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Sunny, warm Monday

 

It will be sunny today with highs in the mid to upper 70s. Breezy south winds can be expected, especially from Garden City eastward into central Kansas.

Today Sunny, with a high near 78. South wind 6 to 15 mph.

Tonight Mostly clear, with a low around 49. South wind 11 to 14 mph.

TuesdaySunny, with a high near 78. Breezy, with a south wind 14 to 24 mph.

Screen Shot 2015-11-02 at 5.47.50 AMTuesday NightMostly clear, with a low around 52. Breezy, with a south wind 14 to 20 mph.

WednesdaySunny, with a high near 76. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 13 to 18 mph increasing to 19 to 24 mph in the afternoon.

Wednesday NightA 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 2am. Partly cloudy, with a low around 50.

ThursdayA 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Partly sunny, with a high near 63.

Thursday NightA 20 percent chance of showers. Partly cloudy, with a low around 35.

FridayMostly sunny, with a high near 56.

Hays Optimists distributing dictionaries to 6th graders for 31st year

Hays Optimist Club members will give 333 dictionaries to Ellis County sixth-graders this year.
Hays Optimist Club members will give 333 dictionaries to Ellis County sixth-graders this year.

By BECKY KISER
Hays Post

It’s not unusual for Hays Optimist Club members to hear stories from young adults who say “I still have my sixth grade dictionary you gave me.”

For the 31st year, the Optimists will distribute paperback dictionaries to all Ellis County sixth grade students and their teachers Monday, Nov. 2.

“We’ll be busy giving out 333 Merriam Webster dictionaries,” said project chairman Gary Wentling.

More than 11,400 dictionaries have been handed over to the students since 1984, according to Wentling. The reference books are given to sixth graders at Hays Middle School and Holy Family Elementary School, Victoria Grade School, and Washington and St. Mary’s schools in Ellis.

Monday’s dictionary distribution schedule:
8:00 a.m.–Hays Middle School
8:15 a.m.–Washington Grade School-Ellis
8:30 a.m.–Victoria Grade School
8:45 a.m.–St. Mary’s-Ellis
9:30 a.m.–Holy Family Elementary-Hays

Balsam Firs, Douglas Firs, Fraser Firs and Scotch Pines available at Optimist Christmas Tree Lot.
Balsam Firs, Douglas Firs, Fraser Firs and Scotch Pines were sold at the Optimist Christmas Tree lot last year.

“This project is made possible from the annual sales of natural Christmas trees by the Optimist Club,” Wentling said.

The Optimist Christmas Tree lot will open Nov. 27, the day after Thanksgiving, in the Hays Wal-Mart parking lot.

Royals rally once again to win first World Series title in 30 years

2015 World Series LogoNEW YORK (AP) – The resilient and relentless Kansas City Royals are World Series champions for the first time in 30 years, thanks to Christian Colon. His pinch-hit RBI tiebreaking single keyed a five-run rally in the top of the 12th inning in the Royals come-from-behind 7-2 victory over the New York Mets to win the World Series in five games.

World Series MVP Salvador Perez opened the 12th inning rally with an opposite field single. Pinch-runner Jarrod Dyson stole second and moved to third on a groundout. Colon, making his first plate appearance in the playoffs, delivered a run-scoring single off Mets reliever Addison Reed. Alcides Escobar scored Colon on a double. The Royals then added three more for insurance.

The lightly used Colon is the first player in World Series history to drive in the winning run in a clinching victory in his first plate appearance.

The Royals won all four World Series games coming from behind. After taking the first two at home, the Royals won two of three in New York. In a year of improbable comebacks, they won eight postseason games coming from behind, this was one of the most unlikely of all.

Kansas City trailed 2-0 after Mets right-hander Matt Harvey hurled eight powerful innings, striking out nine. After he gave up a run in the ninth, Harvey gave way to Jeurys Familia. The Mets closer allowed the tying run to score on a gutsy baserunning move by Eric Hosmer, who scored from third on a ground out. It was Familia’s third blown save of the series.

