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Tigers rally in final five minutes to beat Mules

No. 5 Fort Hays State scored 14 points in the final 4:46 to rally for an improbable 20-16 win over 18th-ranked Central Missouri in the season opener for both Thursday night at Lewis Field. The win was the 50th for head coach Chris Brown, moving him within five of Bob Cortese for the most in FHSU history.

Down 16-6, Jacob Mezera engineered a six-play, 70-yard drive capped by a 37-yard touchdown pass to Jmari Davis with 4:46 to play to close the gap to 16-13.

Chris Brown Postgame Press Conference

Layne Bieberle Postgame Interview

Tanner Hoekman Postgame Interview

Game Highlights

Sheldon Schmidt recovered a fumble from UCM backup quarterback Kyle Bradley at the Mules four yard line on the next possession. Mezera then found Layne Bieberle on a five-yard strike on third down to give the Tigers their first lead with 3:05 to play.

The Mules drove to the FHSU 46 before Tanner Hoekman intercepted Bradley at the 25 yard line to seal the victory.

The Mules gained 508 yards in the game but fumbled at the Tigers six yard line on their first possession, had a field goal blocked and missed an extra point.

Jacob Mezera completed 19 of 40 passes for 226 yards and two touchdowns. Layne Bieberle tied his career high with eight receptions for 112 yards and Charles Tigner rushed for 80 yards on 11 carries.

Doyin Jibowu had 12 tackles including the Tigers only sack. Jose Delgado, Aquil Knowles and Hoekman all had 10 tackles.

Police investigating alleged school threat in Norton

NORTON COUNTY —Law enforcement authorities and USD 211 officials are investigating an alleged threat toward the school for Friday, according to Norton Police.

As a precaution, there will be a strong police presence at the high school Friday.

The Norton Police Department reminded on their Facebook page that it takes any threat seriously and will handle it appropriately in order to protect those in the community and the students in the school systems.

Update: Snow Cone Express opening Friday in new location

Snow Cone Express’ new location at Oak and 27 streets.

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Snow Cone Express is opening at its new location at Oak and 27th Street at noon on Friday.

The store recently closed its location at Big Creek Crossing.

The new store is in Oak Plaza in the corner store that borders Oak Street, across the street from Papa Murphy’s Pizza.

Jarett Gross, owner, said he decided to move to a store front to increase his visibility and foot traffic.

The new location is just down the street via sidewalk from Wilson Elementary School and Hays Middle School.

Gross has been in the mall for several years and said he had a good experience with the mall, but thought it was time for a change.

The last day for the store in the mall was Aug. 20. Gross has had his snow cone trailer open in the Oak Plaza parking as the new building was being made ready for move in.

Winter hours in the new store will be noon to 8 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, noon to 6 p.m. Sundays and closed on Mondays.

The new location is slightly bigger than Gross’ spot in the mall, and he will be able to offer a larger dinning area.

In addition to snow cones, Snow Cone Express offers chili, hot dogs, nachos, jumbo soft pretzels, walking tacos and taco burgers. During the winter, Gross plans to bring back his large cinnamon rolls.

“We will see how the community responds,” Gross said. “If we get busy, we will add more stuff to the menu.”

Branson Hoffman, Big Creek Crossing marketing director, said mall management was sad to see Snow Cone Express leave. The mall has not secured a new tenant for Snow Cone Express location as of yet.

North-central Kansas Outdoor Youth Fair next month in Osborne

OSBORNE – If you think shooting, trapping, fishing, canoeing, whittling and just about anything else you can do outdoors sounds like fun, make plans to visit Osborne in northcentral Kansas. On Sept. 8, 2018, youth age 17 and younger are invited for a day of fun and outdoor learning. The annual event begins at 9 a.m. and ends at 3 p.m. with lunch provided. Preregistration is not required, but participants must be registered by 11 a.m. on the day of the event to be eligible for prizes and lunch.

Youth will enjoy learning a variety of outdoor skills including archery, rifle, pistol, muzzleloader and air rifle marksmanship; shotgun wingshooting; trapping; fishing; biking; fly fishing; bowfishing; canoeing; whittling; basket weaving and more. Other activities include dog training demonstrations, wild game tasting, a tomahawk throw and mountain man encampment.

