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MSD Statement Regarding Tornado Siren

In case you wondered about the tornado siren going off and your child’s safety, Mansfield School District sent a text to parents moments ago.
In case you didn’t receive it, you an read it below.
“2017-18 Middle School Students: Dear parents, earlier the tornado sirens sounded for Mansfield. All Middle School students were taken to shelter until the all clear was given by Mansfield Police and District Administration. Students are currently safe and back in class at the current time. Thanks MMS”

Tigers Finish Season Sitting in New Style

Since Mansfield opened up their new school in 2004, the Tigers have been sitting on the same red and white chairs throughout basketball and volleyball seasons. There were some pretty dramatic finishes over the years with those seats sitting omnisciently along the sideline. However, half-court buzzer beaters and high hand volleyball kills have taken their toil with leaping enthusiasm and bitter disappointments out of those old chairs.

Now, Mansfield has a new place to park it. Thanks to the cooperation of Farmers Bank and the coaching staff at Mansfield, a set of highly padded, red, white, and black new chairs find themselves resting near the Tiger Gymnasium sidelines.

“It’s really a neat look,” expressed Craig Bentley, Mansfield Co-Athletic Director and head football coach. “It was something the indoor coaches have asked about for a couple of seasons. We finally found a partner to donate enough for the purchase.”

mansfield-arkansas-basketball-volleyball-sports-sponsor

That partner was Farmers Bank and one of their leading community involvement personnel in the form of Means Wilkerson. Means is a fourth generation member of the Wilkerson family; a family that has been involved in banking and public works since 1907.

“Our basketball coaches really pushed for the upgrade” said Bentley. “The older chairs had seen their better days. It was time for some new ones. Too many broken and wobbly chairs to accommodate the number of teams and players coming into this building. Farmers really came through for us.”

The new chairs are adorned in red with a distinctive white M and a ferocious black, Tiger claw mark through the middle. The foam padding is twice as thick as before to add to the comfort of those players and coaches that find themselves seated during some portion of a particular contest.

The new arrivals came just as the basketball season was ending. Mansfield was able to let their outgoing seniors enjoy a sit as the chairs were available for senior night.

Now, that comfort will pass down as future generations roam the sidelines and check into more and hopefully just as exciting Tiger tussles.

Dyson Roasted Chicken

Article by Helen Rosner | The New Yorker | Original Link | 03/26/2018

Roast chicken is probably my favorite food, but here’s a confession: until a few years ago, I’d never made one myself. Every TV chef and entertaining expert, it seems, tosses off casual mentions of roast chicken as if it’s so obvious, so simple, so effortless, the little black dress of dinner-making. But every TV chef and entertaining expert also knows that making a good roast chicken is anything but obvious and simple. (No less a figure than Jonathan Waxman, a famously talented roaster of chicken, calls the dish “the litmus test for any good chef.”) There are, from my casual survey of cookbooks and magazines and the Internet, thousands and thousands of variations on the “perfect roast chicken,” the overwhelming majority of which cannot, statistically speaking, be perfect. Some techniques call for buttering or oiling the skin; some submerge the chicken in brine beforehand, while others send the bird into the oven dry. Some call for stuffing the bird’s cavities; others leave them empty. Some use chicken simply as vehicles for cleverly blended spice rubs; others set out to perfume the breasts with aromatic herbs. I happen to care, above all else, about achieving a shatteringly crispy skin, which means that I need to get rid of as much water from my chicken skin as possible. Which is why my roast chicken recipe, naturally, involves a hair dryer.

