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Flying free
Kindergartners in Cathy Rust's class bid farewell Monday to a butterfly they had been observing from egg to caterpillar to cocoon and finally to a winged beauty. Pictured above are (from left) Jenna Schelhaas, Monaya Hustoft, Brian Rose, Tayla Peterson, Trenton Rops, Tanner Kurrasch (kneeling), McKenzi Wenninger and Kaitlin Cohrs. "We've read stories and poems, sang songs and made a butterfly booklet," Rust said. "The children loved watching and learning about the process. It was very hard for them to let it go. They wanted it as a classroom pet."

Photo by Lori Ehde

Hilda Carsrud

Hilda B. Carsrud, 81, Luverne, died Wednesday, Sept. 18, 2002, at Redeemer Residence Nursing Home in Minneapolis.

Services were Monday, Sept. 23, at St. John Lutheran Church in Luverne. The Rev. Gary Klatt officiated. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery, Luverne.

Hilda Richards was born to Earl and Hilda (Olson) Richards on Feb. 4, 1921, in Luverne. She graduated from Luverne High School. After her schooling she worked for Herman Motor Company in Luverne.

She married George Carsrud on Dec. 18, 1940, in Luverne. They owned and operated Duchess CafŽ with Orrie and Edith Skattum and later operated the EightyÕs Drive-In in Luverne. She worked side by side with her husband in the Standard Oil business. She also worked at Luverne Style Shop for 22 years.

Mrs. Carsrud was a member of St. John Lutheran Church in Luverne and was active in numerous church groups. She was the chairperson for Rock County Extension Service and was a 4-H leader. She also belonged to the VFW Auxiliary.

Survivors include her husband, George Carsrud, Minneapolis; four children, Cynthia Wedmore, Minneapolis, Gregory (Michelle) Carsud, Owatonna, Richard Carsrud, Dana Point, Calif., and Catherine (Bill) Pfister, Chicago, Ill.; nine grandchildren; and five great-grandchildren.

Mrs. Carsrud was preceded in death by her parents and her twin sister, Edith Skattum.

Dingmann Funeral Home, Luverne, was in charge of arrangements.

Paul Anderson

Paul M. Anderson, 90, died Saturday, Sept. 14, 2002, at N.C. Little Hospice in Edina.

Paul Anderson was born July 20, 1912, in Norway, Iowa. He graduated from St. Olaf College, Northfield, in 1938. He married Renza Halls on June 20, 1942. During his 35-year career in aeronautical engineering at Honeywell, he was involved in several projects for the United States space program. He retired in 1977 and turned his energies to an active retirement centered on volunteer activities.

Music was an important part of Paul's life. During his college days he sang in the St. Olaf Choir. He also sang in the Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd Choir for many years. He was often called upon to perform solos. He combined his love of music and his Norwegian heritage by singing with the Nordkap Male Chorus. He was a member of the Aquatennial Senior Royalty Singers and responsible for their sound system, as well as being involved in other Aquatennial activities. He and his wife, Renza, volunteered as camera operators for Seniors on Screen, a cable television show, until he became ill this past January. He was a member of Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd nearly 50 years and a member of Calvary Lutheran Church in Golden Valley the past seven years.

Survivors include his wife, Renza Anderson; three children, Claire Benson, John Anderson and Joan Scheppke; and three grandchildren, Mark Hoffmann, Lea Scheppke and Kate Scheppke.

Mr. Anderson was preceded in death by his sister, Mildred Bakken, and his brother, Luther.

Where the buffalo roam

Veterinarian and rancher, Dr. John Bowron, Luverne, sweet talks an unusually mild bison bull as he feeds him some pellet treats Thursday, Sept. 12. This particular bull is gentle, but is also suffering from some wounds inflicted by another bull in the herd. Bowron cautioned the tour group to keep limbs in the trailer when throwing pellets to the bison, because they are "quick, unpredictable and a little dangerous."

The tourists were from the sister city of Worthington - Crailsheim, Germany, whose mayor, Andreas Raab, is pictured between Luverne Mayor Glen Gust (right) and Worthington Mayor Bob Demuth. Gust presented Raab with a framed bison print on behalf of the city of Luverne. The animal, uniquely native to North America, became a fascinating photo opportunity to the group. Worthington has had a 55-year relationship with Crailsheim and 30 of its residents came to the United States for a tour of southwest Minnesota and visit to California.