The event will take place at the west end of Osborne’s Main Street near the Shady Bend Golf Course. Youth 14 and younger must be accompanied by an adult. A variety of prizes will be given away, including lifetime licenses, and hunting and fishing trips. Bonus prizes can be won by catching tagged fish from the ponds.

The event is sponsored by the Osborne County Chapter of Pheasants Forever; Osborne Gun Club; Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism; Nex-Tech; and the Keith Hahn Memorial.

For more information, contact Cleo Hahn, 785-346-4541; John Cockerham, 785-346-6527; or Chris Lecuyer, 785-218-7818.

— KDWPT

KNOLL: Witch hunt or not?

Les Knoll
There was an editorial in the Hays newspaper on Aug. 3 titled “Not a witch hunt” by the Chicago Tribune, proving beyond doubt journalism by mainstream media is dead. It’s kaput, and obviously shows any kind of investigative journalism to be non-existent.

A sad state of affairs for America when mainstream news is totally partisan. “Mainstream” means what most of us are exposed to, unfortunately.

The editorial I reference implies the Robert Mueller Special Counsel investigation is not a witch hunt, even poking fun of Trump at the thought it might be. But obviously for those of us that are informed, if ever there was a witch hunt in our American justice system, this is it! The proof isn’t just extensive, it’s monumental. I can’t possibly cover all the bases in this letter, but enough to prove my point.

For starters, the city of Chicago is one of the most liberal cities in America. You can count on their largest newspaper to be anti Trump. In fact, the Tribune would choose bankruptcy over any support for our president on anything.

Liberalism is mostly about defending the indefensible. Mueller’s investigation out to destroy Trump, is indefensible. Nor is it defensible to claim Trump colluded with Russia or obstructed justice. There is no evidence. Actually, there is no reason for this Special Counsel to continue or even have existed in the first place.

The Special Council was created under false premises. To create an SC, a crime needs to be committed and named. None was named and no crime committed that anybody knows of at the time or even to date. The witch hunt begins in trying to “find” a crime against Trump, allowing Mueller to investigate anything. That whole procedure is unheard of in our justice system of the past. Lord knows what it is now!

Actually, our justice system has been stood on it’s head. It’s been compromised by the FBI and DOJ like never before in American history with hundreds of leftover Obama and Hillary loyalists in our government. Mueller is part of that whole scheme, clearly biased, and currently inventing things to make Trump look guilty of something — anything.

Because Mueller hasn’t been able to tie Trump to Russia collusion with any kind of evidence, he’s gone after Trump associates for the purpose of “insinuating” Trump did something wrong through association. Does the name Manafort come to mind, a man Mueller is destroying simply “implying or insinuating” he helped Trump collude. Other lives are being destroyed by Mueller in hopes of getting to Trump. The investigation is a fraud.

Mueller is down to his last evil scheme and that’s entrapment. He wants to interview Trump and catch him on a perjury charge for something like what he had for breakfast four months ago and now he says something else. The truth is Mueller is no longer after the truth. He’s on a perjury fishing expedition.

There’s no such thing as “equality under the law” in this entire fiasco. If there is, can somebody tell me why Mueller hires an army of lawyers, most of whom donated to the Hillary campaign. The witch hunt is all about taking down Trump because these people wanted Hillary to be president and that’s it in a nutshell. Had Hillary become president, all of the existing corruption that Mueller is part of would be swept under the rug making us no different than a third world country without laws.

Our chief investigator is connected at the hip to all the anti Trumpers in our government past and present. That includes former president Obama, poor loser Hillary, Comey, McCabe, Strzok, Brennan, Clapper, Lynch, Ohr, etc. And, the list goes on and on just as I can go on and on proving the witch hunt against our president.

When Hillary was Secretary of State, she and Obama, sold 20% of our uranium to Russia. Mueller, as FBI Director at the time, looked the other way as there was massive corruption taking place with bribes, money laundering, etc. In the process, the Clinton Foundation took in millions. Yup, from Russia. Bill Clinton was able to line his pockets as well.

If there is equal justice under the law (rather than a two tiered one) heads should roll on the Uranium One scandal, Hillary’s private email server, the Clinton Foundation raking in millions for pay to play, the fake dossier on Trump and many more related scandals. Mueller again looking the other way when there is incontrovertible evidence the real collusion occurs with Democrats and our justice system, not with Trump.

