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Cardinal Hall Monitor

‘Providing Lessons for Life’
This week, Feb. 3-7, is National School Counselors Week, and the theme is "School Counselors: Providing Lessons for Life." Pictured are Luverne School District counselors Kristi Groth, Craig Nelson and Marie Atkinson-Smeins. The week focuses public attention on the unique contributions professional counselors make in schools. In Luverne Elementary School, a large piece of brown paper will be hung on the wall by the library for parents to write special notes to their children during the month of February.

Photo by Lori Ehde

Green Earth celebrates 25 years

From left, Roger Achterhof, Bruce Kurtz, Keith Van Westen and Tor Boen play a game of poker during a scene from the 1979 production of "The Odd Couple," which is part of this weekend’s Green Earth Players 25th anniversary variety show. Also pictured is Morgan Bosshart, as Annie in the 2001 Green Earth musical. Story inside.

Seachris records pin in Tracy

By John Rittenhouse
Hills-Beaver Creek High School students received some mat action as members of the Luverne-H-BC-Ellsworth wrestling squad this week.

The Cardinal mat squad competed at matches in Tracy Thursday and Adrian Tuesday, dropping both duels while slipping to 2-14 for the season.

Dusty Seachris competed in both outings. Kerry Fink wrestled for the varsity squad in Tracy.

Seachris was pinned 1:25 into the second period of the 140-pound match against Adrian’s Adam Voss.

Adrian went on to hand L-H-BC-E a 59-18 setback.

The H-BC wrestlers went 1-1 during Thursday’s 42-31 loss to Tracy-Milroy in Tracy.

Seachris came up with a victory when he stuck Andy Nelson 48 seconds into the third period of the 135-pound match.

Fink was pinned by Adam Snyder with seven seconds left in the first period of the 125-pound tilt.

L-H-BC-E hosts Windom and Redwood Valley tonight and Friday respectively.

Hot-shooting boys gun down SSC Quasars Tuesday

By John Rittenhouse
The Hills-Beaver Creek boys recorded their sixth consecutive basketball victory Tuesday in Okabena.

Playing Southwest Star Concept in a Red Rock Conference battle, H-BC turned in an impressive offensive performance while nailing down a 76-60 win.

The Patriots canned 28 of 45 field goals in the game and outscored the Quasars in three of the contest’s four quarters to up their season record to 13-4.

"We played pretty well," said Patriot coach Steve Wiertzema. "We were very patient and took good shots."
H-BC led 21-18 at the end of a hard-fought first quarter, but Trey Van Wyhe and Kale Wiertzema helped the Patriots gain some separation in the second period.

Van Wyhe scored eight of his team-high 20 points in the second quarter and Wiertzema capped a 15-point first half by netting seven counters in the period as H-BC outscored SSC 29-18 to take a 50-36 halftime lead.

H-BC increased its lead to 16 points (65-49) with a 15-13 scoring edge in the third quarter and prevailed by 13 after battling SSC to a draw at 11 in the fourth quarter.

Coach Wiertzema said Van Wyhe and Jesse Leuthold played great games in the post. Leuthold had eight rebounds and seven steals. Van Wyhe had seven rebounds.

Wiertzema scored 17 points, passed for 10 assists and snared five rebounds for the winners. Tyson Metzger netted 15 points, and Tyler Bush added 12 points, six assists and four steals.

H-BC, 11-0 in the RRC, plays in Round Lake Friday before hosting Edgerton Tuesday.

Box score
Bush 5 0 2-3 12, Wysong 0 1 0-0 3, Broesder 0 0 0-0 0, Wiertzema 3 3 2-6 17, Metzger 2 3 2-4 15, Leuthold 2 0 3-4 7. Van Wyhe 8 0 4-4 20, Spykerboer 1 0 0-0 2.

Team statistics
H-BC: 28 of 45 field goals (62 percent), 13 of 21 free throws (62 percent), 27 rebounds, 23 turnovers.
SSC: 26 of 54 field goals (48 percent), five of nine free throws (56 percent), 23 rebounds, 23 turnovers.

Patriots win tight battle with Pipestone

Hills-Beaver Creek sophomore Melinda Feucht drives past Pipestone's Stacey Plahn during Tuesday's girls' basketball game in Hills. Feucht scored seven points in the first quarter to help the Patriots post a 45-42 win over the Arrows.

By John Rittenhouse
A solid performance as a team set the stage for a 45-42 girls’ basketball victory for the Hills-Beaver Creek Patriots Tuesday.