Photo by Sara Strong

LHS homecoming candidates

Luverne High School candidates for homecoming king and queen are (front row, from left) Jamison Tooley, Jesse Kuhlman, Cody Jagow, Aaron Schmidt, Daniel Amborn, (back) Hannah Breyfogle, Serena Franken, Krista Wynia, Abby Klosterbuer and Stacy Burmeister. Coronation is at 8 p.m. Monday, Sept. 30, with a reception at 9. Among a week full of homecoming activities next week, the volleyball team will play Russell-Tyler-Ruthton Tuesday, the cross country team will host its annual Cardinal Autumn Invitational Thursday, the same day the girls' tennis team meets Martin County West. The Cardinal homecoming football game will be played against Marshall Friday.

Bobcats are no match for H-BC-E squad

By John Rittenhouse
The Hills-Beaver Creek-Ellsworth Patriots had little trouble posting their third win of the season when they traveled to Lake Benton for a Southwest Ridge Conference tilt Friday.

Playing their first road game of the season didn't seem to bother the Patriots, who scored 41 consecutive points in the gameÕs first 27:42 during what ended up being a 41-16 victory.

Lake Benton gambled on defense to stop H-BC-E's impressive running attack by crowding the line of scrimmage with as many as eight defenders.

That strategy backfired as H-BC-E scored four rushing touchdowns covering 48 or more yards in the game.

"They were playing a 4-4 defense that was really tight at the line of scrimmage," said Patriot coach Dan Ellingson. "Our blocking was good, which opened some big holes up for our runners. When we got our backs through the initial line of scrimmage, they were gone."

Senior tailback Chris Reid did most of the damage to Lake Benton's defense.

Reid ran the ball 14 times for 220 yards, averaging 15.7 yards with each carry. Of his 220 yards, 165 yards came on three touchdown runs that were 48 yards or longer.

Reid made his presence known early in the game.

H-BC-E received the kick to start the contest on the Lake Benton 36-yard line. On the first play from scrimmage, Reid dashed 64 yards for a touchdown and a 6-0 lead.

H-BC-E ended up scoring touchdowns during its first six offensive possessions of the game.

The second possession was capped by an eight-yard scamper by Reid at the 6:50 mark of the opening period. Reid hauled in a two-point conversion pass from quarterback Curt Schilling to make it 14-0 difference.

After getting the ball back later in the opening period, the H-BC-E offense put together a drive that ended on the first play of the second quarter. Schilling hit Tyson Metzger for a three-yard touchdown pass, and Zach Wysong added the extra point for a 21-0 advantage.

A pair of explosive runs by Reid increased H-BC-E's lead to 35-0 before the first half was complete.

Reid sprinted 53 yards for a score at the 8:56 mark of the second period, and found the end zone again at the end of a 48-yard run with 3:39 left to play in the half. Wysong kicked extra points after both touchdowns.

The Bobcats did have a scoring opportunity late in the first half as they were in a first-and-goal situation at the H-BC-E six. After advancing the ball to the two with three plays, a run on fourth down was stopped on the one, giving H-BC-E the ball on downs.

H-BC-E's defense stopped Lake BentonÕs first offensive series of the second half, giving the Patriot offense the ball on its own 47. Fullback Jesse Leuthold rumbled 53 yards for a score during H-BC-EÕs first offensive play in the third quarter, making the difference 41-0.

Ellingson replaced his starters with reserves at that point, and Lake Benton was able to take advantage of the situation.

Bobcat quarterback Matt Prosch tossed a 56-yard touchdown pass to Jason Schwing at the 4:16 mark of the third quarter. A successful conversion run made the score 41-8.

The Prosch-Schwing combination clicked for a 37-yard touchdown pass in the fourth quarter. Another successful conversion run capped the scoring with 6:46 left to play.

All things considered, Ellingson was proud of the way his team played against the Bobcats.

"I thought we played really well," he said. "The thing I liked was we got our passing game going on offense. We were 13 of 19 passing. That opened things up for our runners, because Lake Benton had to respect the pass defensively."

The Patriots will try to improve their record to 4-0 when they host Edgerton for their homecoming game Friday.

Edgerton is 1-2 overall after a pair of losses followed a season-opening victory.

