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Luverne Blaze hosts fastpitch softball Bash-A-Rama tournament

The Luverne Blaze fastpitch summer softball club hosted its third annual Bash-A-Rama tournament Saturday, July 8, and Sunday, July 9.
Thirty-two total teams, some from as far away as Pierre, South Dakota, participated in four age brackets, 10U, 12U, 14U and 16/18U.
Each team played two games Saturday to determine which bracket (gold or silver) they would compete in Sunday. In bracket play, teams that lost were out of the tournament.
The Luverne Blaze had two teams in the 10U bracket.
On Saturday, Blaze 1 lost 15-0 to the Blitz (Brandon Valley), lost 15-5 to Fusion Heat (Brandon) and lost to Hit-Stix 14-5.
On Sunday, Blaze 1 fell to Boltz (Sioux Falls) 15-2.
Blaze 2 lost to Flare (Watertown) 13-1, Boltz (Sioux Falls) 15-0 and the Wildcats (Brandon) 13-8.
On Sunday, Blaze 2 fell to Hit Stix 17-2.
In the 12U bracket the Luverne Blaze lost to the Panthers (Sioux Falls) 11-0, beat the Strikers (Sioux Falls) 12-6 and beat the Fusion Heat (Brandon) 10-9.
On Sunday, the 12U Blaze lost 8-5 to TSC Aftershock (Harrisburg).
In the 14U brackets the Luverne Blaze lost to Blast (Brookings) 12-0, lost to Relentless (Pierre) 8-7 and beat TC Typhoon (Harrisburg) 4-3.
On Sunday, the Blaze lost to the Sparks (Sioux Falls) 5-3.
In the 16/18U bracket the Luverne Blaze beat 605 Octane (Sioux Falls) 1-0, lost to Blue Bombers (Pierre) 4-3 and beat the Blast 14-1.
On Sunday, the Blaze lost to Pierre 2-1.
 
Bracket winners are as follows:
•10U Gold Bracket winner was Blitz from Brandon Valley. Silver Bracket winner was Hit Stix
•12U Gold Bracket winner was TSC Aftershock from Harrisburg. Silver Bracket winner was the Futures from Sioux Falls.
•14U Gold Bracket winner was Thunder from Brandon Valley. Silver Bracket winner was the Sparks from Sioux Falls.
•16/18U Gold Bracket winner was Pierre. Silver Bracket winner was Diamonds Elite from Tea.
During the tournament, Blaze board members had put together a fundraiser event that offered a “unique” slant that teams ate up.
Board member Stacey Smidt said, “Teams look forward to winning this event.”
 
Hot dog contest
The Blaze sold hot dogs and credited one point for each hot dog sold to a corresponding team in the tournament.
The team in each bracket with the most points would be crowned the hot dog champs and receive a metal trophy. 
In the 10U bracket, the Luverne Blaze 2 team won with 55 hot dogs eaten.
12U went to the Panthers of Sioux Falls with 57 hot dogs eaten. This was their third year winning the title.
14U went to the Panthers from Pierre with 32 hot dogs eaten. 
The 16/18U bracket saw Pierre win with 108 hot dogs eaten. This was also Pierre’s third year in a row taking the hot dog title.
“We brought in a lot of visitors to town for a fun event and look forward to next year,” Smidt said about the Bash-A-Rama event.

Sr. Legion heading to sub-state

Luverne Post 123 Sr. Legion blew out Tracy 13-2 at home Thursday, July 6, in playoff action.
Thanks to a big 11-run fourth inning, the Cardinals were assured a sub state appearance in the 2023 American Legion baseball tournament.
Jacob Stroh and Elliot Domagala both had three RBIs in the game.
Conner Connell drove in two runners and Riley Sneller, Will Serie and Brayden Ripka each had one RBI in the game.
The Cardinals played an error-free game and held Tracy to only six hits in the game.
Zach DeBoer took the mound for Luverne, pitching five innings, allowing two runs on six hits and striking out seven batters.
On Friday, July 7, Luverne was to play Russell-Tyler-Ruthton for the No. 1 seed.
RTR ended up conceding the game, giving Luverne the No. 1 seed and RTR got the No. 2 seed in the Senior Legion Southwest Sub-State Tournament starting July 13 in St. James.
The Cardinals’ first game will be against Wells Thursday, July 13, in St. James at 11 a.m.
If the Cardinals win, they will play Friday, July 14, at 5 p.m. If they lose, they will play July 14 at 11 a.m.
 