Over the past few days, to my surprise, this method has become a subject of heated conversation. It began on Tuesday, before the latest nor’easter. In an uncharacteristic moment of foresight, I hauled a chicken out of the freezer to defrost and cook during the snow day. I salted it thoroughly, and set it on a plate in the fridge, uncovered, to let the skin dry out as much as possible. The next morning, in the shining white light of a daytime blizzard, I took my chicken out of the fridge and saw that it wasn’t quite as dry as I wanted to be. So I went and got my hair dryer to finish the job. I took a picture of the process and posted it to Twitter, where people were, in roughly even groups, thrilled or repulsed by the sight of a beauty appliance in the kitchen. There was, in particular, no shortage of men (why is it always men?) sneering at my incompetence. “This is what your oven is for,” a few said, apparently thinking that I was using the dryer not to dry the chicken but to cook it. They lingered on my choice of hair dryer—the Dyson Supersonic, a futuristic-looking device that is, at four hundred dollars, absurdly expensive. (It’s also inarguably better than any other blow-dryer I’ve tried, though whether its uptick in quality is worth the several-hundred-dollar premium is a private matter between a person and her credit card.) And they commented on my sparkly pink manicure—maybe, if I’d wanted the tweet to read as an Alton Brown-calibre kitchen hack, instead of ditzy prop comedy, I should’ve gone for unvarnished nails and a hairier knuckle.

Little did the skeptics know that, in blow-drying my chicken, I was standing on the shoulders of giants. I am far from the first person to bring the device into the kitchen. Blow-dryers are used by pitmasters in South Carolina, yakitori chefs in Japan, and kebab cooks in Brooklyn. The exquisite nerds at “America’s Test Kitchen” recommend them for softening chocolate and adding a gloss to cake frosting. And, as for crisping the skin on a bird, the legendary cookbook author Marcella Hazan calls for a six-to-eight-minute session with a handheld hair dryer in her recipe for crisp-skinned roast duck, which first appeared in her 1978 book “More Classics of Italian Cooking.” (Now out of print on its own, its contents live on in the 1992 omnibus “Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking.”) Skin is a matrix of water, fat, and proteins—adding heat makes the water evaporate, the fat render, and the proteins settle into the rigid structure we call “crispiness.” By removing water from the equation ahead of time, you eliminate steam that might de-crisp the crisping proteins in the oven, for one thing; and, more importantly, the rigidity caused by the dehydration helps the skin stay in place while the proteins take their time firming up. (There is a similar principle at work in convection ovens and air fryers.) “When the bird roasts in the oven later,” Hazan writes, “the fat melts and slowly runs off through the open pores, leaving the flesh succulent, but not greasy, while allowing the skin to become deliciously crisp.”

There are plenty of other ways to achieve crispy chicken skin. Hazan notes that her method is an adaptation of the Chinese technique of dunking Peking duck in boiling water and then letting it dry out in the fridge. Air and time do magic: after twenty-four hours exposed to a refrigerator’s cold air, a chicken’s whole character changes. Its skin becomes taut and translucent. It loses its flabby springiness and becomes hard to the touch, almost resinous. (This is the Zuni Café method, maybe the most famous roast chicken in the world.) If you don’t have the fortitude or the luxury to wait for natural dehydration to occur, you could prop the bird up in front of a box fan, or suspend it from a ceiling fan (as my editor tells me she once did to a duck in her sister’s childhood bedroom). But a hair dryer is less cumbersome and perfect for getting the hard-to-reach moist spots inside the cavity, and in the damp little chicken armpits where the wings and legs meet the body. The Dyson is faster and gentler but—as with many things in the kitchen—a substitution based on what you have available will get the job done just as well.


Roast Chicken à la Dyson

1 small whole chicken (3-4 pounds)
kosher salt
3-4 cups roughly chopped vegetables
2 tablespoons vegetable oil or ghee/clarified butter
unsalted seasonings and spices, to taste
½ cup wine, beer, chicken stock, or another flavorful liquid
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
freshly ground black pepper
½ lemon

1. The day before you plan to cook the chicken, pat it dry inside and out with paper towels. (Some chickens come packaged with a small bag containing giblets. Discard the giblets, or save them in the freezer until Thanksgiving gravy-making time rolls around.) Season the chicken generously with kosher salt, inside and out. You should aim for about ½ to 1 teaspoon of salt per pound. Set the chicken on a wire rack set over a large plate or rimmed baking sheet, and place it in the refrigerator, uncovered, for at least twenty-four hours and up to forty-eight hours. The skin will be translucent, dry, and firm to the touch.