Team statistics
H-BC-E: 343 rushing yards, 107 passing yards, 450 total yards, 10 first downs, five penalties for 25 yards, one turnover.
Lake Benton: 114 rushing yards, 149 passing yards, 263 total yards, three first downs, five penalties for 30 yards, zero turnovers.

Individual statistics
Rushing: Reid 14-220, Leuthold 10-85, Schilling 2-12, Dusty Seachris 6-9, Jordan Scott 7-22, Travis Broesder 2-minus five.
Passing: Schilling 13-19 for 107 yards.
Receiving: Metzger 5-30, Wysong 3-42, Kyle Sammons 2-8, Brant Deutsch 1-13, Leuthold 1-6, Reid 1-3.
Defense: Schilling nine tackles, Scott five tackles, Leuthold five tackles and one sack, Pat Nelson three tackles and one sack, Cody Scholten five tackles, Seachris five tackles, Deutsch two tackles and one sack.

Runners test skills at Iowa meet

By John Rittenhouse
The Hills-Beaver Creek-Ellsworth-Edgerton boys' cross country team turned in a strong performance at a meet in Iowa Monday.

Competing in the West Lyon Invitational, staged at Meadow Acres Country Club near Larchwood, the Patriot boys placed second in a 12-team field with 62 points.

Okoboji won the team event with 47 points, but Patriot coach Tom Goehle was satisfied with placing second.

"There is some good competition at this meet," he said. "Some of these schools have outstanding cross country traditions. When you can say that you placed second as a team at this meet, you know that you ran well."

Tyler Bush and Zach Hadler led the Patriots to victory by placing first and third with respective 17:39 and 18:01 times.

Greg Van Batavia (17th in 19:08), Todd Alberty (20th in 19:18) and Kale Wiertzema (21st in 19:24) contributed to H-BC-E-EÕs second-place performance.

"Collectively, I think this was as good as our varsity boys have run this year," Goehle added.

Mya Mann and Erika Fransen ran solid junior varsity races for the Patriot girls by finishing second and eighth with times of 17:01 and 17:25. Rayne Sandoval placed 13th in 18:07.

Derek Haak led H-BC-E-E in the boysÕ junior varsity race by finishing ninth in 20:36.

John Sandbulte (15th in 21:50), Devin DeBoer (20th in 22:51), Michael Bos (26th in 23:13), Jared Drenth (27th in 23:23) and Justin Hinks (51st in 30:09) also ran in the junior varsity event.

H-BC-E-E will compete at a meet in Princeton Saturday.

ML-B-O sweeps Patriots

Hills-Beaver Creek senior Sarah Rozeboom comes up empty when trying to keep the ball in play during Thursday's home volleyball match against Mountain Lake-Butterfield-Odin. Rozeboom had two kills and completed all five of her serves in a 3-0 loss to the Wolverines.

By John Rittenhouse
Hills-Beaver Creek was unable to break into the win column in Red Rock Conference volleyball play when it hosted Mountain Lake-Butterfield-Odin for a league match Thursday.

The Patriots played well at times in the match, especially in the third game.

ML-B-O, however, rose to the challenge whenever the situation called for it while posting a 3-0 win.

H-BC put up a good fight in Game 3, when it turned a 5-2 deficit into a 9-5 lead by putting together a 7-0 run.

Angie Sjaarda served a four-point run during the rally that featured two ace blocks and one kill by Erin Boeve. Boeve served the next three points with Sarah Rozeboom providing one kill.

It seemed like the Patriots were in control of the third game with a four-point cushion, but the Wolverines bounced back to score the next 10 points to post a 15-9 win.

ML-B-O scored the first three points in Game 1 before going on a 9-1 surge to open a 12-1 cushion.

A pair of service points by Melinda Sandstede, a kill by Kelly Mulder and an ace serve by Angie Bush trimmed ML-B-O's lead to seven points (12-5), but the Wolverines scored the next three points to ice a 15-5 victory.

ML-B-O scored the first four points of the second game before going on an 8-3 run while opening a 12-3 lead.

The score was 14-4 when H-BC put together a 5-0 run consisting of one service point from Melissa Fagerness and two kills, one ace tip and one point from Boeve to make it a 14-9 difference before ML-B-O clinched a 15-9 win.

Boeve led the Patriots with 14 kills and six blocks in the match, while Mulder added two kills and one ace.

Rozeboom (five of five), Cassi Tilstra (three of three) and Sandstede (seven of seven) were perfect at the service line. Rozeboom charted two kills.

