Stillwater malt shop to offer free meal to veterans

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If you served — or are serving — in the armed forces, Leo’s Grill & Malt Shop in downtown Stillwater will serve you a free meal on Saturday, Veterans Day.

The meals will be available between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. The restaurant is planning to serve more than 300 veterans this year, and numerous donors have come forward to pay for meals for spouses, said Cory Buettner, the restaurant’s owner.

No proof of service is necessary, and veterans may choose from the entire menu, Buettner said.

This is the 16th year that Buettner has offered the meals to veterans. Leo’s is named for Buettner’s father, who served in the Army during World War II.

Former employees of Leo’s come back to the restaurant on Veterans Day to volunteer and help serve, Buettner said. “This is their favorite day to work,” he said. “There are a lot of handshakes, some hugs and some tears.”

Second graders from Brookview Elementary School in Woodbury helped decorate the restaurant with “Letters to Our Heroes.” They also painted rocks for the veterans, Buettner said.

Buettner said he especially looks forward to “welcoming home” Vietnam veterans at the event.

“As a kid, I recall the disrespect that took place, and some of it was from me,” he said. “I feel compelled to try to make it right for them. We really love that we are able to do this every year, and we appreciate our guests who support us year-round to make it possible.”

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The relentless determination of new Vikings quarterback Josh Dobbs

posted in: News | 0

Josh Dobbs never missed school growing up in Alpharetta, Ga. Not a single day in 13 years.

It started off as a friendly competition with his mother Stephanie Dobbs during his adolescence. She only missed school once as a kid, and she reminded her son of that accomplishment often. If he wanted to beat her, there was literally no margin for error.

That served as a compass for Dobbs throughout elementary school, middle school and high school. Nothing was going to stop him from having perfect attendance. Not even his own college decision.

As a star quarterback for Alpharetta High School, he skillfully navigated the recruitment process in a way that ensured he never got marked absent. His father Robert Dobbs recalled that if his son had an official visit set up, he would go to school long enough to get credit, then the family would race to the airport to catch a flight. If they missed the plane, they missed the plane.

The closest he got to missing school came during his senior year when he was selected to play for Team USA in the International Bowl. It would have required him to miss a full week of classes. After taking some time with the decision, he respectfully declined the invitation to the International Bowl.

Obviously, Dobbs went on to graduate with perfect attendance, symbolic of the relentless determination that continues to drive him in everything he does. If he sets his mind on something, he’s going to make it happen, no matter the circumstance surrounding the situation.

So maybe it shouldn’t come as a surprise that a 28-year-old NFL journeyman took the field last weekend and led the Vikings to an improbable 31-28 win over the Falcons.

This is who Josh Dobbs is. This is who Josh Dobbs has always been.

The prelude

It was a shock to the system for Dobbs a couple of weeks ago when he found out he was being traded. He had just moved into a new house and was finally starting to settle into his life as a member of the Arizona Cardinals. The next thing he knew, he was getting on a plane as a member of the Vikings.

“It’s a part of the process,” Dobbs said during his introductory press conference. “It’ll be a tremendous story to tell.”

That prophetic statement came about 72 hours before he became a folk hero in Minnesota.

Not knowing any of that at the time, however, Dobbs was simply looking forward to the fact that the next game for the Vikings was being played about 30 minutes from his hometown.

That meant he was going to get to to see his parents the night before the game. They had a nice dinner at a steakhouse near the team hotel in Atlanta. It had been a whirlwind of a week for Dobbs, so the sense of normalcy was much welcomed, even if only for a couple of hours.

“It’s a family tradition for away games that we try to have a meal with him if we can,” his father said. “We drove down and treated it just like it was any other away game for him.”

There have been many meals shared over the years, as Dobbs played collegiately at the University of Tennessee, and has spent time professionally with the Steelers, Jaguars, Browns, Lions, Titans, Cardinals and Vikings.

As he’s bounced around the NFL, Dobbs has carried himself with the relentless determination that has gotten him this far. That has been on display since he was a 10-year-old running run the length of the field on his own volition after practice.

“We would do hills after practice and a lot of kids would cry because they wanted to stop,”  youth football coach Bob Rech said. “Then there was Josh doing his thing out there. You knew he was going to make it big. Everybody in Alpharetta did.”

As good an athlete as Dobbs was at the time, the people in Alpharetta tend to agree that he was an even better person. That explains how he has maintained such a loyal fan base wherever he’s gone.