2. Two hours before you plan to serve the chicken, remove it from the refrigerator. Using a handheld hair dryer on the Cool setting, blow air all over the chicken, making sure to dry any parts of the chicken that are still damp, particularly the underside of the bird and inside the cavity.

3. In a large mixing bowl, use your hands to toss the root vegetables with the oil or ghee until evenly coated. Using your hands again, rub the dried chicken with the oil on your hands until completely coated. Sprinkle your seasonings or spices all over the chicken. (The chicken is already very salty, so make sure your seasonings add no additional salt.) Arrange the vegetables in a twelve-inch cast-iron skillet or a stove-safe three-quart baking dish, making sure to pour in any oil or ghee that’s pooled in the bottom of the bowl. Place the chicken on top of the vegetables, breast side up.

4. Place the skillet with the chicken and vegetables on a rack in the center of a cold oven, then set the oven temperature to 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Once the oven comes to temperature, let the chicken roast for ten minutes. Increase the oven temperature to 375 degrees and let roast for another ten minutes. Continue increasing the oven temperature by 25 degrees every ten minutes until you set the oven temperature to 450 degrees. Once the oven temperature is set at 450 degrees, continue roasting the chicken until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the thickest part of the breast reads 155 degrees—about twenty to twenty-five minutes. (The chicken will be in the oven for about eighty minutes total.) When it’s finished, the chicken should be bronzed and crisp-skinned, and the vegetables should be just on the edge of charred.

5. Using tongs or paper towels in your hands, gently lift the chicken, allowing any juices to pour out and onto the vegetables, then move the chicken from the skillet to a cutting board. Let the chicken rest for at least twenty minutes, or up to an hour.

6. While the chicken is resting, set the skillet, still containing the vegetables, on a stovetop burner over medium heat. Pour in the wine or other liquid, and stir with a wooden spoon, scraping up any brown bits stuck to the bottom of the skillet. When the sauce starts bubbling, add the butter, and stir until the mixture is smooth and shiny. At this point, the roasted vegetables may collapse into the sauce entirely. If you want to keep them whole, gently remove them with a slotted spoon before adding the butter. Hold the lemon half over the skillet and squeeze the juice into the sauce. Taste the sauce and adjust the seasoning with salt and pepper. If the sauce is too salty, add more liquid or water.

7. Carve the chicken and serve with the sauce. Return the hair dryer to the bathroom.

Cherokee Tires Opening in Mansfield

If you head North out of Mansfield on Highway 71, you’ll notice a banner located on the property between East Willis Street, and the abandoned Walmart building.
The sign marks the spot for Cherokee Tires which is currently offering tire sales at 1021 Hwy 71 South on the bypass across from the Ranger station in Waldron.
Cherokee Tires will offer new, and used tire sales, wheel alignment, and drive-thru oil changes at the Mansfield location. Construction should start within the next few weeks and will take approximately six weeks to complete.
“We recognized a need in our area to have a full tire shop that will be able to service passenger cars all the way up to commercial heavy duty trucks like log trucks, dump truck’s and 18-wheelers” said Cherokee Tires owner, Shawn Silvey.
Noting a recognizable face, Ben Garlin will be running the tire aspect of the business.

Mansfield School Board Meets Tonight

SCHOOL BOARD MEETING
March 26, 2018
Administration Building
6:00 P.M.
AGENDA

I. Call to Order
Prayer: Rick Nicodemus

II. Approval of Consent Agenda
A. Agenda
B. Financial Reports
C. Minutes of Board Meetings: February 26, 2018
II. Superintendent’s Report
A. FCCLA Recognition – Sue Ward
III. Board Action Required
A. Deputy Officer Reserve Program – Scott County Sherriff
B. Approval of Mowing Bids
C. Hire 10 Summer Workers
D. Child Nutrition Charge Policy
E. Child Nutrition Procurement Policy
F. Child Nutrition End or Year Policy
G. Public Notice of RFQ for Child Nutrition Management Consulting Services
H. Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) – DataPath HSA
I. Heath Insurance Portability Transfer Participant Approval
J. 2019-2020 Election Budget
K. Summer Projects
L. 2018-2019 Salary Schedules
M. 2018-2019 Additional Duty Table
N. 2018-2019 Certified Contract Renewal
O. Approval to Add Driver’s Education to High School Master Schedule
P. Hire High School/Middle School PE & Health Teacher / Coach
Q. Hire Middle School Science Teacher / Coach
R. Additional Coaching Stipend Positions
Other Board Communications
Adjourn