Hosting Pipestone for a non-conference clash, H-BC faced adversity early when leading scorer and rebounder Erin Boeve picked up two quick fouls in the first quarter.

With Boeve on the bench for most of the first half, the rest of the Patriots came together as a team to keep the game close.

Boeve returned to the court in the second half to help the Patriots outscore the Arrows 30-26, giving the hosts a three-point conquest.

"It was a battle," said Patriot coach Tom Goehle. "We’ll take a win any time when Erin is sitting on the bench for 13 minutes in the first half. The other girls did a good job of defending Pipestone, and they did a good job of taking care of the ball offensively."

The Patriots didn’t seem bothered by the absence of Boeve in the first quarter as Sarah Rozeboom drained a shot at the buzzer to tie the game at 11.

Neither team could generate much offense in a second quarter that ended with the Arrows nursing a 16-15 edge.

The teams traded baskets in the early stages of the third quarter before H-BC put together a surge that left it sporting a 32-24 cushion.

Pipestone trimmed the difference to four points (32-28) by period’s end, but the Arrows’ 14-13 scoring edge in the fourth quarter wasn’t enough to best the Patriots.

Cassi Tilstra, who led the Patriots with 13 points in the game, and Boeve set the pace in the second half by scoring seven points each. Brittney Rozeboom added six points in the second half.

Melinda Feucht, who scored seven points in the first quarter, netted 12 counters for the winners.

H-BC, 10-8 overall, hosts Edgerton Public tonight.

Box score
B.Rozeboom 2 0 2-3 6, Feucht 5 0 2-3 12, Tilstra 5 1 0-3 13, S.Rozeboom 3 0 1-6 7, Broesder 3 0 1-4 7, Olson 0 0 0-0 0, Mulder 0 0 0-0 0, Sandstede 0 0 0-0 0.

Team statistics
H-BC: 19 of 45 field goals (42 percent), six of 19 free throws (42 percent), 18 of 45 field goals (40 percent), six of 11 free throws (55 percent).

Students save pennies for cause

By Jolene Farley
Hills-Beaver Creek Elementary School students are saving their pennies and spare change this month and bringing the money to school.

Each classroom has a can for students to drop spare change into for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society’s Pennies for Patients program.

Elementary Administrator Jil Vaughn said students scrounge up change around their homes and deposit the money into the cans.

"At the end of the month, I take the cans to the bank and they count them up," she said.

The program raises funds to find cures for the blood diseases leukemia, lymphoma and myeloma and for patient services.

"This is just an annual thing that we do as a benefit for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society," said Vaughn. "The classes are highly competitive."

The school has participated in the program for several years, according to Vaughn.

Kindergartener Madison Fick, 5, who has donated several times this month, said she hasn’t broken into her piggy bank but has asked her mom and dad for their spare change. She said she likes to bring change because "it’s nice to help people."

The program runs for a six-week period. The class collecting the most pennies and other spare change in the school will receive a pizza party. Top schools in the area win gift certificates and electronics.

Five million students in 10,000 schools across the country raised $9 million through Pennies for Patients last year.

BC resident arrested on drug charges

By Jolene Farley
Jason Richard Meyer, 23, Beaver Creek, was arrested and charged on Monday, Jan. 16, in Rock Rapids, Iowa, with four counts of delivery of a controlled substance and one count of failure to possess a drug tax stamp.

The first charges stem from the sale of drugs on four separate occasions. Meyer was the focus of a four-month investigation by the Lyon County Sheriff’s Office for drug trafficking.

"We seized over one-quarter of a pound of marijuana from him," said Lyon County Sheriff Blythe Bloemendaal.

The single count of failure to possess a drug tax stamp stems from Meyer’s failure to obey an Iowa law that requires dealers to anonymously purchase a drug tax stamp before they sell drugs.

The law was enacted, knowing that most drug dealers wouldn’t comply, as a way for the state to impose fines rather than jail time on illegal dealers.

The amount of illegal drugs seized is reported to the state and fines are assessed in increments based on amount.

"It’s Iowa’s way of really making it hurt," said Bloemendaal. "Now the state will get him in the pocket book if they can."

Meyer is being held at the Lyon County Jail on a $48,750 bond.

Arrests made in separate drug busts

By Lori Ehde
A rural Hills man was found guilty on all drug charges after a two-day jury trial Wednesday and Thursday last week.