It defies logic for anybody to think Putin would collude with Trump to win the election when he had Hillary wrapped around his little finger. Like Obama, Putin knew Hillary wouldn’t do much about Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Crimea. Those are just more examples the Trump/Russia collusion narrative is bogus. The Trump obstruction of justice narrative has no merit either.

Besides the Chicago Tribune wanting to destroy Trump, the Boston Globe organized some 350 other newspapers (apparently including the Hays newspaper) to write op-eds trashing Trump. If 80% of media is anti Trump and 95% of the time negative toward him, I think we can claim two witch hunts. Mueller’s Special Council is one and mainstream media is the other.

It’s obvious the witch hunts are pure unadulterated political ones. Truth is not an objective, nor even justice. We have a president making America great again in many ways especially with a booming economy yet he’s treated as a tyrant. Trump’s many accomplishments, never ever covered by media, deserve special treatment in some other letter.

Mueller, with the help of media, uses the Trump witch hunt to distract from and cover up the real crimes that are massive coming from all the leftists which the SC ignores. Real crimes don’t require a witch hunt Mr. Mueller.

Les Knoll lives in Victoria and Gilbert, Ariz.

City of Hays alters trash pickup schedule for holiday weekend

City of Hays

Due to the observance of the Labor Day on Monday, refuse/recycling route collection schedules will be altered as follows:

Monday and Tuesday routes will be collected on Tuesday. There will be no changes to Wednesday, Thursday and Friday routes.

Although collections may not occur on your normal day, collections will be completed by the week’s end. It is anticipated that heavy volumes of refuse/recyclables will be encountered around the holidays. Please make sure your polycarts and recyclables are out by 7:00 a.m., and keep in mind that the trucks have no set time schedule.

Quilts give servicemen the hero’s honor they deserve

By CRISTINA JANNEY
Hays Post

Veterans left to right Dave “Spud” Richardson, Leonard Kern and Jim Dinkel receive Quilts of Valor Saturday at RPM Speedway. Kansas Grateful Stitchers Connie Haselhorst, Jamie Werth, Bonnie Werth, and Nicole and Kylie Dreiling helped with the project. Courtesy photo

Staff Sgt. Leonard Kern did not receive the welcome home from war he thought he should have received, but he received a gift Saturday that honored him in a way he did not think possible.

Four servicemen were honored by Quilts of Valor during the RPM Speedway races on Saturday. Quilts of Valor makes quilts for both veterans and active service personnel who have been affected by war. Those men who received quilts were Kern, David “Spud” Richardson, Jim Dinkel and Stan Dreiling. Dreiling was not able to attend the ceremony Saturday.

Staff Sgt. Kern, 41, of Hays served from 1995 to 2009. He served a two-year deployment overseas. He was first deployed to Korea, but once his unit was set to come home, they were rerouted to serve another year in Iraq.

Most service personnel are deployed for no longer than a year. The extra time overseas was taxing on the soldiers. Kern said he was lucky. He came home unscathed and so did all the men under his command. Others in the 503rd Infantry Regiment were not so lucky.

Twenty men in the command of 600 died and 150 were injured. Some of the soldiers who came back to the states with him had received three Purple Hearts.

“When we came home, our family and friends were there,” he said. “There was no parade. … There damn should have been.”

The long deployment took with heavy action in Iraq took its toll on the men when they returned home as well.

The group had a high rate of domestic violence and DUI.

Leonard Kern receives his quilt. Courtesy photo

Kern comes from a long line of military men. He never wanted to admit to PTSD but said he knows he brought home some of his experiences from war. He said he is not always the man he wants to be.

“I have heightened awareness,” he said. “I walk into a room, and I judge people. I am looking for where the threats are. I had that before, being in the military, but being in combat heightens that.”

Receiving a quilt from the Quilts of Valor program was the honor he felt he and his fellow soldiers should have received when they came home from Iraq. He said he was elated to receive the quilt.

“I think it was the coolest thing that has happened to be since I got back,” he said. “It made me happy. I was very impressed.”

Kern’s boss’s daughter nominated the group of men for quilts and her aunt helped her sew them.

