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Utility work ahead

Emblom's Midwest Powerline builds a new section of power lines for Land O' Power Co-op, Rock Rapids, Iowa. Crews began work Monday east of Hills replacing lines running south toward the Iowa border.

Photo by Jolene Farley

Lady Bug

Kendra Michael is cute as a button in a ladybug costume at the Community Club Halloween Party Saturday at the Hills Legion.

James Luettel

James William Luettel, 54, rural Adrian, died Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2001, as a result of an automobile accident.

Services were Friday, Oct. 26, at St. Adrian Catholic Church in Adrian. Burial was in the parish cemetery.

Jim Luettel was born to Greg and Wilhelmine (Suedkamp) Luettel on June 15, 1947, in Adrian. He graduated from St. Adrian High School in 1965.

He married Ruth Voss on Aug. 22, 1970, at St. Anthony Catholic Church in Lismore. After their marriage they farmed south of Adrian where he had made his home his entire life.

Mr. Luettel was a member of St. Adrian Catholic Church where he was a former member of the parish council. He also was a former member of Westside Township Board and a current member of the Wilmont-Adrian Coop Elevator. He enjoyed farming, fishing and dancing.

Survivors include his wife, Ruth Luettel, rural Adrian; four children and their spouses, Dean and Jennifer Luettel, Kristi and Dave Wempen, Brad Luettel and Sarah Luettel all of rural Adrian; one grandson, Lance Luettel; his father, Greg Luettel, rural Adrian; two brothers and sisters-in-law, Ron and Deb Luettel and Mark and Pam Luettel, all of rural Adrian; and one sister and brother-in-law, Nancy and Bill Einck, rural Iona.

Mr. Luettel was preceded in death by his mother, Wilhelmine Luettel, one brother, Dave Luettel, and an infant sister, Rita Luettel.

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

Scott Beers

Memorial service for Scott Beers is at 10:30 a.m. Friday, Nov. 2, in St. Catherine Catholic Church, Luverne. The Rev. Andrew Beerman will officiate. Burial of cremains will be in St. Catherine Cemetery. Visitation is from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 1, at Dingmann Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Luverne.

Scott Beers, 46, Luverne, died Tuesday, Oct. 30, 2001, in his home.

Scott Beers was born Dec. 26, 1954, to Roger and Gayle (Frakes) Beers in Fort Riley, Kan. He graduated from Luverne High School in 1973.

He married Gina Ziegler on March 9, 1987, in Las Vegas, Nev. After their marriage the couple lived in Luverne. Mr. Beers farmed with his father and brother southwest of Luverne.

He was treasurer of the Rock County Fair Board for more than 20 years. He was a former member of the Luverne Country Club Board, where he helped build the new south addition to the clubhouse. Mr. Beers was a volunteer for the Minnesota State Fair 4-H Beef Show for more than 20 years and recently volunteered for the Minnesota Beef Expo.

Survivors include his wife, Gina Beers, Luverne; two children, Jason (Kimberly) Thiesse, Rochester, and Amanda Thiesse, Luverne; his parents, Roger and Gayle Beers, Luverne; one brother and sister-in-law, Brad and Jane Beers, Luverne; two nieces, Amber and Ryleigh; and one great-niece, Shayla.

Dingmann Funeral Home & Cremation Services, Luverne, is in charge of arrangements.

Gladys Stroh

Gladys Marion Stroh, 81, Luverne, died unexpectedly Friday, Oct. 26, 2001, in Luverne Community Hospital in Luverne.

Services were Monday, Oct. 29, at St. John Lutheran Church in Luverne. The Rev. Mark Mumme officiated. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery, Luverne.

Gladys McClure was born to Horace "Mike" and Frieda (Beyer) McClure on Nov. 20, 1919, in Luverne. She was raised near Luverne and graduated from Luverne High School.