Cory Kelderman, 29, was convicted of two counts of conspiracy to manufacture methamphetamine, one count of manufacturing methamphetamine and one count of possessing six grams or more of methamphetamine.

Under Minnesota sentence guidelines, the presumptive sentence on these convictions is 86 months in prison, according to Assistant County Attorney Terry Vajgrt.

He said the case represents another victory in the local effort against drugs.

"Law enforcement and our office consider the prosecution of Cory Kelderman to be extremely important," said Vajgrt, who prosecuted the case.

"Information received by law enforcement indicated that Kelderman had been manufacturing methamphetamine for some period of time."

Vajgrt added the case involved cooperation among various agencies.

"The original search of the Kelderman residence would not have been possible without the assistance of South Dakota law enforcement in Sioux Falls," he said.

According to the complaint filed in Rock County District Court, the Rock County Sheriff’s Department searched Kelderman’s home July 19.

Local law enforcement worked with Minnehaha County Sheriff’s Department in South Dakota following the arrest of two individuals who purchased large amounts of cold medicine, pseudoephedrine in Sioux Falls.

When questioned on July 18, these individuals said they intended to deliver the supplies, which included screens and funnels, to Kelderman’s home in Hills.

They said that on July 14 they had delivered similar supplies to Kelderman in exchange for meth.

Based on that information, Rock County officials executed a search warrant of Kelderman’s home the following morning. They found numerous items used to manufacture meth, and in excess of six grams of a substance consistent with the drug.

Kelderman was arrested shortly thereafter, and currently awaits sentencing after last week’s conviction.

Other court activity has transpired since Kelderman’s initial apprehension.

On July 25, Rock County Sheriff’s Department arrested Kevin Dale Smeins, Luverne, after stopping him in Luverne on traffic violation of driving after revocation.

In plain view in the vehicle was a bag containing large amounts of Suphedrine pillboxes. A search of the car yielded roughly 3 grams of meth.

When questioned, Smeins, 42, told law enforcement he was about to deliver the pills to Kelderman’s home in rural Hills that night.

Smeins was sentenced Monday after entering a guilty plea to possession of methamphetamine. Under the terms of the agreement, he was sentenced to 48 months in prison.

In a related case, Kelderman’s uncle, David Leroy Kelderman, 42, was arrested July 26, after Emergency Entry Team officers seized the makings of a meth lab in his Luverne home.

He was sentenced Nov. 25 to 86 months in prison after entering a plea of guilty to the felony offense of manufacturing meth.

His arrest also stemmed from tips from Luverne merchants about suspicious purchases of Suphedrine.

The Sheriff’s Department applauds the residential and commercial tips that led to these arrests and encourages continued cooperation.

Gov. Pawlenty outlines details of proposal

By Lori Ehde
Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty spent two hours in Luverne Monday morning talking about ways to strengthen rural communities.

Specifically, he outlined details of his proposal for Job Opportunity Building Zones (JOBZ), which would provide tools for outstate Minnesota to spur growth.

"The metro areas are thriving, but the rest of the state is being left behind," Pawlenty said.

"Hundreds and hundreds of jobs are leaving Minnesota to Wisconsin, northern Iowa, Sioux Falls and to North Dakota … Let’s stop the hemorrhaging and turn things around."

The Blue Mound Banquet and Meeting Center was filled with nearly 300 residents and political representatives from Rock County and the tri-state area.

Accompanying the governor at Monday’s meeting were Matt Kramer, Commissioner of the Department of Trade and Economic Development, Rep. Doug Magnus (Rock County’s representative in the House) and Mayor Glen Gust.

‘The whole enchilada’
The governor touted the JOBZ plan as the single most effective piece of legislation to save floundering outstate communities.

"This is the mother of all economic development incentives. It’s the whole enchilada," Pawlenty said. "If you can’t make it with this plan, you can’t make it."

Minnesota’s model would be patterned after successful programs in Michigan and Pennsylvania. Both states have created special "tax-free zones" that have succeeded in developing business and creating jobs.

It would establish qualifying geographic zones where for 12 years, residents wouldn’t pay income or property taxes, and businesses wouldn’t pay state and local sales tax, income tax or property tax.
"It’s a significant incentive," Kramer said. "It’s a powerful tool."

Pawlenty said the plan isn’t without controversy. "The income tax exemption is pretty controversial, because people ask me, ‘What about the wealthy people from Lake Minnetonka moving here to take advantage of a tax haven?’ My response is, ‘Great. I hope they do come and spend a lot of money while they’re here.’"