“He’s kind of Alpharetta’s favorite son,” current Alpharetta High School football coach Jason Kervin said. “We’re really proud of him down here.”

The moment

Asked about watching his son trot onto the field for the Vikings last weekend, Robert Dobbs mentioned that he and his wife were initially more concerned with how rookie quarterback Jaren Hall was doing after absorbing a big hit near the goal line.

They have always watched games with the safety of the players at the forefront of their minds, As a result, they were focused on Hall walking toward the medical tent, not Dobbs starting to take snaps on the sideline.

“To look out and realize that Josh is coming into the game, it was hard not to get a little emotional about it,” Robert Dobbs said. “We were just hoping he would go out there and do the best he could.”

His best was even better than anybody could have imagined.

After growing up watching former Falcons quarterback Michael Vick dominate at the old Georgia Dome, Dobbs took centerstage at the new Mercedes Benz Stadium. He finished 20 of 30 passing for 158 yards and a pair of touchdowns, along with 66 rushing yards and another touchdown. He capped his incredible performance with an 11-play, 75-yard drive that culminated in a touchdown pass in the final minute that proved to be the difference.

“It was a very surreal moment,” Dobbs said. “That’s something I’m going to remember for a long time.”

His parents got to watch the whole thing unfold from some good seats perched behind the Vikings sideline. They were so close to the field, in fact, that Dobbs actually spotted them during the game.

Meanwhile, roughly 30 minutes away in Alpharetta, nobody seemed too upset about the Vikings beating the Falcons. If anybody was going to beat their home-state team, it might as well be the hometown kid.

“He’s still a really big deal around here,” former Alpharetta High School principal Shannon Kersey said. “Everybody is so excited that he’s getting this opportunity now to play in the NFL.”

This has been more than a decade in the making for Dobbs. Fittingly, the first game he played for Alpharetta High School played out eerily similar to the first game he played for the Vikings.

“He got his shot midway through the game,” former Alpharetta High School football coach Jacob Nichols remembered. “He marched us right down the field like he had been running the offense his whole life. We decided to stick with him. He played the rest of that game, threw a touchdown pass with a few seconds left on the clock, and the rest is history, as the saying goes.”

That sound familiar?

The aftermath

There wasn’t much time for Dobbs to see his parents after the game. He estimated that he got about 30 seconds with them after he wrapped up his interviews. Enough time to give both of them a big hug before he had to get going.

“I gave them my jersey and everything,” Dobbs said. “That was such a cool moment.”

It was equally as special for his parents. They waited patiently for their son after the game knowing he was going to be a very popular person. He emerged from the locker room with a big smile on his face and signed some autographs on his way toward them.

“He walked up with the jersey in hand,” Robert Dobbs said. ” Just pure joy for us in that moment.”

The family home in Alpharetta has a bunch of memorabilia documenting the journey that has led Dobbs to this point. The jersey from last weekend will get prominent placement for what it represents.

As he reflected on last weekend, Robert Dobbs kept coming back to a particular exchange between his son and Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell that might have otherwise gone unnoticed during the celebration.

“To see how he embraced Josh at the end of that game brought tears to my eyes,” Robert Dobbs said. “I’ll never forget that. It was a wonderful feeling. We feel very grateful that he’s with the Vikings.”

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The GOP’s internal war over how to message abortion policy is shifting

posted in: Politics | 0

Back in April, Nikki Haley delivered a speech at Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America’s headquarters that left officials from the anti-abortion group disappointed and positioned her as an outlier in the field.

The former U.N. ambassador declined to commit to a federal 15-week limit on the procedure and spoke broadly about “sensitivity” and finding “national consensus.” Anti-abortion activists warned that her approach would alienate base voters.

On Wednesday, Haley delivered a similar line on abortion during the third GOP primary debate, declaring that she remains personally opposed but does not “judge anyone for being pro-choice.” This time around, she wasn’t being viewed as an anomaly among the candidates, but as the possible template for others in the party to follow.

“It feels like everyone’s kind of heading in the same direction, and it’s toward the position Nikki has articulated from the beginning,” said Republican strategist David Kochel, a longtime fixture of Iowa politics. Haley had “the answer that most Republicans should be learning how to articulate, because it makes so much sense … We need people in our coalition who have diverse opinions about abortion.”

The Republican Party is in the midst of a potentially seismic shift when it comes to how it talks about abortion. In the years before the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, few, if any, serious presidential aspirants were willing to risk being portrayed as anything less than 100 percent on board with the anti-abortion standards set by leaders of the cause.