She married Vernon Stroh on Nov. 17, 1939, in Luverne. Following their marriage they lived and farmed near Luverne. They retired from farming in 1980 but continued living on the farm. In 1997 they moved to their home in Luverne.

Mrs. Stroh was a member of the Rock County Extension Club. She enjoyed traveling and spending the winters in Texas. She also enjoyed camping, embroidering, gardening, crossword puzzles and spending time with her family.

Survivors include her husband, Vernon Stroh, Luverne; four children, Judith (Daryl) Reese, Worthington, James (Pat) Stroh, Alan (Sue) Stroh, all of Luverne, and Carol (Dean) Brouwer, Lennox, S.D.; 12 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren.

Mrs. Stroh was preceded in death by her parents, an infant daughter, and one brother.

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

Margaret Pickard

A gathering of friends and family for Margaret (Kleine) Pickard, formerly of Magnolia, will be from 9:30 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 3, at Dingmann Funeral Home in Luverne, followed by a memorial service with the Rev. Dell Sanderson officiating. Burial of cremains will be in Maplewood Cemetery, Luverne.

Margaret Mae Pickard, 83, Susanville, Calif., died Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2001, at Lassen Community Hospital in Susanville.

There was a memorial service for her Saturday, Oct. 27, at St. Paul Lutheran Church in Susanville.

Margaret Kleine was born to Earnest and Myrtle (Lehmann) Kleine on March 31, 1918, in rural Rock County. She was the eldest of 16 children. She graduated from Magnolia High School and later lived and worked in California.

She married Tom Pickard on July 12, 1958. Upon retirement they moved to Magnolia. In 1988 they moved back to California.

Mrs. Pickard was a member of St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Susanville. She was also a volunteer for the CDF Fire Prevention Program. She enjoyed needlework, crafts and gardening.

Survivors include three grandchildren and their spouses; five great-grandchildren; five brothers, William Kleine, Louis (Lois) Kleine, Dallas Kleine, all of Luverne, Donald (Martha) Kleine, Ann Arbor, Mich., Thomas (Penny) Kleine, Cincinnati, Ohio; and eight sisters, Evelyn Nelson, Barbara Dye, Nyla Stearns, Mildred (John) Steece and Mary (Floyd) Kraetsch, all of Luverne, Joyce (Glenn) Hawes, Jasper, Patty (Loren) Krier, Beresford, S.D., and Janis (Jerry) Glapa, Rochester.

Mrs. Pickard was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, Tom, one son, Robert Kohrt, one brother, Rodney, and one sister, Helen (Dick) Taillefer.

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

Defensive touchdown clinches H-BC-E victory

Hills-Beaver Creek-Ellsworth quarterback David Top hands the ball off to Chris Reid during the first half of Saturday's section playoff game against Nicollet in Hills. H-BC-E topped the Raiders 26-19 to earn a berth in tomorrow night's championship game in Hills.

By John Rittenhouse
Hills-Beaver Creek High School senior Brad Haak may have some glorious days in front of him, but it will be hard to top what the standout athlete experienced in a 24-hour span on Friday and Saturday.

One day after winning the Section 3A Individual Cross Country race in Tracy, Haak scored a defensive touchdown which provided the game-winning points in a 26-19 win over Nicollet in a Section 2 Nine-Man Football Playoff game played in Hills Friday.

Haak, a starting receiver-defensive back for the H-BC-Ellsworth football team, and the rest of the No. 1 seeded Patriots watched Nicollet erase an 18-6 deficit by scoring 13 consecutive points in the second and third quarters to take a 19-18 lead.

The fourth-seeded Raiders were threatening to pad their lead with a drive entering H-BC-E territory late in the third quarter.

During a fourth-and-six situation, Nicollet ran an option play to the right side of the field that turned ugly when a pitch by the quarterback was bobbled and dropped by the running back.

Being in the right place at the right time, Haak scooped up the loose ball and raced 65 yards for a touchdown to give the Patriots a 24-19 advantage.

