Cubs make up meet in Girard

The Cubs were scheduled to run in Girard last Thursday, but those events were postponed due to inclement weather. On Monday, Humboldt took to the course, but this time the heat played a factor in their performance.

Head coach Eric Carlson said despite the minuscule amount of airflow, the Cubs performed to their high expectations. 

In the middle school two-mile races, McKenna Jones placed first (15:18) and Anna Heisler finished fourth (19:09) in the seventh-grade division. The seventh-grade boys also found success in Girard. Asher Hart placed fourth with a time of 15:20, and Jaryt Hess came in sixth running a time of 18:09. 

The JV girls compete in a two-mile race, with Bri Barker placing 10th (18:36) and Camryn Bill coming in at 15th (20:56). 

Humboldt’s varsity girls ran their way to a fourth place finish,  Elizabeth Melendez led all Lady Cubs runners with a time of 27:19 and an 18th place finish. Rounding off the rest of the girls were Melina Hess (28:09), Leah Mueller (28:10), Zoey Wilson (29:03), Sarah Anderson (30:43), and Winter Snyder (34:16). 

The varsity boys came in sixth as a team, with Drew Wilhite leading the way running a time of 19:58 and finishing 12th. After missing the Anderson County meet due to illness, Luke Yokum recovered nicely for a 16th-place finish running a time of 20:40. Also competing for the Cubs were Sam Neely (23:23), Thane Meadows (24:11), Javyn Hess (26:25), and Cooper Woods (27:05)

Humboldt will have a quick turnaround. They are scheduled to run Thursday in Wellsville. 

Frank Clark overcomes homelessness as a child, shapes his current identity

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — On the outskirts of Country Club Plaza on his way to the Chiefs’ training facility for an introductory news conference on April 26, Frank Clark’s gaze became riveted to a sight many of us either are oblivious to or consciously avoid seeing.

Passing what he recalled as a bridge by Brush Creek, his scan locked in on what he instinctively recognized as homeless people. Even en route to his first public appearance since the Chiefs had acquired the defensive end in a trade from Seattle, he had an urge to get out of the car.

“I know where to look; I understand where they are and what they do,” he said. “I have some pity.”

More specifically, he also has the empathy you could only feel if you’ve ever lived not knowing where your next meal is coming from or where you’ll sleep tonight, or doubting why you should have faith in the world.

“They might be on the edge of it, where they really don’t want to be a part of this stuff (any) more,” he said. “You get to a point where it’s, ‘Is life over for me? Is this the end?’ “

Clark wondered that plenty as a child when he was in constant flux and distress as his single mother, Teneka Clark, contended with addiction and struggled for stability. That remains elusive for her even in the months since he signed a five-year, $105 million contract.

But his agonizing past and reverence for his mother are part of a journey he appreciates deeply and figures makes him who he really is — for better or worse, he’ll tell you.

Never mind that it’s been a turbulent expedition that has featured Clark entering into troubles of his own and his father dying in a fire last year.

Along the way, Clark has come to feel his parents in his blood every day, apart from him as they are for different reasons, as he sets about what he sees as a mission to use football to provide for family that includes a young daughter, Phoenix.

In the process, he’s also become immersed in what might be seen as a full-circle twist. Where once he grasped for the purpose of his life when he was trying to escape the streets, he now realizes this:

Some of his most meaningful purpose remains there.

All of which helps explain the thought he had coming off the practice field the other day.

Thinking of his mother and those who live in poverty and the Chiefs’ fan base, Clark decided he wanted to bring homeless guests to the home opener next week against Baltimore.

Shortly after practice, he said, he turned to the team’s community relations staff to present the thought.

Via the Chiefs, the idea morphed into reaching out to the Women’s Employment Network, which seeks to holistically support and empower women. Many are in tough financial straits, though clients are of all socio-economic groups, ranging from some who might be experiencing homelessness to those who have relocated here with their husband and want to network to many circumstances in between.

