Bowar Received ESA Award

Gary Bowar received the ESA distinguished service award on April 12.

ESA (Epsilon Sigma Alpha) held its awards ceremony where they honored Bowar, presented high school scholarships and honored members of the two Winner chapter for their work in ESA.

Bowar was born and raised in Mitchell. He graduated from Notre Dame High School and went on to attend Carroll College in Helena, Mont, graduating with a B.A. degree in history. He returned to South Dakota in 1964 and enlisted in the Army National Guard for six years. Upon his discharge from active duty, he went to work for the South Dakota Department of Social Services, working in Lake Andes, Yankton and Sioux Falls.

He marred Jan Dotzauer in 1966 and they moved from Sioux Falls to Champaign-Urbana, Ill., where he completed his master’s degree in social work. Upon completion of his degree, they moved to Winner in 1971.

He worked in Winner, Lake Andes, Chamberlain, Martin, Pine Ridge and Mobridge as the district supervisor and Winner office manager of the Department of Social Services. During his employment, he was the on the Winner regional hospital board for 14 years, a social worker designee consultant for the Winner Long Term Care Center and Bennett County Nursing Home. He was a member of the S.D. state employees organization board for 9 years and president of the Winner Chapter of SDSEO for 17 years.

Then Gov. Michael Rounds declared Aug. 9, 2004, as Gary Bowar Day in South Dakota for services he provided to the state and Winner area. Bowar retired in December of 2004 having worked 40 years for the Department of Social Services.

He is currently a member of the Winner DSS permanency planning review team for children in DSS custody as the community representative. He is treasurer of the Tripp County Historical Society and has written two local histories—The history of Winner baseball and Catholic Churches of the past in Tripp County.

Bowar is a member of the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, the Winner Quarterback Club and the Winner Community Playhouse. He is a regular blood donor and has donated 135 times since 1971.

He has been a member of the Winner American Legion for 45 years. As a Legion member is the the post historian, involved in the funeral honor guard for veterans, delivers the military newspapers every two weeks, involved in Labor Day activities and is in charge of the Monday Night football fundraiser.

The Bowars are the parent of two children—Chad of Charlotte, N.C. and Amy of Denver, Colo.

Winner Woman Wins “Miss Amazing” Title

Crystal Hebbring of Winner won the Miss Amazing senior miss division at the Miss Amazing pageant in Sioux Falls.

Hebbring will participate in the national Miss Amazing pageant to be held in Chicago in August.

Also competing at the South Dakota pageant was Megan Kinzer.

Josi Meek, Community Connections support coordinator, said the day was busy and fun. The ladies started their day with registration and then met their buddies for the day. The buddies were college students who walked with the contestants through the day. They assured schedules were kept.

The ladies participated in an interview session with five different judges. They were questioned on areas that the ladies submitted in the registration form such as their goals, employment and where they see themselves in the future.

Both Hebbring and Kinzer nailed it (the interview),” said Meek. “They were both so poised and confident in their answers. We could not have been more proud of them,” added Meek.

The ladies had time to practice for the talent show. The women proceeded to get their hair and makeup done before getting ready for the evening gown event.

Meek said when the judges were ready to announce the winners, everyone was nervous and very excited to hear the results.

Meek noted for Crystal to be announced the winner was an incredible moment in her life.

Miss Amazing began in 2007. It is dedicated to providing opportunities for girls and women with disabilities to reach their fullest potential.

With an expansive network of supporters, Miss Amazing has become so much more than a pageant.

Miss Amazing is a movement created by a collective desire to acknowledge the beauty and value within all people.

Miss Amazing is now in over 30 states.

South Dakota Miss Amazing became a state chapter of the national organization in 2014.

In April of 2015, South Dakota hosted its first annual program with six girls and women. Through each annual program, South Dakota has continued to gain participants, volunteers, sponsors and audience members.

This year there were 38 participants.

Persons who would like to donate to help Crystal get to Chicago can visit the website: https://donate.missamazing.org/fundraiser/1400205.

Husher Candidate for DWU Honor

Sara Husher of Winner is one of the candidates for Miss Wesleyan at Dakota Wesleyan University in Mitchell.

The titles of Scotchman and Miss Wesleyan are given to honor two seniors based on campus leadership, service, community leadership, academics and character.

