Once again, NCK Tech culinary students are offering an Oktoberfest Drive Thru.
The drive-through booth, located on South Main across from Municipal Park, will be offering bierocks, bratwurst, green bean dumpling soup and spitzbuben. All food items are created by the NCK Tech Culinary Department.
Pre-orders are encouraged and guaranteed by calling 785-301-2309. Deadline for pre-orders is 4 p.m. Friday and can be picked up from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 28.
The drive-through booth will be open on Oktoberfest (Friday, September 28th) from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and menu will be available while supplies last.
Business students from NCK Tech will be assisting taking orders and running the booth. Oktoberfest T-Shirts will also be available for pre-order or at the drive thru booth. All proceeds from the Oktoberfest drive thru will benefit NCK Tech students.
TOPEKA — The Kansas Department of Transportation Division of Aviation will host the fifth annual Fly Kansas Air Tour on Sept. 27-29.
KDOT has partnered with the Kansas Commission on Aerospace Education to promote aviation and economic growth. A total of 60 pilots have signed-up to fly the air tour this year with nearly 50 aircraft. Nine communities volunteered to host the flights and encourage participation from local schools.
“We introduced the joy of aviation to more than 1,200 children last year and hope to reach even more this year,” said Lindsey Dreiling, President of KCAE. “This is a unique opportunity for Kansas youth to gain insight to a profession that holds great promise for a bright future.”
This year’s events take place in Wellington, Hutchinson, Junction City, Abilene and Salina on Thursday, Sept. 27; Clay Center, Rooks County and Great Bend on Sept. 28; and Rose Hill (Derby) on Sept. 29. All events are free and open to the public.
“The air tour makes communities aware of opportunities their local airports represent,” said Bob Brock, Director of Aviation. “Services like air ambulance, aerial application for agriculture and regional transport enable access to critical resources for rural communities.”
The Fort Hays State University Department of Political Science, in conjunction with Fort Hays State University’s 2018 Homecoming, is hosting a meet and greet from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, Sept. 29, in the Memorial Union to celebrate the Department’s 80th birthday.
There will be a formal breakfast starting at 10:30 a.m. for those in attendance. Stop by to say hello to some of the almost 900 alumni who have called the department home from 1937 to the present. You can also pick up a gift at the breakfast to help commemorate the celebration.
Alumni, friends of the department and current students are invited to the event.
For more information, contact at Krissy Allacher at (785) 628-4425 or [email protected].
Andreas Maheras, Fort Hays State University track and field coach, published “Hammer Throwing: Dynamic Aspects of the Lower Extremities” in the August 2018 issue of Techniques for Track and Field and Cross Country.
This periodical is the official publication of the American Track Coaches Association. The article’s focus was on the dynamics of the feet action in hammer throwing.
HaysMed, part of The University of Kansas Health System, will sponsor a public education program on “Robotic Surgery and You:How robotic surgery can improve your life” on Tuesday, Sept. 25.The program begins at 5:15 p.m. at Entrance C of HaysMed, 2220 Canterbury.
The program will feature a presentation followed by a question and answer discussion with Dr. Charles Schultz, MD, Dr. Zurab Tsereteli, MD and Dana Kriley, Registered Dietitian.Topic for the discussion is “The Importance of Diagnosing Hernia and Treating Obesity.”
The program begins at 5:15 pm with registration and healthy snacks followed by the presentation.
An audience member at the Science Cafe tries to determine what food is in a bag. The items were marshmallows.
By CRISTINA JANNEY Hays Post
You probably thought picking something to eat was all about taste — something that you did with your tongue.
But Associate Professor Glen McNeil, MS, RD/LD of Fort Hays State University, set out Monday night to demonstrate food choice has much more involved. It relates to all your senses, emotions and external factors, such as education, religion and culture.
At the first Science Café at Thirsty’s Venue, McNeil started to look at food selection by looking at taste. That can be broken down into salty, sweet, sour, bitter and umami. Umami is flavor we experience from broths and cooked meets.
“So what we do is we take these five components and combine them now with texture, temperature and odor and that produces flavor,” he said.
Although some taste receptors are more concentrated on certain parts of the tongue than others, there are food receptors for all five tastes all over the tongue.
Humans have an acquired taste for the five tastes. He used the example of salt.
“The more you use, the longer you use it, the more it takes to taste the salt,” he said. “If you add salt to your plate before you ever taste it, why? You don’t even know if it needs salt or not. It’s habit.”
If you add enough salt to something until you taste it, you have added too much, he said. Salt is a flavor enhancer.
Glen McNeil
McNeil challenged the audience to try to stop salting their food and eating foods high in salt for three days and then go back to adding the same amount of salt they had in the past.
He said they will see a marked difference in how salty things taste.
McNeil gave a couple of examples of foods that start sweet and then go to bitter, such as a tomato. Artificial sweeteners, especially the early ones like Saccharin, started out intensely sweet and then made a bitter aftertaste on the back of the tongue and throat.
