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Long time rivals have way with Patriot girls in Hills Thursday

By John Rittenhouse
A stunning loss to Southwest Christian all but ended Hills-Beaver Creek's chances for a Red Rock Conference Western Division girls' basketball championship Thursday in Hills.

H-BC, a team that beat the E-Gals by 10 points when they squared off in Edgerton Dec. 6, couldnÕt put anything together offensively in the rematch.

The cold-shooting hosts were limited to 21-percent field goal efficiency in what turned into a 51-31 setback.

The loss was H-BC's fourth in RRC play, and it has three games left to play. The Patriots would be eliminated from the title hunt with one more loss or one more win from Adrian, which has a 12-1 league record.

As one might expect, H-BC's shooting woes caused defeat against SWC.

"From the beginning of the game until the end, we really struggled offensively," said Patriot coach Tom Goehle. "It was just a poor shooting night for us. They deserve some credit for playing good defense, but the main thing was we had a hard time getting anything to go down."

The Patriots were limited to six points while falling behind by seven points (13-6) during the first eight minutes of play.

The E-Gals increased their lead to eight points (24-16) by halftime before using a 10-7 scoring advantage in the third quarter to make it an 11-point (34-23) difference heading into the final eight minutes of play.

SWC went on a 17-8 scoring run in the final period to win by a 20-point margin.

Erin Boeve's double-double consisting of 11 points and 11 rebounds was the highlight of the game for H-BC. She also had six blocked shots.

Becky Broesder snared nine rebounds for the Patriots.

Box score
B.Olson 1 0 2-2 4, Feucht 1 0 0-0 2, Rentschler 1 0 0-2 2, Tilstra 2 0 0-0 4, Broesder 1 0 2-4 4, S.Rozeboom 1 0 2-2 4, DeNoble 0 0 0-0 0, Boeve 3 0 5-6 11, A.Olson 0 0 0-0 0.

Team statistics
H-BC: 10 of 48 field goals (21 percent), 11 of 16 free throws (69 percent), 31 rebounds, 19 turnovers.
SWC: 18 of 52 field goals (35 percent), 13 of 18 free throws (72 percent), 34 rebounds, 13 turnovers.

H-BC wrestlers experience highs, lows during meets

By John Rittenhouse
Hills-Beaver Creek High School athletes Dusty Seachris and Kerry Fink tasted victory and defeat during a pair of outings as members of the Luverne-Hills-Beaver Creek-Ellsworth wrestling team.

The H-BC connection posted a pair of wins during the regular season finale against Jackson County Central in Jackson Thursday.

They both dropped tests during the Section 3A Team Tournament opener in Lamberton Tuesday, where L-H-BC-E's 3-16-1 team season came to an end with a 51-24 loss to Lac qui Parle Valley.

The tournament seedings held form as No. 6 LQPV dumped the No. 11 Cards by 27 points in Lamberton.

Fink ended up getting pinned by LQPV's Cameron Avelsgard with 11 seconds remaining in the first period of the 125-pound match.

Wrestling at 145, Seachris stayed alive against Vince Toutges before being pinned at 3:23.

Fink and Seachris both contributed six-point wins to L-H-BC-EÕs team tally during Thursday's regular season finale in Jackson.

Fink and Seachris drew forfeits at 125 and 130 respectively to account for 12 of L-H-BC-E's 27 points during a 43-27 setback to the Huskies.

The loss left L-H-BC-E with a 1-5 Southwest Conference record and a 3-15-1 overall record during the regular season.

The Cardinal wrestlers will compete in the Section 3AA Individual Tournament at Lac qui Parle Valley High School near Madison Feb. 22-23.

MCC nips Patriots

By John Rittenhouse
The Hills-Beaver Creek girls came up on the short end of a 36-33 score during a hard-fought basketball game played in Slayton Tuesday.