BOX Score
TRCY 0 0 0 0 2 x x
LUV   0 2 0 1 1 0 x
 
BATTING
Luverne         AB R H   RBI
Sneller               1   2   0   1
Connell              3   1   3   2
Stroh                 2   1   1   3
Serie                  3   0   0   1
Sehr                  3   2   1   0
Ripka                 2   1   1   1
Anderson          1   2   0   0
Domagala         2   1   2   3
Buss                  1   1   0   0
2B: Stroh, Domagala
Total Bases: Connell 3, Domagala 3, Stroh 2, Ripka, Sehr
 
PITCHING
Luverne       IP   H  R  ER  SO
DeBoer          5   6   2   2   7
Pitches-Strikes: DeBoer 67-44
Batters Faced: DeBoer 22

Davis Lake Triathlon kicks off Fourth of July

The eighth annual Davis Lake Triathlon kicked off the Fourth of July activities at The Lake last week with athletic competition in kayaks, on bicycles and on foot.
The triathlon has two divisions, the Minnows and the Sharks.
The Minnows race is a quarter mile kayak, two-mile bike ride and one-mile run.
The Sharks race is a half mile kayak, eight-mile bike ride and 2 1/2-mile run.
Both races can be completed by individuals or three-person teams.
This year’s event saw the Minnows race go off without a hitch, but the Sharks race was delayed for 1 1/2 hours because of threatening weather and lightning.
Once the all-clear was announced, the Sharks race started and finished in cooler temperatures.
The winning Minnows team “Splash Flash Dash” finished the race in a time of 18 minutes, 29 seconds.
Team members were Kasey Buss, Jaydon Johnson and Luverne High School track and cross country runner Ella Schmuck.
Minnows individual winners were Jaxon Pick, Luverne, (male) in 24:12 and Anna Alvey, Hartford, South Dakota, (female) in 26:36.
The Sharks team “Air Force One,” consisting of Justin Rust, Kraig Rust and the two-mile ringer Jenna DeBates, another LHS track and cross country runner, finished the race in 49:27.
Sharks individual winners were Jon Alvey (male) from Hartford with a time of 49:27 and Jenna Dixon (female) from Canton with a time of 1:03:09.

Redbirds on fire, looking sharp for postseason

The Redbirds picked up three more wins over the past week, raising their season record to 16-1.
The Redbirds beat Worthington 10-1 at home July 5. They also outfoxed Fox Lake 13-2 July 9 and beat Pipestone 19-1 the same day in a doubleheader at Redbird Field.
Luverne is scheduled to host Hadley Wednesday, July 12, and travel to Sioux Falls Friday, July 14, to take on the Brewers.
 
Redbirds 10, Worthington 1
Ben Serie’s clutch hitting helped the Luverne Redbirds topple Worthington 10-0 Wednesday, July 5, at home.
Serie drove in five runs against the Cubs. Two of his RBIs were courtesy of a home run smack over the wall in the sixth inning.
Declan Beers was solid at the plate, recording three runs on three hits and two RBIs in the game.
As a team, Luverne posted 12 hits over seven innings with only two strikeouts.
Worthington was held to only one hit and reached first base three times on walks.
Cade Wenninger took the mound for the Redbirds pitching the entire game, allowing zero runs on one hit while striking out 10 batters.
 
