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It's beginning to look like Christmas...

Tyler Bush (left), Derek Haak and Travis Broesder wait patiently on their snowmobiles for traffic to pass so they can cross the highway near Steen Tuesday afternoon. The winter storm that hit the area Monday and Tuesday dumped more than a foot of snow, making winter sports enthusiasts and snowmobilers happy, while leaving those having to move snow not so enthusiastic.

Anna Tofteland

Anna Tofteland, 74, Luverne, died Friday, Nov. 30 at Luverne Hospice Cottage. Services will be Monday, Dec. 3 at 10:30 a.m. at Grace Lutheran Church, Luverne, with Rev. Maurice Hagen and Rev. Dell Sanderson officiating. Burial will be in Maplewood Cemetery. Visitation will be Sunday, Dec. 2 from 2 to 8 p.m. with the family present from 6 to 8 p.m. at Dingmann Funeral Home, Luverne.

Esther Koehn

Esther V. Koehn, 96, Hills, formerly of Luverne, died Friday, Nov. 23, 2001, at Tuff Memorial Home in Hills.

Services were Wednesday, Nov. 28, at Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Hills. The Rev. Lowell Berg officiated. Burial was in Flowerfield Cemetery, rural Hills.

Esther Nordby was born to August and Johanna (Moe) Nordby on Nov. 14, 1905, in Hills where she was raised and graduated from Hills High School. She was baptized and confirmed in Trinity Lutheran Church in Hills. Following her education she worked for the Hills Bakery for a few months and then began working for the Hills Post Office where she worked for 10 years. She then worked at Rock County Courthouse in Luverne where she was the deputy county auditor for 30 years.

She married Ray Koehn on Sept. 24, 1977, and moved to Luverne. Following Mr. Koehn's death on Jan. 22, 1990, she continued to live in Luverne until moving to Tuff Memorial Home in Hills in 1997.

Mrs. Koehn was a member of Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Hills where she was active in church circles and was church treasurer. She was also a member of Hills Senior Citizens, Luverne Senior Citizens and Rock County Historical Society.

Survivors include by two stepdaughters, Patricia Paske, Bloomington, and Dorothy Stager, Pipestone; stepgrandchildren; stepgreat-grandchildren; two nieces, Margaret Thornton, Madison, S.D., and Frances Muir, Jackson; five nephews, Jan Nordby, Sioux Falls, S.D., Craig Nordby, Ellicott City, Md., Todd Nordby, Garland, Texas, Lance Nordby, Hillsboro, Ore., and David Nordby, London, England; and one cousin, Raymond Nelson, Hills.

Mrs. Koehn was preceded in death by her parents, her husband, one stepgrandson, Tony Stager, two sisters, Anna (Mrs. Otto Bakke) and Rachel (Mrs. Alfred Bakke), and two brothers, G. Oliver Nordby and Joseph A. Nordby.

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

Sally McFadden

Sally McFadden, 67, rural Luverne, died Tuesday, Nov. 6 at Luverne Hospice Cottage. Visitation of remembrance will be Friday, Nov. 9 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Engebretson Funeral Home.

Esther Koehn

Esther Koehn, 96, Luverne, formerly of Hills, died Friday, Nov. 23 at the Tuff Memorial Home in Hills. Services will be Tuesday, Nov. 27 at 10:30 a.m. at Bethlehem Lutheran Church, Hills, with Rev. Lowell Berg officiating. Burial will be in Flowerfield Cemetery, rural Hills. Visitation will be Monday, Nov. 26 from 3 to 6 p.m. at Engebretson Funeral Home, Luverne.

Earl Scott

Earl Scott, 80, died Monday, Dec. 3. Services will be Friday, Dec. 7 at 10 a.m. at Zion Lutheran Church, Hardwick, with Rev. Mark Mumme officiating. Burial will be in Maplewood Cemetery. Visitation will be Thursday, Dec. 6 from 2 to 8 p.m. with the family present from 6 to 8 p.m. at Engebretson Funeral Home, Luverne.

John Wolfswinkel

John Wolfswinkel, 97, formerly of Luverne, died Wednesday, Aug. 22 at the Good Samaritan Center, Albert Lea. Services will be Monday, Aug. 27 at 10:30 a.m. at the American Reformed Church, Luverne. Visitation will be Sunday, Aug. 26 from 3 to 8 p.m. with the family present from 3 to 5 p.m. at Engebretson Funeral Home, Luverne.

Milo Stroh

Milo David Stroh, 81, Brigham City, Utah, formerly of Luverne, died Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2001, in Brigham City.

Graveside funeral services were Monday, Aug. 20, in Brigham City Cemetery.

Milo Stroh was born to James and Lucinda (Wohler) Stroh on Dec. 5, 1919, in Luverne. He was a farmer.
He married Dorothy Christensen in 1967 in Luverne.