Taking on the Murray County Rebels in a Red Rock Conference Western Division clash, H-BC took every blow the hosts had to offer.

When it was all said and done, the Rebels simply were three points better than the Patriots on this particular night.

"I thought we played pretty well overall," said Patriot coach Tom Goehle. "It came down to MCC making a couple more shots and a couple of more free throws than we did."

The Patriots were right in the game until the end.

After facing 21-15 and 32-26 deficits at the end of the second and third quarters, the Patriots scored the first six points of the third period to knot the score at 32.

The Rebels countered with a 4-1 surge that proved to be the difference in the game when an H-BC three-point shot attempt at the end of the game missed its mark.

The Patriots, who led 13-11 after eight minutes of play, had trouble putting the ball in the basket with any consistency. H-BC made 31 percent of its field goals and 42 percent of its free throws in the contest.

Erin Boeve led H-BC with an eight-point, 10-rebound performance.

The 12-8 Patriots host conference-leading Adrian in the home finale tonight before ending the regular season in Fulda Monday.

Box score
B.Rozeboom 0 0 0-0 0, B.Olson 1 0 0-0 2, Rentschler 1 0 2-4 4, Tilstra 3 0 1-4 7, Broesder 2 0 0-0 4, S.Rozeboom 1 0 0-0 2, DeNoble 3 0 0-0 6, Boeve 3 0 2-4 8.

Team statistics
H-BC: 14 of 45 field goals (31 percent), five of 12 free throws (42 percent), 28 rebounds.
MCC: 14 of 39 field goals (36 percent), eight of 11 free throws (73 percent), 27 rebounds.

Girls skip past Ellsworth in second half

Hills-Beaver Creek post Erin Boeve (43) worked the paint to score 20 points during Monday's 50-43 girls' basketball victory in Ellsworth.

By John Rittenhouse
The Hills-Beaver Creek girls pulled off a come-from-behind victory when they squared off against Ellsworth in a non-conference basketball game in Ellsworth Monday.

Trailing by as many as eight points in the first half, the Patriots clawed their way within two points of the Panthers at the intermission.

H-BC completed the comeback by outscoring Ellsworth 32-21 in the second half to nail down a 50-43 win.

Erin Boeve and Jody Rentschler played key roles in H-BC's second-half rally.

Boeve netted 14 of her team-high 20 points in the final two stanzas. Rentschler struck for eight of her 10 points.

Ellsworth led 22-18 heading into the third quarter, but the Patriots went on an 8-2 run in the first 3:30 of the second half to take their first lead of the game at 26-24.

Panther Kayla Boltjes canned a three-point shot to put EHS in front 27-26 before the Patriots went on an 8-0 run consisting of five points from Boeve and three by Brittney Rozebom. This gave H-BC a seven-point advantage (34-27) that was trimmed to five points (34-29) when Jamie Leuthold converted a field goal for EHS with six seconds remaining in the period.

Ellsworth scored the first two points in the fourth quarter to trail by three, but the Patriots countered with a 10-0 run to open the biggest lead of the game at 44-31.

The Panthers did climb within seven points (46-39) when Laurel Drenth converted a three-point play with 1:54 remaining, but that would be as close as EHS would come to catching H-BC.

Ellsworth looked to be the stronger team in the first half.

Boltjes canned a three-point shot at 4:59 of the first quarter to give the hosts a 7-2 advantage. H-BC pulled to within one point of the Panthers twice as the period progressed before facing a 14-12 deficit at period's end.

Jenna Groen, who netted 20 points to lead the Panthers, capped a 6-0 run to start the second quarter with a field goal at 4:24 to give EHS its biggest lead of the game at 20-12. The score was 22-14 when H-BC ended the quarter with a 6-0 run capped by Rozeboom's field goal with 38 seconds left in a first half that ended with EHS sporting a 22-18 lead.

Eleven of Groen's 20 points came in the first half. Leuthold scored eight of her 14 points in the first half for EHS.