That opened the door for the Royals’ extra inning heroics — and their second World Series title in history. The Royals avenged their seven-game loss to San Francisco in last year’s Series.

Kansas school district to nix textbooks in pilot course

SchoolLAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Next semester the Lawrence Public Schools will introduce a pilot course that relies on free, openly licensed educational resources rather than textbooks.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports the district’s plan is part of a new U.S. Department of Education campaign called #GoOpen, which encourages states, school districts and educators to use openly licensed educational materials.

Lawrence Public Schools is one of 10 districts nationwide that have taken up the challenge to replace at least one textbook with open resources within the next year.

Superintendent Rick Doll says the money saved by using open resources to diversify class content can be used to fund costs that have been cut in the past six years, such as hiring more teachers and providing more resources or programs for students.

Manning, Broncos throttle Rodgers, Packers

By ARNIE STAPLETON
AP Pro Football Writer

Broncos logoDENVER (AP) – In only the fourth meeting of teams 6-0 or better, Peyton Manning tied Brett Favre’s NFL record with his 186th regular-season win and Denver’s defense rattled Aaron Rodgers into one of the worst games of his career in the Broncos’ 29-10 victory over the Green Bay Packers on Sunday night.

Wearing the blue jerseys they did in beating the Packers for their first Super Bowl win in 1997, the Broncos piled it on in the fourth quarter, when DeMarcus Ware sacked Rodgers and the ball ended up in the end zone for a safety.

The Broncos improved to 7-0 for the first time since 1998, when they won the Super Bowl after finishing 14-2.

Rodgers of 14 of 22 for just 77 yards for the Packers (6-1) – the lowest of his career in a game where he wasn’t knocked out by injury.

Survey gives yet another sign of Midwest economic slowdown

downOMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Figures have plunged in a third straight monthly survey of supply managers in nine Midwest and Plains states, providing more evidence of a slowdown in the region’s economy.

A report issued Monday says the overall Mid-American Business Conditions Index dropped to 41.9 last month, compared with 47.7 in September and 46.9 6 in August.

Creighton University economist Ernie Goss oversees the survey, and he again cites the strong U.S. dollar and global economic weakness among the reasons for the region’s economic slide.

The survey results are compiled into a collection of indexes ranging from zero to 100. Survey organizers say any score above 50 suggests economic growth. A score below that suggests decline.

The survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

Former Sen. Fred Thompson, had TV and film roles, dies

Thompson
Thompson

LUCAS L. JOHNSON II, Associated Press

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Bouncing from politics to the big screen and back, Fred Thompson played many roles well and those who knew him say the folksy former U.S. senator from Tennessee leaves a big mark on American life and the arts.

Thompson died Sunday at 73.

A lawyer, prosecutor, hard-driving Senate counsel at the Watergate hearings, film and TV actor and even a fleeting presidential hopeful, Thompson commanded audiences with a booming voice and outsized charisma.

“Very few people can light up the room the way Fred Thompson did,” said U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander.

Thompson, who appeared in feature films and television, including a role on the NBC drama series “Law & Order,” died in Nashville after a recurrence of lymphoma, his family says.

FHSU womens’ soccer to host First Round MIAA Tournament match after win at Washburn

FHSU Athletics

TOPEKA, Kan. – Fort Hays State knew its opportunity for hosting an MIAA Tournament match heading into Sunday at Washburn. The Tigers seized their opportunity with a 1-0 win over the Ichabods and leaped Southwest Baptist in the conference standings for fourth place alone.

Cenayda Guzman provided the game winner in the 58th minute as Kelsey Steffens found her in the box in traffic. The goal lifted the Tigers to a victory by the score of 1-0 for the third consecutive match.

Abbie Flax recorded three saves in her team-leading fourth shutout win of the season. She moved to 4-1-1 on the season.

The win pushed FHSU to 7-4 in the conference standings and a total of 21 points. Southwest Baptist tied its final match of the season, dropping the Bearcats behind the Tigers in the standings. As the No. 4 seed, Fort Hays State will host No. 5 seed Southwest Baptist at FHSU Soccer Stadium in the MIAA Tournament First Round on Wednesday night (Nov. 4) at 6 pm.