Husher is a biology major and a member of the CHAOS (science club), Phi Kappa Phi and Sigma Zeta honor societies and the DWU volleyball team. She has volunteered for new student orientation, the regional science fair and Mitchell animal rescue. Husher was an international health care intern at the Gap Medic program in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic and volunteered for a medial portion of the DWU Uganda service learning trip.

She has worked as a research assistant at DWU and as a certified nursing assistant at Firesteel Healthcare for two years. She received the Hughes grant in aid award for educational experiences, the St. Joseph Hospital endowed scholarship award and the S.D. Opportunity grant award.

Husher is the daughter of Linda and Phil Husher of Winner.

After graduation, Husher will work as a post baccalaureate research fellow at the National Cancer Institute in Frederick, Md, while working on a master in public health degree.

The winners will be announced at an honors convocation on April 27.

Hiemstra Named “Legionette of the Year”

Sharon Hiemstra of the Winner American Legion Auxiliary has been named the District 3 Legionette of the year.

The announcement was made at the regional meeting in Chamberlain.

Hiemstra has been a member of the Winner Legion Auxiliary for 10 years and currently is the chaplain and VA&R chairman.

The honoree has prepared food for Memorial Day honor guard luncheon, assisted with the float for Labor Day parade, put crosses on veterans graves at the Winner Cemetery. In addition, she has helped the American Legion the entire day of the demolition derby during the Labor Day festivities, set up the American Legion post home for the Veterans Day dinner and cleanup.

She has helped the unit with the yearly fundraiser, has donated food at just about every event the American Legion and auxiliary hold, helped prepare food for the car show held at the historical society grounds.

Hiemstra is on the funeral committee of her church, a member of the local Centennial Quilt Guild, works part-time at the Elder Inn and also part-time at MEMS.

She has assisted the Legion with prepping, serving and cleanup of a meal for high school students and government officials for Government Day.

She has helped prepare and deliver treat bags to show the auxiliary’s appreciation for the teachers of our local schools.

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Noem Addresses Seniors at Winner High School

By Dan Bechtold, Editor

Rep. Kristi Noem spoke to Winner High School government classes Monday morning as she explained her role as South Dakota’s representative in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington, D.C. Noem also talked about her campaign for governor.

She is in a Republic primary with attorney general Marty Jackley.

Noem has served eight years in the U.S. House of Representatives. In Congress she serves on the ways and means committee. She was one of five representatives from the 435-member House to negotiate the final tax reform deal.

She served six years under the Obama Administration and is now serving under the Trump administration. Now, with a Republican president, Noem says she is at the White House about every week.

In Washington, Noem has a staff of nine and with her offices in South Dakota her staff numbers around 16.

Every weekend she flys back home to South Dakota and attends as many of her children’s school functions as time allows.

Noem and her family operate a ranch in Hamlin County.

Noem says she is running for governor because it was time for her to come home. When first elected in 2010 she said she would not stay in Washington, D.C, for 10 years.

When she is not in Washington, Noem is back in South Dakota campaigning for the primary election on June 5.

As she listens to South Dakotans, Noem hears concerns that there are not enough new opportunities in the state. “Wages are not growing, businesses are not able to expand. They want someone who is going to be aggressive in economic development,” she said.

Noem has a plan to kickstart South Dakota’s economy. She wants to create a foundation upon which businesses can prosper in South Dakota.

South Dakota does a lot of things right but our economy is falling behind,” she said.

The Republican candidate for governor wants to create new opportunities for South Dakotans to prosper.

A lot of the work will be in workforce development. “The biggest challenges businesses have is they cannot get workers,” Noem explained.

When asked, if elected, what kind of governor would she be, Noem said she would be an interactive governor. “I am used to working face to face with people every day and listening to their concerns. I will be a very hands on governor.”

Noem added that her experience in Washington will help her serve South Dakota as governor. She added that she understands how the federal dollars come to South Dakota.

Essay

By Sydney Brown

What is the four way test? How can I apply the four way test in my life? How can I use the four way test in my life? If someone is gossiping or spreading rumors that I can use the four way test. There are four questions you need to ask yourself. Is it the truth? Is it fair to all concerned? Will it build good will and better friendships? Is if beneficial for all?

Now let’s get into the problem. Some of my friends are spreading rumors by gossiping and ask me if I want to hear. They are gossiping about the new kid and say that they heard that she got kicked out of her old school for hitting her teacher in the face. Well I don’t know if that is true I need to use the four way test. I asked myself is that true. There was no way to find out but ask, So that’s what I did. The new girl said no that her dad got a job here that’s why they moved. Then I have to ask is fair for all concerned. This once was not either it was not fair that the new girls had to sit alone at lunch every day because of that rumor.