Pyles Pours It On

The instructions before getting off the bus were to check the egos at the door. Running at a big school track meet such as the one Mansfield attended on March 15 in Gravette has a way of making an individual question self worth. For one Tiger runner, he listened to instructions and just ran. The results were a pair of personal records.

Devon Pyles, Mansfield’s top ranked distance runner, decided to relax and just go with the flow. Racing against 6A and 7A sized schools among others could have been an excuse for the senior to sit back and mail in a pedestrian performance. Instead, he went out and competed.

Mansfield mentor, John Mackey, warned the bus load of men and women high school runners that the level of competition was going to be fierce. He and his past teams used to travel the Northwest Arkansas circuit with regularity while in the midst of winning 4 consecutive state championships from 2007 to 2010. Even then, high caliber athletes from the big school region had the occasion to humble Tiger pride.

It was Mackey’s message to not dwell on placing but rather focus on the times and distances the competition could bring out in them.

Pyles was one of the first Tigers to respond. Pushing pride aside, he challenged himself to stay with the top distance runners. Despite completing 3 individual races outside the top 8, the senior set personal records in his 1600m and 800m runs. It also went well in the 3200m run as he stuck to a blistering pace for a near best mark in that event as well.

In the 1600m run, Pyles rounded the 4 lap race in 5:15.54. Although finishing only in 14th place overall, he made a statement to the closest 3A Region 1 conference competitor by crossing 26 seconds sooner.

In the 800m run, the motivated runner poured out a time of 2:21.00. Teammate Joris Felius also caught fire with a 2:27.40 mark giving the MHS Tiger men the top two spots among nine conference opponents.

“It goes to show you how inconsequential the places can be,” commented Mackey. “Devon was 19th and Joris 31st in the 800m races. But, they were heads above of conference competition, and solid in triple A state terms.”

Mansfield’s Jaicy Griffin also ran without intimidation. He lined up in the fastest flight of the 100m dash competition and showed he belonged. In a wind aided sprint to the finish, he was 0.04 seconds off the 3A state qualifying mark.

Griffin’s 11.38 second measure over 100m distance stands among the best Tiger performances of all time. Compared to the 58 other athletes that ran the short race at Gravette, he was 14th overall.

The sophomore sprinter did not complete his night’s full schedule of events. An awkward push-off in the high jump lead to a slight ankle sprain giving cause for his coach to shut him down for the rest of the meet. That included a state qualifying try in the 200m dash. 

A hand held stopwatch at the Booneville Bearcat Relays last week showed Griffin should be capable of reaching the 23.31 state standard in the 200m dash.

Other bright spots for the Tigers included a first time pole vault competition for newcomer Will Meadows, and a season best triple jump by both Meadows and Lady Tiger Corrina Wesley. 

Meadows, just a sophomore, cleared 8’ 0” in the pole vault. He’s main competition in conference only went 7’ 6”.

Moments later Meadows found a spring in his step at the triple jump site. His bounce across the runway ended in a personal best 38’ 6”. That measure bested the second ranked conference jumper by over two feet yet it was only 16th among the entire field.

Wesley went 30’ 7” in the triple jump. The two-time state qualifier in that event didn’t hit the 30 foot threshold until late April last season. 

Wesley’s eighth place triple was a one of five actual ribbons won by the Mansfield legion. The other’s came in a collective effort in the girl’s 4x800m relay. Alyssa Berry, Corrina Wesley, Lennon Woods, and Megan Rose partnered for that run.

All-District candidate Megan Rose found the 3200m run her best event on the evening by finishing 9th among all runners. She also competed in the 1600m run (6:28) and the 800m run (2:57).