BOX Score
WRTH 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
RBirds 0 0 2 0 3 3 2
 
BATTING
Luverne         AB R  H  RBI
S. Wenninger    4   1   2   0
Serie                 2   2   1   5
Smith               3   1   2   1
Paquette           2   0   1   1
Johnson            3   0   0   0
Sehr                 4   0   1   1
C. Wenninger   3   1   0   0
Lundgren         4   2   2   0
Beers                3   3   3   2
2B: Smith 2, S. Wenninger, Lundgren
HR: Serie
Total Bases: Smith 4, Serie 4, S. Wenninger 3, Lundgren 3, Beers 3, Paquette, Sehr
 
PITCHING
Luverne          IP  H   R   ER   SO
C. Wenninger    7   1    0    0    10
Pitches-Strikes: C. Wenninger 89-64
Batters Faced: C. Wenninger 25
 
Redbirds 13, Fox Lake 2
Phil Paquette and Derek Lundgren both posted home runs in the sixth inning to assure the Redbirds’ win.
 Luverne beat Fox Lake 13-2 in six innings at home Sunday, July 9, in their first of two games that day.
Lundgren led the Redbirds with two runs on two hits and five RBIs, with four coming off his grand slam home run.
Paquette had one run on three hits and four RBIs including his home runs in the game.
Serie and Skyler Wenninger both had one run on two hits and one RBI each.
Ethan Beyer pitched six innings for the win, allowing two runs on four hits while striking out seven and walking two batters.
 
BOX Score
FOXL   0 0 0 0 0 2 x
RBirds 0 0 1 6 0 6 x
 
BATTING
Luverne         AB R H  RBI
S. Wenninger   4   1   2   1
Serie                4   1   2   1
Paquette          4   1   3   4
Johnson           2   2   0   0
Sehr                 4   1   1   0
C. Wenninger   3   2   1   0
Lundgren         4   2   2   5
Beers               2   2   1   0
Beyer               3   1   0   0
2B: Beers, Paquette
3B: Serie
HR: Paquette, Lundgren
Total Bases: Paquette 7, Lundgren 5, Serie 4, Beers 2, S. Wenninger 2, C. Wenninger, Sehr
 
PITCHING
Luverne IP   H   R   ER   SO
Beyer       6    4    2    2     7
Pitches-Strikes: Beyer 96-64
Batters Faced: Beyer 24
 
Redbirds 19, Pipestone 1
The Redbirds schooled the Pipestone A’s 19-1 Sunday, July 9, in Luverne’s second game of the day.
Lundgren singled three times, scoring three times and driving in three runs for the Redbirds.
Cade Wenninger added three RBIs and three runs on one hit and two times being hit by the pitcher to get on base.
Serie posted his second home run for the week to scoring two of his three RBIs in the game.
Mark Sterrett, Brooks Maurer,  Colby Crabtree and Johnson all scored as pinch runners for the Redbirds.
Luverne had nine team hits and 14 RBIs in the five-inning game.
Serie took the mound going three innings, allowing zero runs on one hit with six strikeouts.
Maurer came in to relieve Serie in the fourth inning, pitching two innings, allowing one run on three hits, and striking out two batters.
 
BOX Score
PPST    0 0 0 1 0 x x
RBirds  8 3 2 6 x x x
 
BATTING
Luverne         AB R H  RBI
S. Wenninger    2   1   1   2
Sterrett             0   1   0   0
Serie                 2   1   1   2
Maurer             0   1   0   0
Paquette           1   2   0   0
Crabtree           0   1   0   0
Johnson            0   1   0   0
Ahrens             1   1   0   0
Sehr                  2   2   1   1
C. Wenninger    3   3   1   3
Lundgren          3   3   3   3
Beers                3   2   1   2
Ripka                4   0   1   1
HR: Serie
Total Bases: Serie 4, Lundgren 3, S. Wenninger, Ripka, C. Wenninger, Sehr, Beers
 
PITCHING
Luverne IP   H   R   ER  SO
Serie        3    1    0    0     6
Maurer     2    3    1    1     2
Pitches-Strikes: Serie 49-33, Maurer 45-25
Batters Faced: Serie 12, Maurer 11