According to Ashley Williamson, WEN’s community engagement manager, seven single mothers who have graduated from the program and 13 of their children are expected to be his guests for what Clark calls “a treat” that will include a limousine ride to the stadium, seats in a suite and a postgame meet and greet with him.

Williamson said she couldn’t speak to whether any of the mothers had experienced homelessness. But she said all were in stable situations now and overjoyed by the opportunity.

“I’m so EXCITED I just want to scream!!! Thank you so much. I can’t even think right now,” one of the WEN clients who plans to attend with her children wrote the organization. “I was wanting (her kids) to go to Chiefs camp. I just didn’t know how to go about it, and how much it costs. …

“I can’t wait to tell them!!!! I needed some happiness in my life, thank you so much.”

Clark knows the game will make for just a brief interlude in their lives. But single mothers are what he has a heart for, said Clark, who relished the idea of giving them a day when “they could kind of take it easy and not have to worry so much.”

Like he’s tried to do for his own mother some 20 years now.

From the time he was 6 after an eviction, she has reminded him, he tried to console her that everything would be alright as he absorbed her anguish while they stayed at the Union Rescue Mission in Los Angeles’ Skid Row.

That was around the beginning of a period of about four or five years when Clark was a virtual hostage to a cycle of drug addiction and violence and gangs and guns and death and depression and desperation all around him in the harsh Baldwin Village section of South L.A.

“I was growing up too fast for my own good,” he said.

Living from shelter to shelter to a motel to the streets to a shelter, he said, he learned to stand humbled in community showers and appreciate meals like peanut butter and syrup sandwiches.

“It’s almost like the real Hunger Games — the real Hunger Games,” he said, smiling. “You go into that survival mode where you do anything just to try to put some food in your belly, you know?”

He learned to scour the ground for money and go to libraries and hit the “return money” button on printers to gather up coins. He’d skip school to hustle, because he came to consider that essential for his mother and him even if it meant he would spend some time in juvenile detention.

His mindset became, well, screw everything else: “It’s about my mom and me. It’s only us.”

That was a double-edged razor, though.

“Her feeling like she had let me down … that led me to try to do things to get money: I’m stealing, I’m doing all these different things,” he said. “(Because) if I’m the burden that’s making you sink into this, I don’t want to be the problem. I’m willing to go be in the streets if that’s what it takes.”

Sensing he was on a path to an early death, in 2003 she sent him to live with his father’s side of the family in the Glenville neighborhood of Cleveland and didn’t see him again until 10 years later.

(She didn’t see him play professionally until five years ago in Oakland — something he thought about this week as the Chiefs prepared to play the Raiders on Sunday.)

The move, though, was “no escape for me,” Clark said. It was similarly tough turf, he said, and complicated by the up-and-down nature of his relationship with his father, Frank Clark III, before they came to bond.

(It was shattering for Clark when his father was one of four family members to have died in a house fire last year. In a Tweet at the time, Clark called it “an arson fire.” According to an ESPN.com report from Seattle in January, Clark said authorities told him it was accidental but said he still had questions. “Some stuff you can’t deal with,” he said Friday, “but you just manage and try your best.”)

Chaotic as even the move to Cleveland was, it ultimately led Clark to the University of Michigan, Seattle and now to a life-changing contract.

Which comes with the realization that money can’t cure everything.

“I’m spending my life right now trying to get my mom off the streets,” he said. “The paychecks can come, the money, the resources, etc., etc. But if you’re still trapped in that place mentally, it’s going to show. You’re going to be trapped in that place.”

That period of homelessness wasn’t the only time Clark felt trapped and feared for his future.

In 2014 after an alleged altercation with his girlfriend in a Sandusky, Ohio, hotel, he was charged with first-degree misdemeanor domestic violence and assault and dismissed from the Michigan football team.

He spent his three days in jail thinking “my life is over.”

He could only pray he’d get another chance.

