.

After I glared at him I looked up into the mirror in front of his mother and looked right into her eyes. She gave me a glare but still ignored him when they were there and left it all up to me to control him.

Another little boy about 4-5 years old who came with his mother every week was a real mess. He wanted to open drawers and go into areas of the salon where all the chemicals were stored and just generally run around and tear up the place.

We had to keep our eyes on him all the time because he was always into the work station drawers where scissors and razors were kept and if given the chance would get into the hairdressers purses in the back room.

When Christmas came one year I was really nervous because of this little boy. We put up a beautiful tree in the salon and I had brought some nice ornaments from home. From my station I couldn’t see the tree in the dryer area, but Liz could see it from her station around the corner to the east of mine.

The first time he came in with his mother I told Liz to keep an eye on the tree because I didn’t want any of the ornaments broken. I was afraid he would get cut if he broke them or shocked with the lights or that he would turn the tree over on women sitting in the dryer chairs.

About 15 minutes after he arrived with his mother, he disappeared from my line of sight and I told Liz to keep and eye on the tree. Only a few seconds later she said he was lying under the tree on his stomach, with his chin propped on his hands and his feet in the air.

I told her that was okay as long as he kept his hands off the tree. Well I had barely got the words out of my mouth when she said “He is playing with an ornament! He’s poking the ornament so it swings.”  I slammed down my comb on the station and ran over to the dryer area.

There was enough noise from the dryers that he didn’t hear me coming. He was wearing overalls, so I grabbed the back where the straps crossed and pulled him to his feet. I turned him around to face me and gave him one of my glares.

Then I picked him up and set him down firmly on the couch in the dryer area. I pointed my finger at him and told him, “If you move from this spot before your mother’s ready to leave I will beat you.”

I gave him one more glare, and went back to work. He didn’t know I couldn’t touch him so the threat worked. He sat there the rest of the time his mother was getting her hair done.

When his mom stepped to the desk to pay he bolted off the couch and ran to her side and hid behind her. He got a death grip on her slacks and would peep around her leg and look at me and I would glare at him again. He would tighten his grip on her slacks and hide his face behind her again. All the time his mother was swatting at his hand trying to pry him loose from her slacks.

Other than just being annoying, kids running amuck in a salon can be dangerous to themselves and to others, and parents need to be really careful with them running loose.  To contact Sandy: [email protected]

 

Roger’s view from the hills: Get out the vote

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bowl plaza“YOU CAN’T DO IT UNLESS YOU CAN IMAGINE IT.” George Lucas
This may be where you may think I am jumping into the fray and pushing for one side or the other in the political races.  WRONG!  You should know by know how disgusted I am with the half truths and the bloviating promises that all candidates are involved in.
No I am picking up on a article that my friend Beccy Tanner had in the Wichita Eagle last week about one of my favorite places in Kansas, Lucas.
Not only is Lucas famous for the Garden of Eden and quirky artists, (and ring bologna).  They have the BOWL PLAZA public toilet.  Now one thing that is a huge problem when you have a lot of tourists is that the availability of toilets is pretty critical.  Many of the old buildings are not up to the standards or capacity that streams of visitors put them under.
Lucas utilized their artist community and designed a public toilet that is bringing it’s own tourists.  Not only well designed it is comfortable and so much in the design that you spend more time looking than doing your business.
Now you can vote to have the Bowl Plaza named number one, in number one and two, in the nation.  The Bowl is in the top ten in contest sponsored by Cintas (a company that designs restrooms) in the nation.  You simple need to go to www.bestrestrooms.com and vote.
The competition?  American Girl Place – Chicago, The Fabulous Fox Theater – St. Louis, the Tiki Lounge – Pittsburgh, and six other hoity toity restrooms.
The town residents decided in 2008 that there was a pressing need for a facility like this.  They spent four years raising the money and design it.  It is by far the blingiest toilet in Kansas.
SO GET ON LINE AND VOTE.  YOU HAVE UNTIL OCT 31 TO VOTE IN THE CONTEST.  LETS GET OUT THERE AND FLUSH OUT THE VOTE!!!!!

Men’s Cross Country places 10th at Woody Greeno Invite

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Facing tough four-year college competition and two of the best junior college teams in the nation, the No. 17 ranked Barton Community College men’s cross country team finished 10th this past Saturday in the college division of the Woody Greeno Invitational co-hosted by the University of Nebraska and Nebraska Wesleyan University.  The Cougars completed the 8k race amongst 173 other competitors in an average time of 30:09.70 per mile for a team total of 2:30:48.50.

Sampson Laari turned in another solid long distance performance coming in fourth in the College Division.  Laari averaged 5:16.9 per mile to finish at 26:15.00 that was also good for sixth place overall when counting the University Division.

Tony Perez also maintained sub six minute pace at 5:57.0 to finish 76th in 29:34.60.  Tyler Thornton placed 119th in 31:31.70 while teammate Devyn Brotherton, who recovered from a fall during the race, finished a place behind at 120th in 31:33.40.   Marcus Pastran finshed fourth on the Cougar team crossing the line in 129th place at 31:53.80, Brady Holler was 142nd in 32:18.10, Darrius Salmond‘s time of 33:41.00 was good for 159th place, while Elder Colindres rounded out the Cougar runners in 168th place in a time of 34:41.10.

The Cougars will take a couple of weeks from competition until heading to Fayetteville, Arkansas, for the Chile Pepper Invitational to be held on Saturday, October 4th.

Cheney Safe Routes to School Connects City

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walking chenIf you are using the sidewalks around Cheney you may have noticed the new 2 mile loop within the City

Recently Safe Routes to School project joined with existing sidewalks to create this loop; helping to provide safe routs to school and a functional walking path for local residents.

photo – city of  Cheney

Lady Cougar golf rolls away to conference victory, six Lady Cougars in top ten

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For the second straight Jayhawk Conference meet, the Barton Community College women’s golf team won by sixty or more strokes as the Lady Cougars captured Conference Meet No. 2 held at Dodge City’s Mariah Hills Golf Course.   Building a fourteen stroke lead after Sunday’s nine hole round, Barton dominated from start to finish to run away with the title by sixty-three strokes with a 511 total to surpass last year’s score at the same course by sixty strokes.  Second place and host Dodge City Community College increased their Sunday five stroke lead over Coffeyville Community College to finish at 574 while the Red Ravens carded a 581.

The Lady Cougars also dominated individually taking the top two spots and placing all six golfers in the top ten.  Natthakan Teeratrakul again led the way winning her second straight meet with an eleven over-par 118.  After firing a 41 on Sunday, the sophomore increased her one-stroke lead with a 77 to hold off a charge by teammate Hye Rin Kim .  Kim, who finished third in her first collegiate meet, followed Sunday’s sub-par 46 round to post Monday’s low round of 75 in finishing three strokes behind Teeratrukul at 121 and one better than Coffeyville’s Julia Dierker.

The Lady Cougars tied in the fifth position as sophomores Abbie Thelen and Madison Walden carded a 136.  Shooting a 46 on Sunday to trail Walden by one, Thelen’s 90 on Monday was enough to catch Walden.  Freshman Madison Krull bounced back from a 48 nine-hole score to tie Thelen’s 90 to finish seventh just two strokes behind with a 138.  Competing as an individual, sophomore Madison Werth also had a solid second day following her 49 with a 93 to finish tied for eighth at 142.

Barton will have a two week break from competition before heading to the last conference meet of the fall season October 5-6 held at the Country Club in Coffeyville, Kansas.