Now we need to think about the other two questions. Will it build good will and better friendships? Well for them spreading those rumors if the new girl were to find out then that would most likely not build better friendships. Is it beneficial for all? No it is not so I should not listen to these rumors before I spread them to. I am glad that I know how to use those four steps or there would have been more people to spread those rumors.

Now that you know how I use the four way test you can to. If I did not know about that test I would have been spreading rumors to. Those four questions can help you in a situation, and they really do help you. It is time for you to use the four way test.

Two Students Receive USD Scholarships

Two Tripp County high school seniors have been awarded Coyote commitment scholarships at the University of South Dakota.

Kaylee Bolton, a senior at Colome, has earned a $6,000 Coyote commitment achievement scholarship and Madyson Morehart, a senior at Winner High School, has earned a $7,000 Coyote commitment distinction scholarship.

These awards are based on strong standardized test scores and cumulative grade point averages.

Sixty-two percent of the new students on the Vermillion campus received awards from the USD Foundation, other USD accounts and from other private sources outside the university.

Colome Board Pleased with Public School Meeting

A lot of public opinion was expressed at a meeting Thursday night to discuss plans for a new middle/school high school in Colome.

The Colome Consolidated School Board held the meeting with about 120 people attending.

In addition to school board members, speaking at the meeting were Jeff Nelson of Falls Architecture Studio, Sioux Falls and Adam Houdeshell and Jason Brown of Summit Construction of Platte.

The estimated cost of a new school is $2.5 million. The school board has discussed using capital outlay money and some financing to pay for the school. There will be no tax increase or bond to build the school.

Some community members asked if it was possible to have a bond issue and use a smaller percentage of the capital outlay funds.

A lot of great ideas came out of this meeting,” said Vince Thieman, chairman of the school board. “The board felt very happy with the community input and are excited to move forward with this project.”

Thieman added that he felt coming out of this meeting the community wants this taken to a public vote. Thieman says he plans to recommend this process at the April 9 school board meeting.

The school board wants to thank the community for being involved,” said Thieman. “It was a very positive meeting.”

The board chairman said a recommendation was made that two community members be named to the school board building committee. The community members were named at Monday’s meeting. The school board building committee is made up of Thieman, Justin Heath and Brent Gill.

The current high school is 100 years old and is in need of lot of repair.

School Board Discusses Roof Repair

By Dan Bechtold, Editor

Winner School Board considered several items at its Monday night meeting.

The board discussed the roof repair to the elementary, high school and Armory buildings. The roofs were damaged in last summer’s two hail storms.

On April 10, Upper Deck of Rapid City and the insurance company will meet with school officials.

Austin Calhoon was hired as a 7th to 12th grade math teacher. Board chairman Mike Calhoon abstained from voting.

Keith McCarty was offered employment as elementary school custodian.

Linda Bertelsen resigned as middle school volleyball assistant supervisor.

Schramm Furniture of Winner was awarded the bid for carpet in the elementary school. The bid was $33,958.52. Also bidding was Country Carpet, Pierre, $39,479.

The board will advertise for a special education aid.

The May meeting of the school board has been moved to May 17 at 7 p.m. The meeting was moved due to a pops concert on May 14, the regular school board meeting date.

Membership in the South Dakota High School Activities Association for 2018-2019 was approved.

The request from Winner Education Association to begin negotiations was approved.

Approval was given to the ASBSD health insurance and workman’s comp renewal for the 2018-2019 school year.

Reports were heard from school principals.

Supt. Keven Morehart reported he attended a school law seminar.

Several Winner High School speech students attended the meeting.

The board met in executive session.

Actress, Formerly of Winner, Dies

Delores Taylor, who co-starred with her husband Tom Laughlin in his productions of the Billy Jack series of films, has died in Southern California, her daughter said on March 26.

She was 85.

Taylor was originally from Winner and her father, Harry, was the Winner postmaster.

Teresa Laughlin told The Associated Press that Taylor died March 23 of natural causes at the Motion Picture and Television Fund Home near Los Angeles. She said her mother had suffered from dementia.