Box score
H-BC
B.Rozeboom 4 0 1-3 9, B.Olson 2 0 0-0 4, Rentschler 4 0 2-4 10, Tilstra 2 0 1-2 5, S.Rozeboom 1 0 0-0 2, DeNoble 0 0 0-0 0, Boeve 9 0 2-4 20.
Ellsworth
Boltjes 0 2 0-0 6, Jenniges 0 0 0-1 0, Wurpts 0 0 0-0 0, Drenth 1 0 1-1 3, Ln.Leuthold 0 0 0-0 0, Jm.Leuthold 7 0 0-0 14, Groen 6 0 8-11 20.

Team statistics
H-BC: 21 of 48 field goals (44 percent), six of 13 free throws (46 percent), 26 rebounds, nine turnovers.

Ellsworth: 16 of 41 field goals (39 percent), nine of 13 free throws (69 percent), 31 rebounds, 16 turnovers.

Mano a Mano hopes to banish inequalities for Bolivian people by establishing medical system

By Jolene Farley
A Hills native and her Bolivian husband have been working to share some American wealth with impoverished Bolivian communities through their volunteer organization, Mano a Mano Medical Resources.

Segundo Velasquez noticed many differences between life in the United States and life for the people of Bolivia during trips to visit family in his home country, according to his wife, Joan (Swanson) Velasquez.

"One of the things that struck him most about the United States was how much material wealth there is here," she said.

Awareness of the inequalities between the two countries blossomed into the idea that maybe they could do something to help.

"It's kind of an amazing story," said Joan. "We had no organizational backing whatsoever. We just decided to do it. We saw a need no one was meeting."

Segundo and Joan met in Bolivia while she served in the Peace Corps, and after Segundo moved to the United States in 1969, they married.

Bolivia is South America's poorest nation with an average annual income of $200 per year. Ninety-nine percent of rural residents are unable to sustain healthy diets.

The economy operates primarily on a barter system, according to the couple. Most homes are built of adobe and have no electricity or running water. Residents are fortunate if they own a bed or a table.

"Materially, everything is extremely sparse," Joan said.

The impact of poverty is especially hard on Bolivia's children. Seventy-percent of children under the age of 5 are malnourished. One-third of rural Cochabamba, Bolivia, children die before they are 1 year old, mostly from preventable respiratory or gastrointestinal infections.

"Most of them (Bolivians) have never seen a doctor or a nurse before," said Joan.

After the couple decided they would try to help the people of Bolivia, they searched for ideas on what to do and where to start. Segundo's brother, Jose, is a doctor in Bolivia, so the couple decided to concentrate on the medical field.

A friend suggested approaching area hospitals as a non-profit organization and asking them to give medical supplies they would normally throw away.

Mano a Mano ("hand to hand" in Spanish) Medical Resources, as the couple's organization is called, has continued to operate on that principle since it incorporated in 1994.

Donated items usually would be thrown away if not given to Mano a Mano. For example, when doctors perform surgery, instruments and supplies are ordered in kits, and sometimes all the individually packaged items in the kits are not used. Mano a Mano asks medical facilities to donate the unused items.

When hospitals acquire advanced technology, Mano a Mano asks them to donate their obsolete machines. Several used exam tables, doctor stools and side tables have found their way to Bolivia because clinics redecorated or no longer needed the old equipment.

Medical professionals in Bolivia are ecstatic to receive any supplies. "Their comments are they have never seen anything that modern in their country," said Joan.

The first shipment to Bolivia was a handful of medical supplies delivered by Segundo on a visit to his family. Since he was a Northwest Airlines employee, he could visit Bolivia frequently.

Shipments continued to increase in size until Mano a Mano was forced to look for an alternate way to transport donations. "Then we called in the Air Force Reserves," joked Segundo.