McNeil then had his audience explore food through sight. He asked each person in the room to take a jelly bean out of a paper bag and try to determine what it would taste like based on its appearance. They then tasted the jelly beans. Some people had guessed their flavors correctly, others had not and still others could not put a name to the flavor of their jelly beans.
He then held up a bright yellow banana. Some people said the banana was ripe. Others said it was green.
Ripe bananas are actually mostly brown, soft and are more sweet — too sweet for most people, he said. Green bananas are more starchy.
“What we see is not always what food is meant to be,” he said.
Color can be important in affecting our food choices and perceptions of foods.
“We eat with our eyes,” McNeil said. “We make choices and selections with our eyes. We begin to associate colors with foods from shortly after birth.”
Food processors use coloring to affect our food choices. Strawberry milk has no strawberries in it. It has artificial coloring to make it pink and a mix of chemicals to make sweet.
We associate certain colors with certain favors. Some relate red with spicy like a red peppers.
People associate blue sports drinks with a sweeter taste, despite the fact they are flavored no differently and have no more sweetener than the other colors.
Perception also has effected portion size. A bottle of pop used to be eight ounces. Now a standard bottled beverage is 20 ounces. Bagels used to be three inches. Now they are they can barely fit in your hand. Hamburger patties used to be 10 per one pound of beef. Now the standard is a quarter pound.
“Serving sizes have grown as we have gotten into looking at them, looking at how much they fill a plate, looking at what we see,” McNeil said.
McNeil also brought audience participation into his program with a hearing test. His wife, behind a screen, popped popcorn, opened a pop, snapped celery, opened a bag of chips and bit into an apple.
“Sounds drive us to make selections in foods,” he said. “Sounds are used to judge quality in foods and what we see.”
To demonstrate how we use touch in food selection, McNeil prepared paper bags and asked audience members to identify the contents only by touching them. The items were marshmallows.
“Touch tells a lot of things, and there are two ways we touch,” he said. “We can touch with our fingers. We can also touch with our tongues. There are different ways to sense.”
Finally to illustrate smell, McNeil prepared bags full of peanuts.
Although you primarily take in aromas through your nose, you can also take in odors through your mouth.
Food manufactures take advantage of our sense of smell to entice us to eat certain products. They look for chemical signatures that produce the strongest response in consumers.
“Every smell has a chemical formula they can replicate,” McNeil said.
People are also conditioned to eat certain foods culturally, noting the Catholic custom of eating fish on Fridays.
Some people in Kansas eat mountain oysters, which are cattle testicles.
McNeil and his family lived in eastern Kentucky for a couple of years. One of his students had to miss class because she needed to go home and help her family castrate hogs. The family usually fed the testicles to their dogs.
McNeil asked the young women to bring him some of the testicles. He and his wife fried them and ate them.
“They thought I was nuts,” he said. “When she graduated the only thing her dad wanted to do was meet me. He came up and said, ‘Mr. McNeil, I just had to meet a guy who would eat testicles.’ We do that all the time at home. You eat head cheese. That is not overly appealing to us and chitlins and tripe, which is not bad, but it is different.”
Money, fads, nutrition knowledge, level of education, peer influence, time, temperature, and likes and dislikes all affect our food choices.
“The further you go in the educational system, whether it is formal or informal, the more educated we become, the broader your palate becomes — the more likely you are to try new and different foods and experiment with foods. It gets us out and we meet other people and we hear things and some people travel,” McNeil said.
Local environments also dictate the availability of certain foods. On the coasts, produce and seafood are more abundant. In Kansas, beef and pork is more available.
In the winter, we usually eat more soups and chilis.
“We eat warm foods,” he said. “We also have a tendency to eat more because it is cold out and here comes our genetic heritage. We need a little more fuel.”
Hunger is the physical sign your body gives you that you need food. Appetite is the psychological signal our body gives us about food, and that also affects food choices.
Marketers play on these emotions.
Perkins restaurant was struggling, so it created a commercial in which it panned across a table full of pancakes and pie with a simple theme song touting its name in the background. Sales soared. 7 Up used a radio commercial that depicted the sound of ice clinking in a glass, the pop pouring and then someone drinking the beverage. It was very successful.
The next Science Café titled “Thought Experiments Leading to the Theory of Relativity” by Dr. CD Clark III, associate professor of physics at FHSU, will be at 7 p.m. Oct. 29 at Thirsty’s Venue, 2704 Vine St.
Today Showers and thunderstorms likely, mainly after 5pm. Increasing clouds, with a high near 87. Windy, with a south southwest wind 16 to 25 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Tonight Showers and thunderstorms, mainly before 11pm. Low around 59. West wind 13 to 18 mph becoming west 7 to 12 mph after midnight. Winds could gust as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.
Friday Mostly sunny, with a high near 71. North northeast wind 11 to 14 mph.
Friday Night Mostly clear, with a low around 48. East northeast wind 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday Sunny, with a high near 74. East wind 5 to 8 mph becoming south southeast in the afternoon.