'It could have been ugly ... They saves our lives'

Years of emergency training and specialized equipment led to a successful grain bin rescue Wednesday afternoon in rural Rock County.
“It feels really good,” Luverne Fire Chief David Van Batavia said after the incident.
“Three guys were in the bin, and three guys came out. No one was injured.”
Involved in the incident were Ron Fick, Jim Fick and Mel Fick at the grain storage facility at 1159 101st St. southwest of Luverne.
The 911 call came in to dispatch at 2:28 p.m. that a man was stuck in a grain bin. When rescue crews arrived at 2:34, they discovered three men were in the bin.
Jim was buried nearly over his head, and Ron was entrenched up to his chest. Mel had shut off the unloading equipment and was frantically working to clear corn from Jim’s face so he could breathe.
Van Batavia said firefighters from Hills and Luverne worked together methodically to properly respond.
“It was time-consuming, but it was a well-run scene,” he said. “Everybody did their part and everyone was on the same page.”
Firemen took turns working in the bin, switching out frequently to take a break from the heat.
Van Batavia said grain bin accidents require a patient approach that’s different from fire calls or crash scenes.
“We’re used to responding quickly at accidents and fires, but these are different,” he said.
“When someone’s buried like that, you just want to hop in right away and help, but we have to set up ropes and equipment and get everybody set up properly.”
A key piece of equipment, he said, is what’s called a grain bin tube, an aluminum cylinder that’s assembled around a victim trapped in grain.
It’s lowered around the victim — pounded in like a fence post, and grain is removed from the tube via a portable auger to eventually lift out the trapped person.
That’s what happened Wednesday, except that a second tube was needed from the Hills Fire Department to help Ron.
“We didn’t realize until later that more than one person was trapped in the bin,” Van Batavia said.
Meanwhile, the Rock County ambulance service was on the scene, and Sanford air med was called for standby during the nearly two-hour episode.
As it turned out, air transport wasn’t needed, and the Ficks were treated and released, one at Sanford Luverne and two at the scene.
But the outcome could have been much different.
 
‘They saved our lives’
“It could have been ugly,” Ron said, recounting the moments inside the bin leading up to the 911 call.
He said the three of them were unloading corn from a large 48-foot bin when a chunk of corn plugged the auger.
He and Jim climbed up the outside ladder of the bin, climbed down the ladder on the inside, and walked across the grain down to the center bottom of the bin.
“The corn where we were standing was probably only three feet deep,” Ron said.
“And then all at once, it was like a big avalanche. The corn (piled against the bin wall) let go and came down on us.”
Fortunately, at that moment, Mel climbed the bin to check their progress and was able to shut off equipment and call for help. He then climbed back in the bin to help.
“He laid across the corn, using his body as a dam so that the corn couldn’t come down any farther until 911 arrived,” Ron said. “We have to thank him, too.”
In hindsight, he said they should have approached the plugged auger differently, but at the time they thought they were doing the right thing.
“Just like every other farmer, we thought we were doing it the proper way, and it ended up not being that way,” Ron said.
“We know better. We’ve heard all the stories. We thought we were being very cautious and it backfired.”
In the days since the accident, he said people have been supportive.
“We’ve had so many guys call and neighbors and friends tell us, ‘We do the same thing, and we’ve been in the same situation many times,’” Ron said.
Other than being stiff and sore, he said Friday that they feel fine, but shaken.
“They saved our lives,” he said. “We really appreciate the firemen and first responders. They really did an excellent job. We couldn’t have gotten by without them.”
 