And he did: The charges ultimately were reduced to fourth-degree persistent disorderly conduct, with Clark also completing a 25-week domestic violence course and paying court costs and fines.

Only months later, the Seahawks selected him in the second round of the 2015 NFL Draft. He’s had no known legal issues since.

Still, he understands that the 2014 allegations preceded him here and even seemed to embrace addressing his past when he was introduced.

He spoke about having to learn to be a better person and a better man. He framed it as a pivot point of his life, something that could make or break you and that he believed made him “more understanding, more compassionate … (and) my heart a little bigger.”

Maybe most of all, he emphasized being “real” and not sugarcoating or hiding anything.

“I (can) barely hide; it’s all out there,” he said, smiling and adding, “I know what (people) read. I know everything people see. And I know the perception people can have. And that’s easy, you know?

“But I just feel like the hard part is getting to actually know somebody. I feel once everyone does, that they’ll understand me as a person.”

That’s an inherent challenge for most, because few can relate to his path. Some naturally won’t want to try, either.

The 2014 episode invites scrutiny and skepticism, but his story is a reminder that we’re all better served by listening to try to understand … not just to reply or comment.

And that if we can’t hope for redemption and growth, what’s our purpose here, anyway?

“Now around here, we’ll be really rooting for No. 55; it’s not every day that somebody really understands,” said WEN’s Williamson, who hadn’t been aware of Clark’s 2014 arrest.

For all the personal challenges he knows may still be ahead, Clark says he knows one of his true purposes: to apply the unique experiences that make for a natural platform to continue helping the homeless as he did in Seattle, where he was in concert with Pearl Jam’s efforts and working with the Union Gospel Mission.

“We aren’t bringing an end to the homeless crisis in Seattle,” he said in announcing the #GiveYourBest challenge last year, “but we are shedding a little bit of light on it.”

A light that shines more because of his ability to connect to a plight that remains deeply personal. Without elaborating on his mother’s current whereabouts or specific status, Clark said he’d see her every day if he could. Instead, he sees her only “whenever she wants to see me — not when I want to see her.”

You might not be able to contact her, he says, but he knows how.

Truly reaching her, though, is another matter.

“I’m constantly working just to put her in a better place,” he said, “so I can be 100% happy in life.”

Kyle Busch criticizes underdog teams after Vegas race

The massive divide between NASCAR’s heavyweights and the underdog teams just scraping by received renewed attention following Kyle Busch’s damning assessment of how backmarkers raced in the playoff opener over the weekend.

Busch rallied from an early incident at Las Vegas Motor Speedway that dropped him two laps off the pace to stunningly position himself for a top-five finish. Instead, he ran into the back of Garrett Smithley, who was 12 laps down in 35th place.

Busch, the regular-season champion, dropped to a 19th-place finish and went from first to fourth in the playoff standings. Clearly aggravated after Sunday’s race, he was blunt about the incident with Smithley, who was among 23 drivers on the track that day who are not in the 16-driver playoff field.

“I was told he was going to go high. I thought he was going to go high,” Busch said of the instructions he received from his spotter. “We went middle because I thought he was going to go high. Killed our day. I don’t know. Should have run fourth probably. Instead 19th. We’re at the top echelon of motorsports, and we’ve got guys who have never won Late Model races running on the racetrack. It’s pathetic. They don’t know where to go.”

The comments have drawn sharp criticism, with some saying they came off as entitled simply because another driver didn’t get out of Busch’s way. Some responses came from some lesser-known drivers on underfunded teams and helped spark a debate over on-track etiquette during the playoffs.

Tommy Joe Martins, an Xfinity Series driver when he can piece together a deal to get in a non-competitive car, on Tuesday supported “my friend” Smithley and called him a “really good racecar driver.”

“This fear for any of us driving for a small team: become a controversy,” Martins posted on Twitter. “We all just want to race & be respected. Stuff like this proves how bitter the divide is between 2 sides of this garage. It’s depressing to me.”