But over the past year, as voters have consistently backed codifying abortion rights in their states — including in Ohio, the night before the debate — GOP candidates up and down the ballot have tried to moderate or muddy their message, even while continuing to back abortion restrictions.

The current runaway favorite for president, Donald Trump, has repeatedly warned that the Republican Party risks electoral calamity if it comes off as too doctrinaire. That Haley, the most ascendant of the also-rans, has staked out a softer approach, too, suggests there is currently little political downside in doing so.

The Haley campaign is feeling vindicated. Having endured criticism over her approach early in the race, aides feel she is “teaching the GOP how to talk about this,” as one campaign official put it. It does not go unnoticed that she is doing so as the only woman in the race.

“She is on a primary debate stage surrounded by men,” the campaign official, granted anonymity to speak freely, said. “The first debate, they were literally all wearing the same thing. Here she was, a voice of reason and clarity. I think it just struck people.”

Haley’s moderation, Democrats argue, is on rhetoric, not substance. As a governor and a state legislator, she supported anti-abortion laws and continues to pledge to sign the most restrictive one that would reach her desk. Top surrogates of the Biden campaign, which has made no secret of its plans to run on abortion, were quick to slam her debate response, attempting to frame her as an extremist, despite her hesitance to embrace a specific federal standard.

But as a matter of messaging, it is clear that the GOP primary field has moved in Haley and Trump’s direction. With former Vice President Mike Pence now out of the race, and former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson no longer on the debate stage, there is little public embrace in the GOP primary of a national abortion law.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — who signed a six-week abortion ban in his state and agreed to sign a 15-week national abortion restriction if president — didn’t mention that pledge during the third debate. Instead, he told a personal story about appointing a state Supreme Court justice whose mother had been counseled to abort her.

Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie maintained that the issue was one for states to decide for themselves. Biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy declined during the debate to give a direct answer to the question of a 15-week ban — though he has repeatedly said it should be decided at the state level — instead calling for “sexual responsibility for men.”

The one exception was Sen. Tim Scott, who embraced a 15-week ban.

For leaders in the anti-abortion movement, it feels off — and a bit frustrating — that the loudest voices in the party have failed to adopt the proposed 15-week messaging. Having finally achieved their decadeslong goal of dismantling Roe, they believe Republicans need to not act defensive.

“I think clarity is a gift in politics, and the only one with any sense of clarity at all was Tim Scott,” said Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, remarking on the most recent debate. “Voters in the Republican primaries deserve to hear not nuance, but they deserve to hear what the candidates would actually do. I don’t think the question could be asked in any simpler way than the moderators have asked.”

Dannenfelser said she has not spoken with Haley since her speech at their headquarters in April, or with Trump since she held a meeting with him later in the spring. But she is holding out hope that they have a change of heart on how they’re approaching abortion policy.

But a change of heart seems increasingly unlikely.

On Tuesday, voters passed an amendment enshrining abortion into the constitution in the red state of Ohio, in what was widely seen as a political bellwether for voters leading into 2024. And Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin, having pushed a 15-week limit as a sensible middle ground, saw Democrats in his state retain the state Senate and win over the House.

Long before then, Trump had argued that the GOP needed to change how it tackled abortion. More recently, at back-to-back events in September for the conservative groups Concerned Women for America and Family Research Council, he said it was possible to win on abortion, but “it’s very delicate and explaining it properly is an extremely important thing.”

Trump — who touts nominating the conservative Supreme Court justices who overturned Roe but rarely offers specifics on his abortion position — has underscored the importance of exceptions in the case of rape, incest or when the life of the mother is endangered. And he has criticized six-week abortion bans as “a terrible thing and a terrible mistake.” He has instead offered to sit down with Democrats and Republicans to “negotiate something” on abortion.

Penny Nance, the CEO of Concerned Women for America, said she agreed with Trump’s premise that messaging around abortion needs to improve. But she said the solution was not to try and “dodge the issue and go soft on [it],” but more conviction and resources behind the anti-abortion cause.

“It’s not going to go away, and it’s going to be top of the Democrats agenda in 2024. So, Republicans need to learn their lessons, and they need to put their money where their mouth is,” Nance said. “When we’re getting outspent 9 to 1, what do they think was going to happen?”