The practice
of saving lives
Fortunately for the Ficks and others who have been trapped in grain, Hills and Luverne firefighters are trained for grain bin rescues.
Van Batavia said firemen train annually in the CHS bins with “Rescue Randy,” the 180-pound, 6-foot-tall dummy. “We throw him in one of those big bins and then we rescue him,” Van Batavia said.
Without the grain tubes he said the Ficks wouldn’t have gotten out of the bin on their own.
“Absolutely not,” Van Batavia said. “You would never get anywhere on that call without the tubes. The only thing you could do is to start taking it out the bottom.”
This response isn’t preferred, he said.
“That’s your initial reaction – just open the door and let the corn out, but you get this rush of corn and then nothing,” he said.
The bottlenecked corn then needs to be shoveled.
To illustrate how effective the tubes are in protecting victims from crushing pressure, he said firemen had to wait until the next day to recover the equipment from the Fick bins after they removed corn.
And then they discovered the welds on the aluminum had been broken. “It’s crazy the amount of pressure it kept off them,” Van Batavia said.
The tubes will need to be replaced, but he said CHS and New Vision have been generous about providing funding for local firemen to have them on hand.
“It’s a smart thing for them to have out there, to make sure everybody has what they need,” he said.
Van Batavia said he remembers the first one he assisted with in 2010. “We ended up punching a bunch of holes in the bin to get the corn out,” he recalled.
Since then, he said he’s helped with three additional grain bin rescues and also a trench cave-in at a construction site.
Despite new rescue techniques and equipment, grain bin accidents are often fatal, according to the National Ag Safety Database.
Just over 200 farmers have died as a result of grain bin suffocation accidents over the past 30 years, the organization reports.
It takes four seconds for an adult to sink knee-deep in flowing grain and be rendered unable to get free without assistance. In just 20 seconds, an adult can be fully engulfed and die from suffocation.
Rescues are difficult because of the force of downward-flowing grain.
Research shows that 900 pounds of pull is required to raise an adult mannequin covered with corn, which is why grain bin rescues are so difficult.
Meanwhile, the Ficks are glad to be among the survival statistics.
“Between the rescue workers and God watching over us, we are here today,” Ron said.
“I just gotta put that out there. There were some guardian angels watching over us, that’s for sure.”

Kids Rock! Child Care Center announces name and $1 million fundraising campaign

“Kids Rock! Child Care Center” is the name chosen for the community day care center in Luverne, and local leaders and organizers have launched a campaign to raise $1 million in donations to help pay for construction.
“Kids are the center of this project,” said Luverne Economic Development Authority Director Holly Sammons, who has been instrumental in organizing the project and securing funding. “The center will serve many families and businesses throughout Rock County.”
She explained the rationale behind the name of the facility, which was the result of a visioning process with many involved. “Not only does ‘Rock’ refer to our geographic location, but it also symbolizes the rock-solid foundation we want to provide for kids and young families,” Sammons said.
After decades of searching for a solution to the local child care shortage, Sammons said it’s rewarding to see a finish line. She compared it to giving birth.
“I feel like we’ve been ‘pregnant’ with this project for a very long time. The contractions are starting and it’s time for labor and delivery,” she said. “We’re ready to give birth to this project and watch it come to life.”
The city of Luverne, with support from Rock County and federal funds, is converting the former Total Card Inc. building (originally Tri-State Insurance) into a day care center.
The city paid $515,000 in March 2022 for the 30,000-square-foot office building, which needs $6.3 million in renovations to become a child care facility for up to 186 children.
Studies show a current day care shortage of 120 slots, and that doesn’t account for more than 100 new jobs coming online with new employers in the next year. Many of those workers will also need child care.
The new facility, which will open in phases, will eventually have capacity for 24 infants, 42 toddlers, 60 preschoolers and 60 school-age children.
The city has committed $2.15 million toward the project. Rock County will pay $550,000, and a grant through the USDA will cover $2.6 million.
A community fundraising campaign is expected to contribute $1 million, and the Kids Rock non-profit announced those fundraising goals this week.
“A community-based child care center will fill a critical role in the social infrastructure of a healthy community, allowing children, families, businesses and communities to thrive,” is on the cover of a colorful brochure touting the Kids Rock! Child Care Center.
The mission of the non-profit is to “build a rock-solid foundation that prepares children to thrive socially, emotionally and academically,” with a vision to “invest in children for the future of our communities.”
 