The couple found a little-known law, the Denton Amendment, which permits military aircraft to transport humanitarian cargo free of charge on a space available basis. All shipments are now transported twice a year by the Air Force Reserves.

"We never know when it's going, but we do know it will get there," said Joan.

The couple considers the help of the military invaluable. "It makes us able to complete this work," Joan said.

The military has transported 600,000 pounds of medical surplus out of the Twin Cities for Mano a Mano over the last seven years.

The guards fly the supplies into the capital city of La Paz, Bolivia, and volunteers drive over the Andes Mountains to Cochabamba, Bolivia, carrying the cargo to a Mano a Mano warehouse.

Mano a Mano has up to 100 volunteers in the United States and 40 volunteers in Bolivia.

Because of its volunteers, Mano a Mano's expenses are less than 1 percent of revenue. "We say we are the organization that doesnÕt pay anyone to do anything," said Segundo.

The couple appreciates the local support they receive for their organization. Bethlehem Lutheran Church ladies quilt blankets for Mano a Mano, and Hills-Beaver Creek students donate school supplies.

In 1996 almost by accident, Mano a Mano branched into building clinics. A friend of the Velasquezes was celebrating her 70th birthday, so another friend suggested asking for gifts for Mano a Mano instead of birthday gifts.

The couple hoped the gifts they received would be enough to purchase a microscope. After donations spiraled to more than $9,000, they realized they could fund a much larger project.

A one-room clinic in Bolivia can be constructed for between $3,000 to $4,000 with some donated labor. So the birthday donations allowed the organization to build two clinics.

Before a clinic is built in a community, an agreement is signed stating what is expected from each party. Communities must supply four unskilled workers per day for three to four months of construction. Residents have logged more than 25,000 hours of labor on projects in their communities.

In 2000 an anonymous $2 million grant allowed Mano a Mano to plan the construction of 30 more clinics. The grant also partially funded staffing at the clinics for a period of seven years.

As a future project, Mano a Mano hopes to build a hospital in Cochabamba. Land has been purchased, and a group of medical professionals in Bolivia are creating a nonprofit group to try to raise funds.

Mano a Mano will always remain a Bolivian organization, according to Joan. "The need is so enormous (in Bolivia)," she said. "It would be hard to imagine our organization able to cover the whole country."

Accident claims life of former Beaver Creek resident

By Jolene Farley
A car accident near Presho, S.D., Friday claimed the life of 51-year-old Patricia (Gibson) Van Wyhe, and left her husband, Tom, hospitalized.

Tom is the son of Cliff and Vi Van Wyhe, Hills. PatriciaÕs father, Marshall Gibson, is a former Beaver Creek postmaster. Tom and Patricia are both Hills-Beaver Creek High School graduates.

Tom suffered a broken right hand and left collarbone and lacerations and bruising.

"Tom had surgery and he's out of intensive care," said his brother, Steven Van Wyhe, Steen. "His prognosis is good. He'll recover."

The couple was returning to their home in Sioux Falls from a basketball game in Pierre, S.D., when they swerved to miss a stalled semi.

Patricia was killed instantly when their vehicle left the road and rolled.

Co-workers of Patricia's, a doctor and a nurse, were first on the scene and reported the crash by cell phone and administered care until emergency personnel arrived.

Tom was transported to Pierre by ambulance, then flown to Sioux Falls. He is a patient at Sioux Valley Hospital.

A 28-year employee of Sioux Valley Hospital, Patricia was director of surgery and anesthesia.

Memorial services will be at 7 p.m. Thursday at First United Methodist Church, Sioux Falls. See the full obituary on page 2.

Helge's Pool Tournament

Helge's Father/Son Pool Tournament in Beaver Creek Friday and Saturday raised $242 for the Beaver Creek Fire Department. A separate collection by the players raised $205 to be used for a tree to be planted beside the Hospice Cottage in Luverne. Gary Helgeson (left) congratulates tournament winner Brian Moen, while Gordon Helgeson congratulates his father Roger Moen. The Moens are from Lester, Iowa.