Haley’s camp, for its part, sees no need to change course. After Wednesday’s debate, positive feedback, including for her abortion answer, came pouring in publicly and privately, a campaign official said. Haley raised more than $1 million in the 24 hours after the debate, setting a record day for the campaign’s small-dollar fundraising. A post-debate 538/Washington Post/Ipsos poll declared her the clear winner of the night.

While the praise she is receiving for a less-defined abortion policy might frustrate some leaders of social conservative groups, others have been less insistent that the candidates follow a strict script.

Ralph Reed, chairman of the Faith and Freedom Coalition, said there should be a “highly organic process and an ongoing conversation” between the candidates, anti-abortion and other conservative groups, voters and party officials.

“They need to be both principled and pragmatic, where they are not retreating one inch on being pro-life and standing for the ultimate goal of every child being safe in its mothers womb,” Reed said. “But they have to be pragmatic about what’s achievable today on the state and federal level.”

“In the near term,” Reed said, “most of the progress will be in the states.”

The Loop NFL Picks: Week 10

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Saints at Vikings (+2½)
Former Vikings quarterback Fran Tarkenton was wowed by Joshua Dobbs’ performance last Sunday, saying what the replacement QB did was “impossible.” Tarkenton’s a bit of an expert on things “impossible” from his days trying in vain to win Super Bowls.
Pick: Vikings by 3

Jets at Raiders (+1½)
Injured Aaron Rodgers was in full backtrack mode after saying on the field Monday night that he’d be back quarterbacking the Jets in “several weeks.: He quickly amended that to “several fortnights,” then admitted he’s going to spend the next several months playing only Fortnite.
Pick: Raiders by 3

Broncos at Bills (-6½)
Former Bills star O.J. Simpson, looking like the frail 76-year-old he is, was seen shuffling down the street in Las Vegas. Despite his hobbled state, he was recently turned down by Visiting Angels when he tried to hire them to take over his search for The Real Killers.
Pick: Bills by 11

Falcons at Cardinals (+1½)
Kyler Murray is expected to return as Arizona’s QB. That means last week’s starter, Clayton Tune, has probably started his last NFL game, giving him something in common with the Vikings’ Jaren Hall.
Pick: Falcons by 7

Lions at Chargers (+1½)
The Chargers finally looked playoff worthy by routing the New York Jets on Monday Night Football. The game was so bad that it was almost as unwatchable as the Manningcast with Arnold Schwarzenegger’s donkey.
Pick: Chargers by 3

Giants at Cowboys (-16½)
The Giants have made it clear that last-string Tommy Devito will quarterback the rest of the season, making them a strong bet to finish with the NFL’s worst record. That news caused New York fans to shudder and USC’s Caleb Williams to collapse weeping in his mother’s arms.
Pick: Cowboys by 24

Titans at Buccaneers (+1½)
Tennessee has named rookie Will Levis the starting quarterback after just two games leading the Titans’ offense. Levis obviously surpassed the ridiculously low bar of being better than Ryan Tannehill.
Pick: Titans by 3

49ers at Jaguars (+2½)
The 49ers raised eyebrows by trading at the deadline to get Washington pass rushing star Chase Young. It’s a surprisingly astute move for a franchise that just traded away a king’s ransom for the likes of Trey Lance.
Pick: 49ers by 3

Texans at Bengals (-6½)
Houston backup running back Dare Ogunbowale made headlines by kicking a go-ahead field goal last Sunday after the Texans’ kicker was injured .He’s the brother of WNBA star Arike Ogunbowale of the Dallas Wings who, it turns out, have as much chance of winning a Super Bowl as the Houston Texans.
Pick: Bengals by 8

Packers at Steelers (-3½)
Pittsburgh coach Mike Tomlin dismissed tensions with his malcontent receiver, saying Geroge Pickens is “a pebble in my shoes.” The stress is nothing compared to Tomlin’s many years of Antonio Brown being a porcupine in an unmentionable place.
Pick: Steelers by 7

Other games

Colts vs Patriots (+2½):
Pick: Colts by 3

Browns at Ravens (-5½): .
Pick: Ravens by 3

Commanders at Seahawks (-6½):
Pick: Seahawks by 7

Bye weeks

Chiefs, Dolphins, Rams, Eagles

Record

Week 9
9-5 straight up
7-7 vs. spread

Season
84-52 straight up (.618)
70-66 vs. spread (.515)

You can hear Kevin Cusick on Wednesdays on Bob Sansevere’s “BS Show” podcast on iTunes. You can follow Kevin on Twitter — @theloopnow. He can be reached at kcusick@pioneerpress.com.

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