Community donations goal is $1 million
Community donations will help pay for cribs and cots, highchairs, tables, desks, chairs, stools and flexible seating.
It will help fund interior remodeling, rugs and carpet, office equipment and commercial kitchen necessities.
It will also help pay for strollers, wagons, trikes, scooters and outdoor playground equipment, as well as balls and toys for the indoor activity room.
Additional funds will be needed for learning equipment required by the Minnesota Department of Health. For example, equipment is needed for block play, gross motor skills, dramatic play, nonmobile play, manipulatives and library, music, art, science sensory exploration.
 
Kids Rock! partners with LACF to accept donations
Kids Rock! Child Care Center is partnering with the Luverne Area Community Foundation to accept charitable donations.
Contributions over $1,000 will be recognized on a permanent donor board in the facility.
Checks payable to LACF can be sent to 102 E Main St., Luverne, MN 56156. Call 507-220-2424 for information.
Renovation work on the building starts this summer with a projected opening late in 2024 or early 2025.
Once construction is complete and the center is furnished, the city will turn over the facility to a non-profit for $1 per year.
The city will continue to subsidize its operation, maintenance, snow removal, lawn care and utilities.

First class of LHS Alumni Hall of Fame Inductees announced

The first group of inductees into the new Luverne High School Alumni Hall of Fame have been named by the Hall of Fame committee. 
The Class of 2023 includes six individuals and one team. In alphabetical order, the honorees include:
•The players, coaches and manager of the 1964 state championship basketball team. The team brought statewide fame to Luverne during an era when there was only one class of competition, there were no girls’ sports, and the state basketball tournament was the most focused-on high school sports event in Minnesota. 
•Quentin Aanenson, Class of 1939. Aanenson was a celebrated World War II fighter pilot whose first combat mission was during D-Day in 1944.  He was featured in the nationally known documentaries, “A Fighter Pilot’s Story” and the Ken Burns series, “The War.” 
•Jim Brandenburg, Class of 1963. Brandenburg is an internationally known nature photographer. He was a contract photographer for National Geographic magazine and commissioned to create a nature stamp by the U.S. Postal Service. 
•Jerilyn Britz, Class of 1961. A professional golfer for 26 years, Britz won the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA) tour in 1979 and was the first woman inducted into the Rock County Hall of Fame. 
•Warren Herreid, Sr., Class of 1938. Herreid had a distinguished 41-year career with the Minnesota National Guard. He was instrumental in founding Luverne’s “Last Man’s Club,” the Rock County Veterans Memorial and the Southwest Minnesota Honor Flight and is the inspiration behind the Herreid Military Museum in Luverne. 
•Betty J. (Soutar) Mann, Class of 1948. Betty Mann has been the force and inspiration behind the celebration, preservation and education of the history of Rock County for generations. She had the vision for the Rock County History Center and was instrumental in its fundraising and construction.
•Monti Ossenfort, Class of 1996. Ossenfort was a stand-out quarterback for LHS and the University of Minnesota, Morris. He began his NFL career in 2001 and has advanced through the ranks with the Houston Texans, New England Patriots and the Tennessee Titans. In 2023 Ossenfort was hired as general manager of the NFL Arizona Cardinals. 
The Alumni Hall of Fame is intended to recognize the accomplishments of former Luverne students while inspiring current students to strive for greatness in their professional or personal lives. 
New members will be honored during an induction ceremony in the new Luverne High School Alumni Garden Oct. 6 and introduced at the Homecoming football game that evening. 
A new class of inductees will be added to the Hall of Fame each fall during LHS Homecoming ceremonies. 
The Alumni Hall of Fame is organized by the Luverne Education Legacy Fund (LELF) and the Luverne Alumni Hall of Fame Selection Committee. 
Committee members include Superintendent Craig Oftedahl, former teachers Jeanne Bowron and Elmer Menage, current teacher Jason Berghorst, School Board member Mike DeBates, LHS alumni Emily Crabtree and Gary Papik, and Chamber Director Jane Lanphere.