Taylor was born in 1932 in Winner, South Dakota. She grew up near the Rosebud Indian Reservation, an experience which she drew from when creating the namesake character of the Billy Jack films in the 1970s.

Taylor starred in three of the four Billy Jack films in which she played a teacher whose progressive school is defended by Billy Jack — a half-white, half-Native American Vietnam veteran who had come to hate war. The films became counterculture favorites.

In 1986, Taylor returned to Winner to attend her 35th class reunion. She was honored at the coronation as then mayor Duane Patmore presented Taylor with a key to the city and Dennis Meyer, president of the Winner Chamber of Commerce, presented her with a dozen roses.
A front page story in the Oct. 1, 1986, Winner Advocate detailed her life in Winner and as an actress. The story was written by Dan Bechtold.

While she and her husband were in Winner they spoke to Winner High School students.
While at WHS, Taylor was active in band, chorus, student council, pep band, pep club and National Honor Society. She was a cheerleader and a homecoming candidate.

After graduating from Winner High School, Taylor worked at the Tripp County Auditor’s office for two years.

After raising enough money, she went to the University of South Dakota and majored in art.

In an interview for the Winner newspaper back in 1986, Taylor said she had a lot of feelings about Winner High School. “The one thing that has struck me the most is that Winner gave me a good solid foundation, an inner strength that i don’t think i would have gotten any place else,” she said.

Billy Jack was first seen in the 1968 biker movie Born Losers, but became widely known after Billy Jack, the second of four films Laughlin made about him (only three made it to theaters).

Billy Jack was released in 1971 after a long struggle by Laughlin to gain control of the low-budget, self-financed movie, a model for guerrilla filmmaking. The film became a surprise hit and the theme song, One Tin Soldier, was a hit single for the rock group Coven.

Taylor was nominated for a Golden Globe for New Star of the Year in 1972.

Taylor appeared in a small role and as the narrator in the first Billy Jack film, The Born Losers (1967), then played the schoolteacher Jean Roberts opposite her husband as the title character in Billy Jack (1971), The Trial of Billy Jack (1974), Billy Jack Goes to Washington (1977) and The Return of Billy Jack (1986), which was never released.

Taylor and Laughlin, who were married from October 1954 until his death in December 2013 at age 82, developed the character of Billy, a mystical half-Navajo, half-white Vietnam veteran and martial arts expert who stands up for the underdog in America.
Laughlin also directed all the films in the series, and for much of their off-camera work, he and his wife adopted pseudonyms, including Frank and Teresa Christina to honor their children. (Frank is a film editor, and Teresa appeared in four of the Billy Jack films.)
The couple also self-distributed their features, which explored themes like child abuse, religious persecution and exploitation of Native Americans. After winning a lawsuit with Warner Bros. over Billy Jack, they rereleased that film, made for $360,000, and it remains one of the most successful independent films in history.

On the eve of the release of The Born Losers, Roger Ebert wrote about her:
“Miss Taylor is an independent producer. But not an independent like John Wayne or Kirk Douglas, forming production companies for tax purposes and releasing films through established studios. She is a real independent — which means that she works out of her own living room and pocketbook, finds financial backers wherever she can and sometimes has to stop filming to dig up more money.”

A song from The Trial of Billy Jack, “Golden Lady,” written for her and performed by Lynn Baker, became her trademark. Taylor had not heard it until her character was brought by Billy into a church in a wheelchair in an emotional scene, her daughter noted.
“Just about every letter that she received from her fans after that called her the Golden Lady,” Christina, her youngest daughter told the Hollywood Reporter.

She met Laughlin at the University of South Dakota and was set to marry another man. But Laughlin hitchhiked to South Dakota, arriving on Christmas Eve to talk her out of that, her daughter said.

They were married in Milwaukee when she was working as a graphic artist and he was a dairy deliveryman, then came to Los Angeles in 1955 in a borrowed car and with $200 to their name to figure out a career in show business.

“They completed each other in a way I’ve never seen with anyone else,” said Christina, who is writing and producing a documentary titled Renegades, about 1971’s Billy Jack.
In addition to her three children, survivors include Taylor’s grandchildren, Ellery, Hutch, Lily, Arlan and Jessica, and her sisters, Joan and Darlene.

 

Her daughter said Taylor was a “reluctant” celebrity and preferred her roles of wife, mother and grandmother.

“She loved performing but didn’t enjoy the Hollywood trappings,” Teresa Laughlin said.