Smithley will be Rick Ware Racing’s driver for Saturday night’s race at Richmond Raceway, the second event in NASCAR’s 10-race playoff series. It will be his 13th career Cup Series start; he has one top-five finish in 133 starts across the Xfinity and Truck series.

Busch has always driven for one of NASCAR’s top teams. His break in the Cup Series came with Hendrick Motorsports and he was then hired at Joe Gibbs Racing, which has won 14 of 27 races this season and placed all four of its drivers in the playoff field. Busch has 207 victories across NASCAR’s three national series and won the 2015 Cup championship.

His criticism of the smaller teams and the drivers trying to claw their way up to Busch’s level prompted a lengthy rebuke from Smithley.

He noted that, unlike Busch, who followed his older brother, Kurt, into a ride at NASCAR’s top level, Smithley “didn’t grow up in a racing family, and we certainly didn’t have the funds to race. The only race car my parents ever bought was a used Bandolaro race car when I was 15. I didn’t think I had a chance starting that late.”

Smithley said he won enough races that a local golf cart shop owner stepped in as a sponsor, bought him a Legends car and helped Smithley move up to touring level. Then he decided to relocate to North Carolina, the hub of NASCAR, and try to make it in the big leagues.

“When I decided to move to Charlotte to pursue a career as a professional driver there is no doubt I had to basically give up the chance to win races in order to ‘fund’ getting the opportunity to race,” he continued. “I am one of only a handful of drivers that actually has never spent any of my own money to race. So spending money to go win in a late model was never an option, because the only way I can afford to race is if someone else pays for it.”

Smithley said he sells his own sponsorship, which he then brings to a team in order to secure seat time. He said most companies and sponsors prefer to back “someone like Kyle” to get the marketing value they want.

“Nobody that is considered ‘in the way’ wants to be,” he wrote of the incident with Busch. “We are simply doing the best we can” and “I do think I can be competitive in the right equipment and I will even go a step further and say, with time and equal funding my teams with Rick Ware Racing, Johnny Davis Motorsports can be competitive, too.”

NASCAR is attempting to address the current model and financial distributions, and team owners such as Bob Leavine of Leavine Family Racing have repeatedly said they believe a balance can be struck between the wealthy front end of the garage and the small teams in the back that spend each week short on tires, parts, personnel and everything else needed to be competitive.

Any solution will not come quickly.

Joey Gase penned a similar tale of his struggle to make it in NASCAR. Gase and Smithley were both running near each other when Busch ran into Smithley. Gase’s post included photos from late model races he won, noted he needed outside financial support to continue his career because his father worked in a coal power plant and his mother was a hairstylist and couldn’t afford for Gase to race as his childhood sport.

“We have to work for every sponsor we get and I am proud to say I have 30 different sponsors this year and would not be here without them,” Gase wrote.

Royals drop close one by the Bay

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Matt Olson had never hit a ball to the second level of elevated bleachers, even in batting practice.

He sure found a timely moment to accomplish the feat, hitting a tying homer leading off the seventh before Seth Brown hit a go-ahead double two batters later, leading the Oakland Athletics past the Kansas City Royals 2-1 on Tuesday night.

“That was one of my better swings,” Olson said with a smile, offering little more explanation except that the ball doesn’t usually carry like that at night.

Olson’s drive to center reached the Coliseum seats above the luxury suites — a spot only a handful of sluggers have visited. Jorge Lopez (4-8) then hit Mark Canha with a pitch before Brown doubled.

“The home run that Oley hit inspired everybody,” manager Bob Melvin said.

A.J. Puk (2-0) followed Brett Anderson and struck out two over two shutout innings for his second major league win. Liam Hendriks struck out two in a 1-2-3 ninth for his 23rd save in 29 opportunities.

Hendriks’ 116 strikeouts as a reliever this season passed Hall of Famer Rollie Fingers — 115 in 1975 — for most in franchise history.

The A’s, who hold the top AL wild-card spot, bounced back after their six-game winning streak was snapped by Monday’s 6-5 loss to the Royals in the series opener.