“I gave her a hug, and then I gave her another hug,” he said. “It was awesome.

Kern, who now works as a mechanic, said his experience in Iraq has resulted in him not taking life for granted.

“I just take one day at a time, because every day could be your last,” he said.

David Richardson
Despite some of the ugliness Sgt. First Class David Richardson has seen in the world, he said his service made him see other cultures in a new light and gave him optimism for change.

David Richardson receives his quilt. Courtesy photo

Richardson served in the Army from 1989 to October 2015. He served in different roles, but his most recent duties were in artillery. He had multiple overseas deployments including Germany, Bosnia, Desert Storm, Iraq and Africa.

Each theater gave him a unique perspective into the people of those regions.

Richardson, 47, Victoria, was part of the peacekeeping mission in Bosnia after the brutal civil war ravaged in that region. The country split on ethnic lines when it declared independence from Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. An estimated 100,000 people were killed in the war, and 2.2 million people of all ethnicities were displaced.

During his first deployment to Bosnia, Richardson was part of security forces attempting to separate the Bosnians from the Serbs. When Richardson reached the region for the second time, the fighting had calmed, but the destruction was evident.

“In Croatia and some places in that area, you could see the destruction, especially in downtown Sarajevo,” he said. “There is sniper alley. You could see where the Serbs had just sat up on the ridge line and pounded the town, the buildings and Olympic stadium. You did not have to look far to see the damage.”

Richardson said he took satisfaction in helping the people of Bosnia rebuild after the war.

“When you work with people who have been, so to speak, beat down and have no idea how to rebuild from there, they always need help,” he said. “To be a part of something like that — to rebuild a nation, to rebuild a country — it is a wonderful feeling because at the end of the day, you have that sense of accomplishment.

“We tend to go places and people back home don’t understand why we are in theaters. As a soldier, you get to see those things,” he said of the rebuilding, “and you get to see the day-to-day changes. It always gives you that opportunity to see that change is possible. I believe in myself that it makes you a better person to see how fortunate we are back home as a people versus how some of these people live in other countries.”

Richardson was only deployed during Desert Storm for six months. He said the deployment was so short and focused that he had little time to soak in what was happening around him.

Iraq, however, was a whole different story.

Richardson was the team leader of a six-member quick reaction force. His group’s mission was to respond when a convoy encountered an improvised explosive device or enemy ambush. They engaged the enemy and helped the convoy reach safety.

“Iraq was more ramped up,” he said. “Every time you went outside of the wire, your head was on a swivel. You were looking around. You were making sure, first of all, that your team was going to be safe and you are going to be safe and you are keeping the routes and the convoys safe.”

The city’s especially were hotbeds of enemy activity. Quiet and calm was not a good sign.

“One day, you are driving through a city and it is business as usual and then, the next day, it is quiet, so it was kind of an eerie feeling,” he said. “Yesterday, you went through that town and everyone was playing and business as usual. Then you roll through the next day, and no one is around. It was like ‘OK, something bad is going to happen.’ Not all of the time did it happen, but most of the time it did whether it be an IED or ambush or something like that. Most of the time we were able to push through it and just keep going.”

Despite the violence Richardson experienced in Iraq, he urges others to judge people as individuals instead of stereotyping.

“I think you are going to have bad people and you are going to have good people no matter what you do, no matter what theater, whether it is in the United States or a foreign country,” he said. “There are people who there is no way to convince them there is something outside of hate and discontent. Then there are people who are there who actually need the help.

“I think throughout my experience it helped me to read people better. You never judge a book by its cover. You have to get through the first chapter or least the first couple of pages to understand how things are and how these people live on a day-to-day basis. You can’t go out there and say I don’t think this of this guy or these people because of this or that. It is just wrong. You have to speak to these people, see how they act, how they react, how they think.

“If you ever get a chance to go over to a foreign country and see how they run things versus the way we do things here, I think a lot people’s eyes would open up. It is not what most people think it is.”

Richardson’s last deployment was to Monrovia, Liberia, a coastal nation in West Africa. Liberia has suffered through two civil wars during the last 40 years. More than 250,000 people have been killed. Although peace was reached, the conflicts wreaked havoc on the country’s economy. Eighty-five percent of the Liberian people live below the international poverty line, which was calculated by the World Bank in 2015 to be $1.90 per day. Richardson’s mission in Liberia was to train Liberian troops.