Survivors include his brother and sister-in-law, Vernon and Gladys Stroh; three stepsons, Harm DeLaGrange, Tremonton, Utah, Chris DeLaGrange, Harrisville, Utah, and George DeLaGrange, Crownsville, Md.; and many nieces and nephews.

Mr. Stroh was preceded in death by his parents and one brother, Kenneth.

Myers Mortuary, Brigham City, was in charge of arrangements.

Luverne graduate makes second team

Luverne High School graduate Mark Maranell received a post-season honor for his performance as a member of the Northwestern College football team in St. Paul this fall.

Maranell, an offensive lineman for the Eagles, was selected to the second team of the All-Upper Midwest Athletic Conference honorary squad.

Maranell was a member of a Northwestern team that led the UMAC in total offense, as well as ranking as one of the NAIA's top offenses nationally.

Maranell was a first-team all-conference selection and an NAIA Scholar-Athlete award winner in 2000.

Web site ewg.org points to 'inequitable' subsidies

By Lori Ehde
A popular Web site among local Internet surfers this week is ewg.org.

The site, compiled by the Environmental Working Group, presents USDA figures on farm subsidies - who gets how much, organized by state, county, and producer.

Mike Pap, who farms 2,300 acres in Rock County, tops the local list at $500,000 in the past five years.

He said most of the subsidies are distributed in the form of loan deficiency payments, a federal system that ensures farmers are paid a fair price for grain, despite what the market does.

For example, when the posted county price for corn is $1.42 per bushel, and the contracted LDP price is $1.72, the load deficiency payment on that bushel is 30 cents.

The more grain a producer harvests, and the more depressed the farm economy, the more the LDP check will be. "Depressed farm prices make LDP payments higher," Pap said.

Producers in Pipestone County received nearly $46 million in farm subsidies since 1996.

Top five Pipestone County recipients include Brinkmeyer Farms, Holland, $554,174.51; Donald Backer, Pipestone, $381,677.65; Stuart Sybesma, Lindstrom, $362,321.54; Uilk Farms Inc., Pipestone, $320,262.50; and Peter Bisson, Garretson, S.D., $310,451.29.

Nobles County producers received more than $89 million in subsidies.

Top recipients in Nobles County include Son-d-partnership, Rushmore, $757,461.07; Keith Tordsen, Round Lake, $519,529.51; Loru Farms, Worthington, $492,213.11; Wieneke Farms, Adrian, $485,000.54; Riley Farms, Worthington, $480,207.87.

Rock County producers received more than $62 million over the past five years.

Pap said his posted subsidies are accurate. He said other local farm operations actually received more subsidies than he did, but they're reported differently.

For example, the husband-wife farming team of Mark and Leah Gath received a combined total of more than $800,000 in subsidies, but they're listed separately in two smaller amounts.

Warren Pommier of the Minnesota Farm Service Agency, St. Paul, said the ewg.org site is technically correct, but the numbers don't tell the whole story.

"You have to keep in mind these figures are for a period of five years," said Pommier, state specialist for the Freedom to Farm Bill.

Also, he said some line entries represent partnerships that may support several families.

He clearly pointed out that while Harvest States tops the Minnesota list of subsidies, the co-op collects loan deficiency payments for producers and disperses checks to members.

"That's why they're at the top with $20 million," Pommier said. "They do the LDPs for their patrons rather than the LDP being attached to their names."

Other disclaimers made by EWG are that the subsidies listed don't include conservation or disaster payments. Also, the amounts listed are for farms only in Rock County (some recipients receive subsidies in more than one county), and the locations listed on the site represent addresses where checks are mailed.

While it looks as though some are getting rich on farm subsidies, Pommier said that's not the case for everyone.

"If [subsidies] hadn't been there, the vast majority of producers would have had no income," he said.

He pointed to information from the Minnesota Agriculture Statistics Service Annual Report that states 97 percent of net farm income in 1999 was comprised of government payments.

"The profit was government payments," Pommier said.

A link on the site answers the question, "Why has EWG assembled this Farm Subsidy Database?"

EWG asserts that farm assistance is vital to farmers' incomes, but it advocates overhauling federal subsidy programs.

"We also think current policy has badly failed almost everyone in agriculture but the very largest producers of a few favored crops," the site reads.

"Before Congress enacts another Farm Bill that will set agriculture policy for the next five to 10 years, at a cost of $170 billion, the entire country should have better information about how taxpayers have already invested $90 billion since 'Freedom to Farm' became law."

The Environmental Working Group is a not-for-profit environmental research organization dedicated to improving public health and protecting the environment by reducing pollution in air, water and food.

EWG is funded almost exclusively by grants from foundations. Major supporters past and present include the W. Alton Jones Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Beldon Fund, the Turner Foundation, and the Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund.

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