The point would be to attract businesses and jobs to areas of decline. High poverty, older housing and recent history of job loss would be indicators of such decline.

Under-utilized city infrastructure would be another qualifying point.

For example, a community with an unoccupied industrial park would be a perfect candidate, because the infrastructure is already there, but it’s not producing jobs or tax revenue.

Pawlenty said no single criterion could qualify or exempt a community from the JOBZ programs, because DTED would take a number of factors into account when determining which communities qualify.

According to the current verbiage of the plan, 10 outstate Minnesota zones would be selected, and Pawlenty encouraged any qualifying city to apply.

‘It’s a crisis. The state
of Minnesota is broke’
While the point of the governor’s visit was to talk about JOBZ, he dedicated part of the morning to a budget tutorial.

Minnesota’s deficit is second only to California’s, and it has the largest per-capita deficit of any state in the nation.

"I don’t think average Minnesotans have taken into account what this means for the state," he said.

"This is the worst budget deficit in the history of Minnesota — times three. It’s a crisis. The state of Minnesota is broke."

He said revenues are actually increasing at a rate of 7 percent, but spending is projected to increase by more than 14 percent for commitments already made.

One notable reason for increased spending is that healthcare costs for state employees has been rising by 10 to 20 percent per year.

Considering every state employee down to the local level, plus health care assistance for needy families, the state purchases half the healthcare services provided in Minnesota.

"It’s eating up more and more of our budget and we can’t keep up when revenues go up only 6 percent."

He said the answer to the deficit isn’t to raise taxes and allocate more funds, because that would only treat the symptoms, not the cause.

For example, school districts are losing per-pupil funding due to declining enrollment, and that, the governor said, is due to loss of jobs.

"People won’t stay if they don’t have economic opportunity," Pawlenty said.

The state lost 38,000 manufacturing jobs in the last four years, and raising taxes will only exacerbate that trend.

"We can’t continue to strangle the goose that lays the golden eggs in Minnesota," he said.

Everyone has to tighten belts – including ethanol producers

He said the severity of Minnesota’s budget deficit is going to require belt tightening for everyone.

The unveiling of his proposed budget cuts two weeks ago drew criticism statewide. Renewable fuels
lobbyists, among his most vocal opponents, attended Monday’s meeting in Luverne.

The governor proposed eliminating $26.8 million in payments to 13 plants.

When ethanol representatives protested that they had invested money based on what was promised in subsidies, Pawlenty reiterated that everyone will need to give up something.

"When you get down to the lug nuts of balancing the budget, are higher profits for ethanol producers more important than money for other things?" he said.

"Or do you want to see local nursing homes and school districts get more money?"

Pawlenty said he has a long history of supporting renewable energy, and he complimented ethanol producers on their successes.

But he added that his research showed their dividends were quite generous, and that’s why his budget proposed trimming the producer subsidy.

"Given these choices, I thought maybe you guys could take a little less money this time around.
Everyone’s been promised money. School districts are figuring on funding, nursing homes are figuring on funding," he said.

"We’re at a fork in the road. These are the choices."

Reversing the trend
In addition to cutting the budget, Pawlenty said programs like JOBZ can spur development that will ultimately increase state revenues.
"Let’s get this bill passed this session and have these zones up and running this year," Pawlenty said.
Rep. Magnus is carrying the legislation in the House, and the Senate has yet to introduce its version.
There were concerns Monday about the likelihood of Luverne qualifying the JOBZ program and about existing small businesses benefiting from it.

Pawlenty said he hoped the plan would include a number of tools for tailoring the zone to specific needs.
He emphasized the success of the program, regardless of who’s approved, will hinge on the effectiveness and of local community leaders.

He said they’ll need vision like that of hockey legend Wayne Gretzky. "He said, ‘I don’t care where the puck is; I care where it’s going.’ He was able to see the playing field on the ice differently than other players," Pawlenty said.

The Luverne stop was one of several in the governor’s tour of outstate Minnesota in the past week.
He was in East Grand Forks Thursday, Jan. 23, and in Keewatin and Hibbing Friday.

Students save pennies for cause

Kindergarteners Madison Fick (left) and Carey taubert donate spare change to the Pennies for Patients can in their classroom at Hills-Beaver Creek Elementary School in Beaver Creek. Story inside.

Photo by Jolene Farley

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