Delilah McKusker was the Lady Tigers’s best 300m hurdler at 1:00.97. 

Haylee Buckner missed a high jump ribbon due to early misses. She was tenth place at 4’ 6”.

Pending Lawsuit Still Looms

By Tammy Moore Teague
Although the mayor has tendered his resignation, officially he holds the office until April 5th. What does this mean for the city, more specifically, what impact will it have on the lawsuit Mayor Larry Austin filed against the council?
City Attorney, Matt Ketcham said “the fastest, easiest answer is that it doesn’t.” He went on to clarify that the remaining issue of the lawsuit questions the legality of the council’s decision to remove his name from the personnel book. “I remain resolute that what you did is exactly legal,” Ketcham said. “I stand behind that until a judge and jury tells me different.”
Ketcham has not spoken with Austin’s attorney, Joey McCutchen. It remains uncertain if his resignation will have any bearing on the future of the lawsuit. Because it is still pending, we will continue to monitor any unfolding news as it develops.

Council Set to Fill Mayor’s Seat

By Tammy Moore Teague
The bombshells resignation of Mansfield’s Mayor Larry Austin left many questions about the future of the city. Who will fill his shoes until November’s regular election, who will make that decision and when?
City Attorney, Matt Ketcham said that the council should appoint am interim mayor at the next regularly scheduled city council meeting.  Because Austin’s resignation isn’t effective until April 5th, it will not be until the April 12th that the council will discuss and ultimately decide who will fulfill the duties as mayor.
The only other option, which is neither cost effective or viable, is a special election. The city can expect a major shake up within its government with both the mayoral election and the option to re-elect three of the current sitting city council members.
Each ward in Mansfield has two positions. All position one’s are up for election this year, and those currently seated in those are Georganna Mabry, Rick McDaniel and Buddy Black. Black recently came on board to replace elected councilman Nathan Sterling. Sterling abruptly resigned his seat the night the council voted 5-1 to strip the mayor of some duties.
Austin served as mayor for the past three years, and is eight months shy of completing his elected term. Mabry, McDaniel and Black will accompany those making a bid for the mayor’s seat this November. The remaining three, Dave Johnson, Sheri Hopkins and Beverly Lyons will be up for re-election in 2020 and will accompany the office of city recorder/treasurer race.
Resident Press will be covering the campaigns of those who announce their bid for mayor.

Personnel Shake Up Continues

by Tammy Moore Teague
Although the biggest news of the night was the resignation of the mayor, other news at Thursday’s city council meeting included the business of street repair, addressing ADEQ violations and waste water plant equipment.
Public Works Director Ken Swilling reported to the council that he could recommend a company to provide materials for street repair. After discussions, the council decided to save money by hauling the material themselves and to purchase five tons.
City recorder/treasurer, Becky Walker, who served as an overseer of the meeting, reported that the pumps initially ordered for the waste water plant were not compatible. These correct are much more costly at $8,450 each. This price included a pro-rated warranty, however it did not include the cost of frieght. The council voted to proceed with the purchase as it is delaying the progress of getting the plant up to the Arkansas Department of Environmental Equality’s code.
Additionally, Landmark Engineering’s services would be needed to clear other issues with the plant. These issues include discharge monitoring reports or DMRs, non compliance forms and photos of the repaired tanks. None of these have been submitted to ADEQ. The cost for the city to implore their services was estimated at $600-$700.
At ten till eight the council went into executive session to discuss personnel matters. Upon reconvening, they approved some increased raises for employees in an effort to show employee appreciation and boost morale. “We must take care of our people,” Walker said “they are the most important of all.”
The next weekly meeting of the city council will be postponed and moved to Thursday March 29th. Business slated for that meeting includes more discussion on the waste water plant and updates on the street repairs.

BGCA Community Advisory Meeting Planned

All interested community members are welcome to attend a community advisory meeting planned for March 27th, at 6:30pm at Mansfield City Hall.
The focus of this meeting is to find out more information about opening a Boys and Girls Club in Mansfield.
For questions, or more information, please contact Stephanie Stipins at (479) 883-7126