Kansas City’s Nick Dini hit a sacrifice fly in the fifth for the game’s first run.

Anderson allowed five hits over five innings and would have liked to go longer, but Melvin is trying to get some younger pitchers like Puk and Jesus Luzardo key experience down the stretch. The left-hander has received three or fewer runs of support in 16 of his last 22 starts.

“I’d be lying if I said I didn’t want to go longer but having a couple lefties throwing upper-90s after you is never a bad option,” Anderson said.

Lopez — who has only won on the road this season — missed a chance at winning three straight starts for the first time in his career. Demoted to the bullpen for an extensive stretch midseason, he has been steady of late.

The right-hander allowed two runs and four hits in six innings in his first career start against the A’s and second appearance.

“The last three, four starts I’ve been doing the same, trusting my sinker and have that power curveball after those sinkers,” Lopez said. “That’s a team that will challenge you. You just have to stay down in the zone and try to make them uncomfortable.”

Ryan McBroom doubled leading off the fifth and advanced on a single by Cheslor Cuthbert before Dini’s sac fly for Kansas City, which took pregame infield practice — a rare sight for September.

Majors hits leader Whit Merrifield, coming off three consecutive two-hit games for the Royals, went 0 for 4.

SEPTEMBER SURGING

The A’s improved to 12-4 in September, second in baseball only to Milwaukee’s 13-3. The Brewers beat San Diego at home.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Athletics: RHP Mike Fiers underwent an MRI exam for nerve irritation in his hand, and then threw a bullpen session. He is scheduled to make his next start, likely one of this weekend’s games against Texas. Fiers left his start Saturday in the second inning because of numbness. … Melvin was a late arrival after receiving another round of injections in his troublesome neck. … OF Ramon Laureano had a night off from starting after playing four of the previous five games, though he came in late. Laureano was activated from the injured list Sept. 6 after missing 32 games with a stress reaction in his lower right leg and Melvin is being careful to not overextend him.

UP NEXT

Right-hander Homer Bailey (13-8, 4.76 ERA) pitches for the A’s against his former Royals club, opposite lefty Danny Duffy (6-6, 4.55 ERA). Bailey was acquired by Oakland in a trade July 14. He was the winning pitcher in a 19-4 victory at Kansas City on Aug. 26. Duffy is 4-0 with a 2.89 ERA over eight appearances and seven starts vs. Oakland.

Play group planned

A “community play group” filled with games, stories, educational activities and free dental screenings, is open to any child 6 years and younger Friday morning on the Allen County Courthouse lawn.

The event is sponsored by Talk, Read, Play Allen County, a consortium of agencies that deal with early childhood education services.

The partnering agencies that make up Talk, Read, Play Allen County each have come up with different activities for Friday’s event.

The hands-on activities are geared to promote creative playing experiences, and to offer an “opportunity to connect” between parents, grandparents or other caregivers and their children, explained Beth Toland, early childhood education specialist with Allen Community College. Allen is one of the participating agencies.

“It gives them an opportunity to sit and play with their kids,” and model good playing behavior, Toland said.

Meanwhile, the Community Health Center of Southeast Kansas will offer free dental screenings for each child who shows up.

The event runs from 8:30 to 10 a.m. on the courthouse lawn. The event will be rescheduled in case of rain.

Those who need transportation can contact Toland at (620) 901-6304 or toland@allencc.edu.

 

TALK, READ, Play focuses on the critical development in the first 2,000 days of a child’s life, and how that development plays a large role in that child’s future success.

The various services promote social and cognitive development through “meaningful everyday interactions,” according to the group’s mission statement.

Other partners along with ACC and CHC are ChildCare Aware of Kansas and Eastern Kansas chapters, Greenbush Parents as Teachers and Birth to Three Services, the Iola Public Library, the Southeast Kansas Community Action Program’s Early Head Start and Head Start programs, the Southeast Kansas Mental Health Center and the Southeast Kansas Multi-County Health Department.