After having one two-point conversion pass from quarterback David Top to Lyle DeBoer negated by a holding penalty, the same combination clicked for what was a 13-yard conversion pass and catch that gave the Patriots their margin of victory at 26-19.

The conversion ended up being overshadowed by Haak's big defensive play as the Raiders were unable to score in the fourth quarter.

"He really is having a great senior year," said Patriot coach Dan Ellingson, referring to Haak.

To emphasize Haak's importance to H-BC-E's football team, the section championship game will be played around his schedule.

The event was scheduled to be played Saturday afternoon but has been moved up to tomorrow night so Haak can run at the state cross country meet in Northfield Saturday morning.

The 9-0 Patriots will host 8-2 Sioux Valley-Round Lake-Brewster, a 12-6 double-overtime winner over Westbrook-Walnut Grove, at 7 p.m. in Hills.

Although no more points were scored after the conversion following HaakÕs defensive touchdown, the game wasn't decided until the final minute.

Patriot Kevin Van Batavia produced what proved to be the game-clinching play when he picked off a pass with 1:03 remaining in the fourth quarter, but H-BC-E fumbled the ball on the next play from scrimmage and the Raiders recovered on the Patriot 45-yard line.

Facing a fourth-and-six from the 41, Nicollet tried a long pass that was knocked down at the last second by H-BC-E defender Chris Reid on the 15-yard line.

The Patriots were able to run the rest of the time off the clock after Reid's big play.

H-BC-E dominated the game's early stages while opening a 12-0 lead.

The Patriots received the opening kickoff and marched 57 yards with Reid scoring on a five-yard run to end the drive. A missed extra-point attempt followed the touchdown.

H-BC-E was driving again with its second possession, but a Nicollet defender intercepted a pass and returned 30 yards before being stripped of the ball from behind by a hustling Haak. DeBoer recovered the fumble on the H-BC-E 35, and Reid made Nicollet pay for the mistake when he dashed for a 65-yard touchdown run on the next play.

A failed two-point conversion attempt followed the touchdown.

Just when H-BC-E appeared to be on the verge of blowing out the Raiders, Nicollet made a statement. On the second play of its next possession, Nicollet back Tony Hulke ran for a 65-yard touchdown. A missed two-point conversion left the Patriots sporting a 12-6 lead.

The Patriots regained a 12-point cushion with their next offensive possession when a 45-yard run by Reid set up a one-yard touchdown plunge by DeBoer in the second quarter. The run for a conversion failed.

Nicollet countered H-BC-E's score when Raider quarterback Andy Truebenbach dashed 30 yards for a touchdown during a fourth-and-five play. A failed conversion run left the Patriots sporting an 18-12 halftime cushion.

Ellingson said scoring early against the physical Raiders was one of the keys to victory.

"They are a good team. They are big and strong. It was important for us to get out to an early lead because it gave us confidence. It wasn't a big lead that they couldnÕt overcome, but it gave us a little bit of an edge. Another key was the outstanding individual plays turned in by some of our kids. We made a lot of them," he concluded.

Team statistics
H-BC-E: 290 rushing yards, 16 passing yards, 306 total yards, 11 first downs, five penalties for 45 yards, three turnovers.

Nicollet: 350 rushing yards, 36 passing yards, 386 total yards, 11 first downs, six penalties for 54 yards, three turnovers.

Individual statistics
Rushing: Reid 21-204, DeBoer 19-70, Jesse Leuthold 1-1, Chris Tiesler 1-9, Van Batavia 1-5, David Top 1-1.

Passing: Top 3-5 for 16 yards.

Receiving: Darin DeBoer 1-13, Haak 1-9, L.DeBoer 1-minus six.

Defense: Schilling 12 tackles and one interception, Reid 12 tackles, Leuthold 10 tackles, L.DeBoer five tackles and one fumble recovery, Van Batavia one interception, Haak six tackles and one fumble recovery, Kyle Braun seven tackles and one sack, Lee Walraven one sack.