GOVE COUNTY — One person was injured in an accident just after 5p.m. Wednesday in Gove County.
The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2003 Suzuki motorcycle driven by Jonathan Andrew Hejny, 32, Hays, was eastbound on Interstate 70 three miles east of Grinnell.
As the rider passed a semi, the wind blew the motorcycle off the road as into the median. The driver lost control causing the motorcycle to flip twice.
Hejny was transported to Gove County Medical Center. He was not wearing a helmet, according to the KHP.
Royalty finalists for Homecoming 2018 at Fort Hays State University have been announced by the Homecoming Committee.
“This year there were 29 Homecoming Royalty nominees representing 20 different student organizations and groups,” said Brittney Squire, from FHSU’s Center for Student Involvement. “Each nominee’s application was reviewed and scored by members of the Homecoming Coordinating Committee in order to select the top five finalists for king and queen.”
This year’s Homecoming Royalty Finalists are:
Queen:
• Anna-Lura Frisbie, McDonald senior, representing Alpha Kappa Psi. She is an accounting major.
• Kaylin Haines, Topeka senior, representing Students for Life. She is a management major.
• Cassidy Locke, Wichita senior, representing Delta Zeta. She is an English education major.
• Lucille Partlow-Loyall, Colorado Springs, Colo., senior, representing Alpha Gamma Delta. She is a social work major.
• Kelly Strecker, Highlands Ranch, Colo., senior, representing the University Activities Board. She is a physics major.
King:
• Adam Daniel, Arriba, Colo., senior, representing Collegiate DECA. He is a tourism and hospitality management major.
• Cyrus Haynes, Hays senior, representing Alpha Kappa Psi. He is a tourism and hospitality management major.
• Hayden Hutchison, Hays senior, representing the VIP Ambassadors. He is a management major.
• Roy Koech, Russell junior, representing the Criminal Justice Club. He is a criminal justice major.
• Dane Murzyn, Brighton, Colo., junior, representing University Activities Board. He is an organizational leadership major.
A new event at this year’s Homecoming schedule is the Homecoming Week Kickoff from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, Sept. 24, sponsored by the Office of the President, the Center for Student Involvement and the University Activities Board.
FHSU President Tisa Mason will deliver a welcome, finalists for Homecoming royalty will be introduced and guitarist Sam Burchfield will provide the music.
The student body vote for king and queen will be from 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 26, until noon Friday, Sept. 28 on TigerLink. Students can also vote in the Memorial Union from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Sept. 26, and Thursday, Sept. 27.
The royalty finalists will lead the Victor E. March to the Tiger Pep Rally Thursday night. The Victor E. March starts at 7 p.m. at Tiger Village and Stadium Place Apartments and will weave through campus before arriving at Gross Memorial Coliseum for the start of the pep rally at 7:30.
The finalists will also participate in the Homecoming Parade through downtown Hays on Saturday, Sept. 29. The parade starts at 1 p.m.
The king and queen will be announced at halftime of the Homecoming football game against Central Oklahoma University on Saturday, Sept. 29. The football game kicks off at 7 p.m.
Jay and Leslie Cady—known as “Laughing Matters”—performed for children at Roosevelt Elementary School Tuesday morning.
The comic duo will be performing for children across the area thanks to the sponsorship of the Hays Arts Council.
The Cadys have performed for the HAC before. This year’s performance, “Tales with a Point: Fables and Fairy Tales,” focused on literacy skills.
The Cadys treated the children to a series of Aesop’s tales, which included “The Three Little Pigs,” “The Tortoise and the Hare,” and ” The Three Billy Goats Gruff.” The actors also portrayed the poem the “Jabberwocky.”
Through the laughs and hijinks, the kids learned about parts of the stories, including characters, plot and setting.
Full-time professional entertainers since 1980, the Cadys have performed more than 6,000 times in 36 states and seven foreign counties.
For this year’s public performance, the HAC has arranged for Laughing Matters to participate in Early Childhood Connection’s “Go Truck, Go!” event on Thursday with their roving performances taking place from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at the National Guard Armory in Hays.
TOPEKA — Two Oklahoma residents have been charged in federal court on drug charges stemming from an arrest in Thomas County.
Guillermo D. Andrade, 22, Oklahoma City, and Kiamichi F. Bond, 21, Norman, Okla., have been charged with possession with intent to distribute 21 pounds of methamphetamine, U.S. Attorney Stephen McAllister said in a news release Wednesday.
In addition, Bond is charged with one count of unlawful possession of a firearm following a felony conviction. The crime is alleged to have occurred July 12 in Thomas County.
Bond, Thomas Co. Sheriff’s Office
Upon conviction, the drug count carries a penalty of not less than five years and not more than 40 years in federal prison and a fine up to $5 million. The firearm count carries a penalty of up to 10 years and a fine up to $250,000. The Kansas Highway Patrol and the Drug Enforcement Administration investigated. Assistant U.S. Attorney Mona Furst is prosecuting.
— Office of the U.S. Attorney General, District of Kansas