Below are the first round tournament match-ups on Wednesday.

2015 MIAA Women’s Soccer Tournament First Round (Nov. 4)
No. 7 seed Nebraska-Kearney at No. 2 seed Central Oklahoma – 3 pm
No. 5 seed Southwest Baptist at No. 4 seed Fort Hays State – 6 pm
No. 8 seed Washburn at No. 1 seed Central Missouri – 7 pm
No. 6 seed Missouri Western at No. 3 seed Northeastern State – 7 pm

The semifinals and finals are scheduled for November 6 and 8 respectively, hosted by the highest remaining seed.

FHSU men’s soccer allows two penalty kicks in final six minutes; fall to NSU

FHSU Athletics

TAHLEQUAH, Okla. – Fort Hays State led for nearly 60 minutes before a bizarre finish on the road at Northeastern State on Sunday (Nov. 1). The Tigers fell 3-2 as NSU buried two penalty kicks in the final six minutes of the game to escape the 20th-ranked Tigers on its home field.

Anthony Hernandez put the Tigers in front 1-0 in the 11th minute after a nice pass off the heel of Mauricio Castorino. FHSU held that advantage until the 70th minute when NSU’s Trevor Reed scored a header off a free kick.

The Tigers looked as if they would escape with a win when Maurizio Costa buried a penalty kick at 84:01, but then all sorts of chaos ensued.

Only 20 seconds later, the Tigers were whistled for a violation in the box, setting up a penalty kick for Jonathan Guzman who squared the match again.

Then at 87:13, Luis Torres was issued a red card for a play in the box and Guzman scored another penalty kick to put the RiverHawks in front with less than two minutes to play.

Fort Hays State put two shots on net in the final two minutes, but both were saved. Jackson Biles picked up the win in goal for NSU with seven saves. Michael Yantz took the loss for FHSU with four saves.

Even with the loss, Fort Hays State still controls its own destiny in conference play. The Tigers will need to win their final two home games this coming week against Upper Iowa and Lindenwood to win an MIAA Championship. Anything else and they come up short of claiming their first conference crown.

SCHROCK: China’s two-child policy correct, Western press wrong

John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.
John Richard Schrock is a professor at Emporia State University.

Western press coverage of China’s recent announcement of moving back to a two-child policy has been an abysmal example of shallow reporting. Newspaper, television, radio and online “news” combine a failure to conduct background research with our expectation that every culture in the world should be just like us.

Media are all claiming the Party is hesitant to abandon the one-child policy because it would reveal the longtime Party policy was wrong. That is nonsense. Mao was not happy with any birth control policy; he viewed maximum growth as essential to building a modern nation. Mao died in 1976. China’s limitation on children was introduced in 1978 for enforcement in 1979. Science voices had long pointed to their massive growing population as creating a terrible burden on solving economic, social and environmental problems in China. They finally prevailed after Mao was gone. The initial restriction was a mild two-child policy, but the need for a one-child policy rapidly followed.

During World War II, our film director Frank Capra made famous the example that if Chinese came marching past you four abreast, they would never stop coming because more would be born, grow up, and join the march. That was when China had 400 million people. Today, with 1.4 billion, they can march past us 14 abreast and never stop coming! And without the one-child policy, that number today would be an additional 400 million more or 18 abreast!

Western news makes this last week’s decision appear to be a recent turnaround motivated by an aging population and the increasing burden of workers supporting the retired elderly. Again not true. In 2008, the deputy director of China’s National Population and Family Planning Commission indicated that the one-child policy would only remain in place until 2015.

Even in 2008, a spokesman for the Committee on the One-Child Policy pointed out that only 36 percent of China’s population was subject to a one-child restriction. It applied only to Han Chinese. There were no restrictions on the minorities or foreigners living in China. Residents of Hong Kong and Macau are also exempt. Natural twins or triplets are also permitted. And recently, admittedly due to the financial burden of a single child caring for two parents and four grandparents, the only-child-of-an-only-child who marries an only-child-of-an-only-child can have two children.