Carol of the Bells

Did you hear the bells ring at noon on Tuesday? Sept. 17 is Constitution Day and the Cofachique Chapter DAR contacted churches in Iola, Humboldt and Chanute to ring their bells at noon in commemoration. Conner and Evan Powe are shown ringing the bell at First Presbyterian Church in Iola. Bells were also rung at Trinity Methodist and Calvary Methodist. 

A look back in time

58 Years Ago

September 1961

Dr. George F. DeTar, 32, Joplin, will open an office in Dr. Gerald Pees’ building at 219 W. Madison. He has practiced in Joplin for the past two years but prefers a smaller town. He and Mrs. DeTar have three children, George Jr., 8, Karen, 2, and Marilee, eight months. They are moving into a house in Wheeler Heights.

*****

The M and M Packing Company, which has been closed by a strike since July 20, re-opened on a limited scale yesterday. A spokesman for the firm said today that nine to 10 men and women, including administrative and supervisory employees, are back to work. Ed Marquis, manager of the company, and Alva Morris, president of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butchers Workmen of America, are understood to be meeting with a mediator from the National Labor Relations Board.

Farm life fun

A pack of 175 first-graders learned firsthand about life on the farm Monday.

The annual Fall Ag Day event, hosted by Strickler Dairy, allowed students from Iola, Humboldt, Marmaton Valley and Yates Center schools to experience the many facets of farm life, from seeing how a full-fledged dairy operation runs to the many careers available in the agricultural community.

 

Iola High School FFA members Hannah Gardner, left, and Becca Sprague give a tour of the cow barn at Strickler Dairy Monday as part of a day at the farm field trip for area first-graders. PHOTO COURTESY OF ISABELLA DUKE

 

The event was split into 11 stations, such as ATV safety, feed bins (to demonstrate the many ways animals get nourishment), Strickler?s milk and cow barns, a roping demonstration and an exhibit that details how working on the farm provides ample opportunities for physical fitness.

The collaboration included several workers from Strickler?s Dairy, Allen Community College ag students and FFA members from high schools from each of the respective participating school districts.

The event coincides with National Ag Safety Week, which runs through Saturday.

Winston Jordan takes a whiff of livestock feed at Strickler Dairy Monday.

 

 Isabella Peres tries her hand at a roping exercise. 

A Look Back in Time

55 Years Ago

September 1964

The second annual Colony Hi-Point Rodeo will be next week. More than 5,000 visitors are expected to attend. The area was built and is owned by Dale Nichols. Floyd Rumford, Jr. of Abbyville will furnish the stock and be in charge of entries.

*****

Dale Creitz, coordinator of music in the Iola public schools, was named coordinator of fine arts for the new Bowlus Fine Arts Center last night at a meeting of the board of education. Creitz will schedule all fine arts events and activities in the new building and will be in charge of student groups and teachers using the facilities.

 

10 — LAHARPE — The largest enrollment in several years was on hand at LaHarpe schools last week as the new academic year got under way. The high school has 71 enrolled and the elementary school 157 for a total of 228, said Supt. Kenneth Hays.

11— Jim Christy of Iola, new state commander of the American Legion, will be guest of honor Saturday night at a reception to be held by the Leslie J. Campbell Post 15 of the Legion. He was elected state commander on Aug. 1 at the annual state convention in Wichita. He was the first World War II veteran to be elected commander of the Iola Post.

Ringing in autumn at Farmers’ Market

Thursday’s Allen County Farmers’ Market session features the second annual Fall Harvest Celebration.

An evening of pumpkin decorating, shopping and more are on the menu.

In addition, the Allen County Animal Rescue Facility will have caramel apples.

The Farmers’ Market runs from 5:30 to 7 p.m. along Jefferson Street on the east side of the courthouse square.

Vendors accept EBT and debit cards and participate in the Double Up Food Bucks Program.