“By the time I left, there were several people throughout the Liberian army who I had become friends with,” he said, “and I still talk to via Facebook. I like to check up on them and see how things are going. It is a sense of accomplishment. It is something that made me feel like I did something, and I did something right.

“It is not about me doing something for myself. It is about me doing something for my country. If we can better our country, then [we] can teach these other countries this is how we do things to better ourselves. It is not that hard. It does take time. It doesn’t happen over night.”

Richardson, who is now the parts manager at Dreiling Field Service, said he was pleased to receive a quilt, but said he thought others were more worthy.

“I am very thankful I am being honored with this and for this, but I guess my biggest thing is that even if I am getting something, there is more we can do for our soldiers who are out there and veterans who are out there,” he said. “I think we need to recognize those soldiers also.”

“People who have not served in the service do not understand the sacrifices a soldier makes, nor do they understand what sacrifices the families make. It is not just the soldier who is deploying. In a sense the soldier’s spouse, children and family, they are deploying too. They have to change their lifestyle because that soldier, sailor or airmen is not going to be around for a year, eight months, six months. It is very hard. It is not easy for people to make change like that. They also need recognition.”

Jim Dinkel

Jim Dinkel receives his quilt. Courtesy photo

Spec. Fourth Class Jim Dinkel, 69, Hays, was drafted during the Vietnam War, but served as part of the U.S. forces in Korea from 1968 to ’70.

He entered the military as an infantryman, but because of a lack police, he was given on-the-job training to become an MP. He and his peers patrolled the Second Infantry Division, which was roughly the size of Ellis County.

Although Dinkel was never in combat, tensions were running high along the DMZ at that time.

“The North Koreans intimidated back then, just as they do now,” he said.

During Dinkel’s time in Korea, the Pueblo incident occurred. The North Koreans captured a U.S. naval vessel and held U.S. service personnel hostage.

On a Sunday in August 1969, North Koreans shot and killed eight UN command soldiers who were repairing a demarcation line tape at the DMZ.

Anti-military sentiments were prevalent during and after Vietnam, but Dinkel said he was spared much of this because he had been stationed in Korea instead of Vietnam.

“The guys coming from Vietnam, they went through hell,” he said.

Dinkel said his time in Korea made him more thankful for the advantages he has an American.

“I complain about a lot of foods we ate,” he said. “You go oversees and see a little farmer growing vegetables in a ditch. It had a pretty positive effect on me.”

Dinkel, retired, has been a longtime member of the VFW and a member of the VFW Honor Guard.

“It is an honor for me to get it,” he said of his Quilt of Valor, “but I think there are probably more people more deserving than me.”

Hot, windy Friday with a chance for thunderstorms

Today A 20 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms before 10am. Mostly sunny, with a high near 99. Breezy, with a south southwest wind 8 to 13 mph increasing to 16 to 21 mph in the morning.

TonightA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms, mainly after 9pm. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 70. South wind 7 to 10 mph.

SaturdayA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms after 1pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 89. South southeast wind 6 to 10 mph.

Saturday NightShowers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 68. Southeast wind 6 to 8 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a half and three quarters of an inch possible.

SundayA 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 84.

Sunday NightShowers and thunderstorms likely. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 66. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New rainfall amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible.

Labor DayA 30 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 82.

FHSU professor speaks at global business conference in Hong Kong

Dr. Steven Tam
FHSU University Relations

Dr. Steven Tam, associate professor of management at Fort Hays State University, recently delivered a keynote speech at the 20th Asia-Pacific Conference on Global Business, Economics, Finance and Social Sciences in Hong Kong.

Tam discussed “Emerging Paradigms in Organizational Learning: Some Useful Insights from a Strategic Standpoint.” In his speech, key findings from his years of research were presented, stressing the importance of human capital and the strategies behind organizational learning as a firm continues to grow. A misalignment between human capital development and firm growth means an ineffective management of the firm, which leads to losing strengths and performance in business.

Tam, having experience with international industry, began teaching strategic management 15 years ago at both undergraduate and MBA levels. During this time, Tam said he saw many young entrepreneurs who “started and flew” and some who “stuck and failed.”

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