While I was teaching at a Chinese university in 2012, my wife tutored ten university students in English. Only three of the ten were only-children; the seven others had brothers and/or sisters and those siblings were also getting an education with full civil rights, not suffering as non-citizens as portrayed in the American press.

While lecturing at over 25 Chinese universities in the last 23 years, I have seen major changes in quality of life and attitudes toward family. In Shanghai and Beijing, the ratio of boys-to-girls is 105.5-to-100, the exact same ratio of boys-to-girls as in America. The surplus of males in less developed areas of China is a relic of a boy preference we also had in the last century; they call it “feudal thinking.” Farmers not only wanted bigger families to work the fields, but preferred boys. So yes, there are unwanted girls in orphanages. But no one can fault the People’s Republic who from their beginning ended arranged marriages and foot binding, and championed equal rights and education for women.

In contrast, India remains an economic basket case with uncontrolled growth that will surpass China. Every effort to modernize India is impeded by their ever-increasing population. Japan however made birth control accessible after World War II, curbed its population growth, and achieved a higher standard of living. It has even fewer workers supporting their elderly population when compared to China.

With the world population having passed 7 billion and growing to over 9 billion by 2050 and 11 billion by 2100, China’s policy was critical. Without it, China would not have received a United Nations award for having pulled 400 million people out of poverty.

“Why do Americans think our one-child policy is a human rights issue?” is a question I am asked every summer I go to China. I can only reply that Americans have not walked the terribly crowded streets of China or experienced the pollution caused by five times the population on less land.

And yes, we get lousy news reporting.

Eugene D. ‘Scrubby’ Hutchins

Screen Shot 2015-11-01 at 6.22.08 PMEugene D. “Scrubby” Hutchins, age 89, passed away on Thursday, October 29, 2015 at the Park Lane Nursing Home in Scott City, Kansas. He was born on April 10, 1926 in Shields, Kansas, the son of Clarence Thomas “Pete” and Mary Sharp Hutchins. A Scott City resident since 1942 moving from Lane County, he was a farmer, stockman and antique dealer.

He was a US Army Veteran of WWII and attended the First Baptist Church in Scott City, Kansas.

On June 1, 1950 he married Evelyn Irene Hopper in Dodge City, Kansas. She passed away on November 21, 2012 in Scott City, Kansas.

Survivors include his One Son – Alan & Lois Hutchins of Kansas City, Missouri, Three Daughters – Dorsi & Bob Cupp of Dighton, Kansas, Julie Hutchins of Scott City, Kansas, Becky Hutchins of Scott City, Kansas, One Sister – Carol Auten of Scott City, Kansas, Five Grandchildren and Six Great Grandchildren.

He was preceded in death by his Parents, Wife, One Son – Stan Hutchins and Two Brothers.

Funeral Services will be held at the First Baptist Church in Scott City, Kansas at 2:00 p.m. Thursday, November 5, 2015 with the Rev. Kyle Evans presiding.

Memorials may be given to the Eugene Hutchins Memorial Fund in care of Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas.

Interment will be in the Scott County Cemetery in Scott City, Kansas.

Visitation will be from 2:00 p.m. until 8:00 p.m. Tuesday and 10:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Wednesday at Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas.

Bernita Catherine Scheuermann

Bernita Catherine Scheuermann, 82, LaCrosse, died Saturday, October 31, 2015 at the Locust Grove Village in LaCrosse.

She was born November 26, 1932 in Topeka Kansas the daughter of Regina Knoll. She was raised by her grandparents Katherine and Michael Knoll in Park, Kansas.

She was a nurses aide at Trego County Hospital, St. Anthony Hospital, and Great Bend Medical Center. On August 7, 1951 she married Leo Dolezal in WaKeeney. She later married Ray Scheuermann on July 4, 1975. He died July 5, 2011. She was a member of the VFW Women’s Auxiliary for many years and loved fishing and animals.