Ange Patton

Ange (Mohr) Patton, 65, Orange, Calif., died Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2001, in her home. She was formerly from Luverne.

There will be a memorial gathering on 1:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 10, at Blue Mound Banquet and Meeting Hall in Luverne.

Ange Mohr was born to William and Myrtle Mohr on Aug. 7, 1936, in Austin. She graduated from Luverne High School in 1954. She graduated from McKennan School of Nursing in 1957.

She married Edward C. Patton in 1963.

Survivors include four brothers, Karl (friend, Kim) Mohr, Trenary, Mich., William (Sue) Mohr, St. James, Anthony (Victoria) Mohr, Sartell, and James (Karen) Mohr, Savage; six sisters, Phyllis (Don) Abild, Windom, Sally Mohr, Minneapolis, Mary (James) De Jarlois, Minneapolis, Martha Mohr, St. Peter, Christine (John) Tartorella, Tama, Fla., and Ann (Bruce) Simmons, Mankato; sister-in-law, JoAn Kincaid, Santa Monica, Calif., and many nieces and nephews.

Mrs. Patton was preceded in death by her parents and her husband, Edward Patton.

Luverne girl learns to live with Asperger's

By Sara Quam
Luverne High School senior Audra Novotny is like many students her age, planning a college career and looking forward to independence. But the usual issues of homesickness or financial stress are secondary to the bigger obstacle she faces - Asperger's syndrome.

Diagnosed just more than a year ago, Audra is achieving a lot for someone with the condition.

She is active in Sioux Falls community theater, participates in school and church extracurriculars and holds down a part-time job. For all of this she recently was honored with the Autism Service Award for Outstanding Achievement from the Center for Disabilities through the University of South Dakota School of Medicine.

Although she's not autistic as the award implies, Audra has a higher-functioning form of it called Asperger's syndrome. Some of the typical symptoms are speech and language peculiarities and non-verbal communication problems.

Those are similar to some of Audra's most noticeable problems. "I don't know how to accept a compliment. I can't pick up on body language - if someone's mad or sarcastic. If they're nervous I might think they're sad," Audra said.

Symptoms are different in all cases, but common ones are also talking at length about a favorite subject or repeating words or phrases. People with Asperger's may like routines or rituals and have unusual preoccupations and sometimes exhibit egocentricity.

"I roll my eyes, and it's totally involuntary," Audra said. That small facial expression can often leave other people feeling she's rolling her eyes at what they've said or done and causes further communication problems.

A major roadblock for Audra is the way she learns. "I can't do anything without thinking of it in pictures," she said.

In younger years she steadily got high grades, but they started dropping. "My grades were slipping because the older you get, the fewer pictures and visuals you get in your classroom."

Audra spent more time listening to lectures and trying to visualize as much as she could to compensate for her different way of learning.

In fact, she didn't even read the required novels for an eighth-grade English class but knew enough of them from watching TV and videos that she managed to pass the tests.

But since she's been diagnosed, she's gotten extra help. "A lot of my teachers are really helpful, and that's great," she said.

Being 'different'
"I've always known that I was different, and my mom knew it," Audra said. "She's been my advocate."

Her parents, Mark and Beth, tried for years to find a name for what Audra had. Beth went to speakers and talked to as many experts as possible and observed all she could.

Audra was initially misdiagnosed as having Attention Deficit Disorder in middle school. But as early as age 2, Beth saw something different in Audra. "I was constantly talking to parents and talking to teachers and counselors and anyone who would listen. I was grabbing on to anything I could get my hands on."

Beth has a degree in early childhood education so she had background in child development but wasn't capable of knowing about Asperger's.

In fact, until very recently, the condition wasn't named, and many with it went undiagnosed.

It's easy to miss it, especially if the person with Asperger's is extremely high functioning. Some doctors are now releasing the theory that Bill Gates has it. Girls are less frequently diagnosed than boys because they can learn to mimic normal social behavior more easily.