Another blast of winter

Snow lingers on the side of a hill north of Beaver Creek Monday after another blast of winter Saturday dumped three to seven inches of snow on the region. The snow was delivered with 35-mph wind gusts causing poor visibility at times. SaturdayÕs storm followed record high temperatures Friday.

Photo by Jolene Farley

Russell Blanford

Russell Arthur Blanford, 81, Luverne, died Thursday, Feb. 7, 2002, at his farm.

Services were Tuesday, Feb. 12, at St. Catherine Catholic Church in Luverne. Burial was in St. Catherine Catholic Cemetery, Luverne.

Russell Blanford was born on the family farm in Rock County near Hardwick where he was raised and attended Hardwick School. Following his education he worked on the family farm.

He marred Maxine "Sis" Markl on Feb. 4, 1946, at St. Leo Catholic Church in Pipestone. Following their marriage they briefly farmed near Hardwick. They moved to a farm near Luverne where he farmed for 47 years. Mrs. Blanford died on Jan. 13, 1994. He continued living on the farm and later spent most of his time at his apartment in Luverne.

Mr. Blanford was a member of St. Catherine Catholic Church in Luverne. He was also a member of the Luverne Eagles Club where he enjoyed rolling dice and cooking. He enjoyed playing cards, raising sheep and going to the sales barn. He also enjoyed hunting deer and fishing.

Survivors include two nieces, Trudy Anderson, Magalia, Calif., and Glenda (Dennis) Kleinsaser, Denver, Colo.; three nephews, Jack (Darlene) Biever Jr., Garretson, S.D., Dave (Cindy) Biever, Sioux Falls, S.D., and Tom (Linda) Biever, Beaver Creek; and special friend, Ardyth Gass, Luverne.

Mr. Blanford was preceded in death by his wife, parents, and one sister, Wava Wentzel.

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

John Aukes

John Arthur Aukes, 94, Luverne, died Saturday Feb. 9, 2002, at Mary Jane Brown Good Samaritan Center in Luverne.

A private family service was Wednesday, Feb. 13, with the Rev. Paul Fries officiating. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery, Luverne.

John Aukes was born to Dirk "Dick" and Laura (Winkelwitsch) Aukes on Oct. 13, 1907, on the family farm in Rock County near Steen where he was raised and attended country school. Following his education he worked on the family farm.

He married Frances Thompson on March 20, 1940, in her parents' home near Hills. They made their home on a farm southeast of Hardwick where they farmed until they retired in 1975. They moved to Luverne. Mrs. Aukes died on May 24, 1994. He moved to Mary Jane Brown Good Samaritan Center on Sept. 29, 2000.
Mr. Aukes was a member of Bethany Lutheran Church in Luverne. He was a lifelong member of Minnesota Farmers Union and also a member of the Minnesota DFL party. He enjoyed his dogs, Sparky and Cindy. He also enjoyed milking cows and fishing.

Survivors include his four children and their spouses, Eileen (John) Massey, Paul (Darla) Aukes and Wayne Aukes, all of Luverne, and Gary (Mavis) Aukes, Beaver Creek; four grandchildren, Jane Aukes, Edina, Melissa Aukes, San Diego, Calif., B.J. Aukes, Luverne, and Shannon Maday, Groton, Conn.; one stepgrandson, Martell Massey, Hot Springs, Ark.; one brother, Orrin (Bernice) Aukes, Steen; four sisters, Laura (Fred) Paulsen, Hills, Lillian (Walter) Ausen, Ruthton, Verla Baker, Ash Creek, and Vera (Conrad) Rozeboom, Murdock; and nieces and nephews.

Mr. Aukes was preceded in death by his parents, his wife, Frances, one sister, Mary Vis, and three brothers, Dick, Harvey and Lloyd Aukes.

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

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