Survivors include a daughter Judy Fike and husband Gary of Topeka, two grandsons Scott Engel and wife Geri of Hays and Bobby Engel of Hays, great grandchildren Logan and Madison Key, a half-sister Pat Clerc and a half brother Michael Grier, and numerous nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by two sons, Mike and Mark Dolezal and a half sister Mary Ellen.
Funeral services will be at 11:00 am on Monday, November 2, 2015 at the Hays Memorial Chapel Funeral Home, 1906 Pine. Inurnment will be in the Kansas Veterans Cemetery, WaKeeney. The family will receive friends from 10:30 until service time on Monday at the funeral home.

Memorials are suggested to the Locust Grove Village in LaCrosse, in care of the funeral home.

Condolences may be left for the family at www.haysmemorial.com

Fantasy, frenzy, memory and joy in Hays Symphony’s second concert

symphony orchestraBy Rachel Rayner
FHSU University Relations and Marketing

After a highly successful first concert, the Hays Symphony Orchestra will perform its second concert at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 7, in the Beach/Schmidt Performing Arts Center on the Fort Hays State University campus.

Director Shah Sadikov, assistant professor of music at FHSU, said many audience members were surprised at how much they enjoyed the first concert.

“I had students who had never been to a symphony concert before say to me, ‘It was amazing. I didn’t know it would be like that’,” he said.

RELATED: Click here for Mike Cooper’s Community Connection interview with Sadikov.

The next concert will begin with Felix Mendelssohn’s “Hebrides Overture,” ushering audiences into a world of maritime fantasy with undulating strings that are both foreboding and exciting. Stormy seas alternate with woodwind solos full of humble wonder, allowing the short piece to capture listeners’ imaginations.

“It’s magical,” said Sadikov.

The second piece of the evening, “Knoxville: Summer 1915,” by Samuel Barber, is also imaginative, but instead of going to fantastical lands, it shows familiar American scenes through the memories of a young boy. Soprano Dr. Ivalah Allen, assistant professor of music, will sing Barber’s beautiful nostalgic melodies subtly laced with the boy’s pain of coming to terms with the death of his family.

“It’s a little boy telling the story, yet it feels like he is so mature,” said Sadikov.

The third piece, “Poem (In the Memory of a Teacher),” by Tulkun Kurbanov, is a special piece for Sadikov. Sadikov’s father, also a conductor, was a close friend of Kurbanov and commissioned and premiered the piece in 1977. Sadikov’s father wrote a book about the piece in 1992. Sadikov and his father re-orchestrated the piece for the Hays Symphony.

“It will be the American premiere of the piece, and because it is a new version of it, in a way this will be the world premiere of it,” said Sadikov.

“The concert will include a special surprise about Kurbanov’s ‘Poem,'” said Sadikov.

Sadikov decided to program “Poem” because Kurbanov used a dance theme from Ludwig van Beethoven’s Symphony No. 7, which will close the concert.

Beethoven’s Seventh celebrated the defeat of Napoleon and was premiered for Viennese audiences who had been under Napoleon’s rule for nearly a decade. The piece is full of frenzied dance rhythms and pure joy, making it one of Beethoven’s easiest pieces for audiences to enjoy.

The second movement is one of Beethoven’s most famous works and is often played by itself. It is often played in memory of influential people, such as when Leonard Bernstein conducted it in honor of Herbert von Karajan, one of the most important conductors of the 20th century. Sadikov plans to reveal who the Hays Symphony’s performance is dedicated to at the concert.

The second movement features a melody that is both mournful and full of life, the ideal representation of how deceased loved ones are remembered.

“From the beginning to the end, it is filled with dance rhythms and joy,” said Sadikov. “We have so much energy and joy to give to the community.”

The mission of the orchestra is to enrich the Hays area with high quality music and performing arts. Sadikov invites everyone to attend whether it is as part of a date night or just out of curiosity.

Unsure of what to wear to a concert?

“Just come however you want,” said Sadikov. “As long as you won’t get arrested for it.”

Tickets are available at the door for $10 for adults, $5 for seniors and free for FHSU students with Tiger ID.

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