Beth said, "They can be so verbal and so bright that it's hard to get people to see there's a problem."

Audra was reading before she was in kindergarten and when Beth approached teachers with social skills concerns, they often brushed it off as Audra being too smart to relate to other students and that she would catch up later.

A few more children in Rock County have been diagnosed, so Beth and Audra feel they've been a part of the education process.

Getting help
Talking openly about her condition isn't difficult for Audra. She's had to grow a thick skin after years of difficulty with peers in school.

"I was teased horribly and still am a little," she said.

Already prone to anxiety and depression because of Asperger's, Audra took that teasing very hard and was home-schooled her seventh-grade year to give her a break from it.

"I've gotten some more respect now that people see I can help myself become better," she said. She has twice-weekly appointments with psychologists and takes medication.

She used to be prone to more illnesses when under stress. With decreased anxiety from the help of medication and therapy, she has missed fewer days of school.

Nervousness can still keep her from having a good time, though. She missed out on a cast party after a play because being on stage made her feel extraordinarily tense one night. The performance went well, but afterward, she needed a rest more than a loud party.

She started auditioning for plays outside of Luverne High School to give her more experience and broaden her small circle of friends.

"I was accepted right off the bat," she said of her experiences outside of high school.

Beth said, "Creativity has always been there for her."

Most recently Audra played an evil sister in "The Mask of Beauty and the Beast," the non-Disney version of the fairy tale. She is also heard on a group of radio stations out of Worthington, most recognizably on 95.1 and 93.5 FM.

Even though she still struggles, Audra said she's relieved to have a name and a course of treatment for what had been inhibiting her from enjoying much of her life.

She's already applied to the Brown Institute in Minneapolis and plans to further her broadcasting career.

Beth said she's ready to let Audra try to live independently and give her job goals a try. But like most mothers with children entering college, she'll continue to worry.

To learn more... about Asperger's syndrome, try these sources:

Books by Tony Attwood, Carol Gray, Brenda Smith Myles or www.asperger.net and www.tonyattwood.com

Adrian, Luverne to vote on levies

By Lori Ehde
Residents in both Luverne and Adrian school districts will head to the polls Tuesday to vote on operating levies the boards have proposed to hedge their budgets against uncertain future state support.

Luverne district voters will be asked to approve a $400-per-pupil operating levy that would amount to approximately $234,000 asked of Luverne School District property owners.

If the proposal is approved by voters, it will generate roughly $635,000 for the district. The local effort would be nearly 37 percent of that, or $234,000, with the balance coming from state aid.

"It's important to know it's a matched effort from the state," said Luverne District Financial Officer Marlene Mann. "If you put down 37 cents you get 63 cents back."

In Adrian, district voters will be asked to support a $450 per pupil operating levy referendum.

For the first year of the operating levy (2002-03) revenue would increase by more than $365,000. Of that, the local effort would amount to roughly $69,000 and the state would match that with nearly $246,000, plus more than $50,000 in open enrollment and equity revenue.

"For every $1 raised by taxpayers, the state will now contribute $3.57," an Adrian District brochure states.

Special elections in both districts will be Tuesday, Nov. 6.

In Adrian, residents can cast their ballots from 4 to 8 p.m. The Adrian Elementary Commons is the polling place for residents of the city of Adrian, as well as residents of Westside, Little Rock and Olney townships.

The Lismore City Hall is the polling place for residents of the city of Lismore, as well as residents of Lismore, Larkin, Leota and Wilmont townships.

In Luverne, polls will be open from noon to 8 p.m. in the middle school-high school gymnasium.

The proposals require a 50 percent plus one majority to pass. If approved, the levies would be in effect for 10 years.

Each year, school board members can agree to levy lower amounts, but levies will be capped by the amounts voters approve Tuesday, if the proposals pass.

Questions can be directed to the Adrian School District Office, 483-2232, and to the Luverne District Office, 283-8088.

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