Patriot coach Curt Doorneweerd credited Fagerness for displaying outstanding hustle during the match.

German exchange students attend classes at H-BC

By Jolene Farley
Hills-Beaver Creek High School welcomed two exchange students this fall, both from Germany, through International Cultural Exchange Services.

Esther Oehlschlaegel, 16, from Hildesheim, Germany, is staying with Matt and Cindy Larson, Beaver Creek. She arrived in the United States Aug. 19.

"I like it here," she said. "It's very small and more rural than my town, but it has the advantage that everybody is very friendly. They all are very interested and very helpful."

Oehlschlaegel decided a long time ago she wanted to become an exchange student. She was always interested in other countries, learning a new language and about a new culture.

"I was always very interested in trying to see how America really was... we know so much from television, newspapers and radio," she said. "I wanted to check if it was the way we thought."

Oehlschlaegel said she isn't very homesick. "I miss my friends and family, but it's not so bad because I'm happy here."

Oehlschlaegel's father, Thomas, works for a computer science company and her mother, Christine, is a teacher. She has a brother, Gunnar, 20.

Oehlschlaegel said Germans were shocked when they heard about the events of Sept. 11. "We never expected something like this could happen."

Her government class in Germany spent many days discussing the background of the countries involved and possible reasons for the attack.

She thinks United States citizens are more loyal to their country than German citizens are. "They (Americans) are so proud of themselves, everyone feels like a patriot, is proud of their country," she said. "In Germany, we are not so proud of our country, of our history."

Corrina Braun, 17, from Berlin, Germany, arrived in the United States on Aug. 26. She is staying with Merle and Shelley Knobloch, Hills.

Braun said she wanted to vacation in the United States her entire life, so when she discovered she could spend an entire year in the States, she signed up.

"I couldn't decide if I wanted to go to a big town or a small town," she said. "I said if I want to go to the USA I try to live in a small town." Her hometown, Berlin, is a large city.

Braun wanted to learn more about American culture and learn better English.

She said students in Berlin study English for six years.

"Sometimes, it is not so hard as I thought it would be," she said. "If many people are together and talk with each other really fast I don't understand them."

She said she appreciates their patience as she learns.

"The American people are friendly," she said. "You can ask three times the same question and they are always friendly."

Braun said there is a difference between German and United States meals. "They (Americans) go often out for eating," she said. "Many people eat sweet things for breakfast."

She said in Germany people eat less fast food. Braun's mother cooks the family's meals or they eat out maybe once or twice a month.

Braun's father, Ralf, works with computers, and her mother, Monika, is a dental assistant. She has a younger sister, Celia, 11.

Oehlschlaegel and Braun will return to Germany next summer.

Larchwood bank moves into new building

By Jolene Farley
Security Savings Bank, Larchwood, moved into a new building Sept. 9. With approximately 7,200 square feet, the new building resolves space shortages in the former building on Main Street in Larchwood.

Construction began on the new building last fall. "The weather was cooperative," said Larch Bancorporation President Rod Bonander. "They were pretty much able to work over the entire winter."

Larch Bancorporation is the holding company for Security Savings Bank and its branch bank in Inwood, Iowa. It also owns the Exchange State Bank of Hills and its Steen branch bank.

According to management the new building will provide a better working environment for employees and better service for customers. It has six offices that circle the lobby for bank use.

"It's more accessible to customers," said Joel Klatt, vice president of Security Savings Bank. "Just by having more offices available in the lobby area."

In addition, legal firm Lachlan, Murphy and Bonander occupies the offices in the back of the building.

"We were desperately short on drive-up window space," said Bonander. Drive-up window traffic at the old location would, at times, back up onto Highway 9. The new location has two drive-up windows, with a drive that circles behind the bank.

The bank also needed additional operational space, according to Bonander. In the past, data processing was sent to a computer firm, but now it is done in house at the bank.

Security Savings Bank is a full-service banking facility with an emphasis on small business, farmers and consumers.

As the makeup of Larchwood and surrounding communities has changed over the years, more and more people live in town and commute to work in Sioux Falls 15 miles away.

"You have to provide better convenience for people who are commuting back and forth to work," he said. "We are seeing more in personal loans and single family dwelling type loans."

The bank currently employs 10 people and has no immediate plans to hire more, but the building is designed for expansion, should the need arise.

An open house is tentatively planned for the second or third week in October.

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