Rops returns from semester of study abroad in Germany

Luverne High School 2021 graduate Jayson Rops returned in May from Luneburg, Germany, where he spent the semester studying abroad at Leuphana University. 
Rops, who just completed his sophomore year at the University of South Dakota, studied in the city just south of Hamburg, Germany, from January to May as part of the University Studies Abroad Consortium. 
“I had thought about studying abroad but was uncertain about the cost and being so far away from my family and everything I knew,” Rops said.
“But eventually I decided that I was just going to do it and didn’t let myself back out of it,” he said. 
Rops, the son of Tom Rops and Jodi Rops, joined 25 other university students from all across the nation in the program. 
“The thing I enjoyed most about my semester was all the people in the program with me,” Rops said. “I met some really cool people.”
As a history major planning to become a teacher, Rops also enjoyed the opportunity to study near and visit so many historic sites. 
In all, he visited seven European countries: Germany, Denmark, France, Greece, Italy, Ireland and England during his semester abroad. 
“Seeing all that history and iconic landmarks was surreal,” Rops said. 
Rops and another student from Texas resided with a host family in Luneburg, a city of about 70,000 people that included classic German architecture, cobblestone roads and plenty of bars and breweries.
He attended classes Monday through Thursday and was able to take advantage of his passport and inexpensive transportation to visit so many other locations. 
After two years of German classes at LHS, Rops said he could understand more German than he could speak. 
While at Leuphana University, he took German language classes and a Nazi German History course. 
“I think this opportunity will benefit my career as a teacher,” Rops said.
“It will also benefit my life in general because I was exposed to an entirely new culture and society and learned things from a completely different perspective.”
Rops said he hopes to return to Europe in the future to visit Paris and Rome again, specifically the Louvre Museum and Palace of Versailles. 
“There is just so much history in those cities and Paris, especially, was beautiful,” he said, adding that the opportunity to study internationally was worth it. 
“I highly recommend studying abroad to everyone. Even if they are unsure about doing it, just do it,” he said. “It was the best four months of my life.”

Meeting a Challenge

Enore Boelman sat down with her first book in January, and six months later she’s read 50 of them.
The 92-year-old Luverne woman is just one of a handful of Rock County Community Library patrons to finish the “50 States Challenge.”
“I didn’t know I would be able to finish before the end of the year, but once I got started, I got into it,” she said.
The Challenge requires patrons to read 50 books, each set in a different state. The books must be checked out from the Plum Creek Library System.
The Challenge began Jan. 1 and ends Dec. 31.
Rock County Librarian Calla Jarvie said she’s surprised patrons are finishing the challenge only halfway through the year. To be on pace to finish by the end of the year, 25 books, e-books or audio books should be finished.
“Everyone who completes the challenge will get a prize,” Jarvie said. “We’re just not sure what that is yet.”
Sheets to record the book selections by state are still available at the library.
“If you haven’t started, it’s not too late,” said Boelman, who read 50 large-print books that her daughter, Becky Sehr, brought her from the library.
“She really got into the challenge, often saying, ‘Get down there and get me my next book,’” Sehr said.
Boelman raised eight children on a farm and later opened a day care business. She then worked 20 years in the lunchroom at Luverne Public Schools.
She turned to reading once she retired in 2015.
“Her whole life she would like to read, but she didn’t have the time,” Sehr said.
The 50 States Challenge prompted Boelman, who prefers Christian fiction, to read other genres. She skipped over some authors’ offensive language, but finished all the books and later said she liked some books she wouldn’t have picked up otherwise.
For example, Boelman now reads mystery novels. “I couldn’t quit until I found out who did it,” she said. “I can see why people get hooked on reading mysteries.”
Now that she’s completed the 50 States Challenge, Boelman has moved on to the library’s summer reading program with a satisfied feeling.
“It makes me feel good. I’m glad I did it,” she said.

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