Pheasants Forever Looking for Projects to Cost Share

Pheasants Forever of Winner is again looking for habitat projects to cost share in the 2015 crop year.

Persons wanting to enhance conservation practices on their farm to help pheasants are asked to submit a plan. It could be for planting trees, digging waterholes, planting grass or a completely new idea.

Cost share grant application deadline is June 15.

Persons are to submit an  application outlining their plan to: Pheasants Forever, P.O. Box 282, Winner, S.D. 57580. The applications can also be dropped off at BankWest of Winner.

Join Angus Association

Kaylea Larson Littau  of Tripp County is a new member of the American Angus Association.

Jesse Larson of Hamill is a new junior member of  the American Angus Association.

Junior members are eligible to register cattle in the American Angus Association, participate in programs conducted by the National Junior Angus Association and take part in association sponsored shows.

The American Angus Association, with nearly 24,000 active adult  and junior members, is the largest beef breed association in the world.

Races in Two Wards in City Election

There will be a race in two wards in the Winner city election on April 14.

Incumbent Frank Finney is running unopposed in Ward One.

Seeking election in Ward Two are Cory Assman and Jody Brozik. Incumbent councilperson Val Sherman is not seeking re-election. Sherman has served on the city council for 16 years.

Running in Ward Three are Orville Lund and John Meyer. Incumbent councilman Zach Anderson is not seeking re-election. Anderson served six years on the council.

The deadline for candidates to file nominating petitions was Feb. 27.

Colome City Election

The city of Colome will have an election in Ward Three.

Three persons filed petitions for two seats on the board.

Filing petitions in Ward Three were Bruce DeMers, Bob VanOort and John Hofeldt. DeMers and Van Oort are the incumbents.

The deadline for filing election petitions was Feb. 27. The election will be held April 14 in the Colome city office.

Incumbents filing petitions in two other wards were Carl Westergren and David Duffy in Ward One and Brad Hill in Ward Two.

Bling Fling Set for March 7

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The third annual Spirit Gems Bling Fling will be held Saturday, March 7, at 10 a.m. in the Winner Armory. The doors will open at 9 a.m.

Everyone is welcome to attend and watch individuals showcase their dance, tumbling, stunting and cheer skills.

Spirit Gems is a group of local kids ranging in age from 3 to 18.

There will be vendors, concessions and fun booths.

In addition to the Winner areas, there will be competitors from Miller, Pierre, Ainsworth, Neb., Colome, Platte, Gregory and other area towns.

All five Spirit Gems groups will be performing which includes about 100 girls.

There will be 10 vendors at the show. One of the booths will feature the Spirit Store from the Lincoln, Neb., area. The store features cheer bows and other accessories.

The concession stand will feature caramel apples and cotton candy along with other  food items.

There will also be a silent auction. Persons who would like to donate items to the silent auction can contact Jessica Beehler, Katie Craven or Sara Swedlund.

Vendors who would like to have a booth can contact Amy Kartak.

The Bling Fling will feature a special performance by the Spirit Coals.

Kirdy Jorgensen will be the cheer announcer for the Bling Fling.

There will be prizes awarded at the end of the show.

Saphire

Horstman Honored at SDSU

zach horstman and cody larson

 

South Dakota State University men’s basketball team honored its seniors Zach Horstman of Winner and Cody Larson of Sioux Falls on Feb. 21.

The Jacks defeated Oral Roberts and the game marked Horstman’s final home game.

“You look at Zach’s  four years and I don’t think there’s been a more successful guy in the Division I era in terms of wins,” said coach Scott Nagy.

The coach said both Horstman and Larson are great students. “They’ll be great leaders in their community and I’m proud that I had a chance to have them in my life,” said Nagy.

Area couple make wedding plans while bride-to-be fights cancer

lance engel nd jenny longville

 

By CANDY DENOUDEN, The Mitchell Daily Republic

KENNEBEC — Jenny Longville didn’t expect to get engaged for a while.

So when her boyfriend, Lance Engel, proposed during a mid-December trip to the Black Hills, Longville was surprised. Still — she said yes.

“My mom cried for two weeks,” Longville added with a smile.

Engel told Longville to get dressed up so the couple could go look at Christmas lights in Deadwood. It helped Engel honor Longville’s only proposal stipulation: She wanted to look nice.

“That was the only thing I had to work around,” Engel said with a laugh.

Longville, 26, and Engel, 29, met on New Year’s Eve last year, when Engel’s brother’s band played in Presho. They hit it off, and began dating soon after. Engel, of Winner, and Longville, of Kennebec, have made their long-distance relationship work. In the last few months, the couple and their families have banded together to support Longville, who was diagnosed with cancer in October.

Today is Valentine’s Day, a day to celebrate love and romance in all its forms. As Longville and Engel sat next to each other recently in Longville’s home in Kennebec, where she lives with her parents, Todd and Teresa, they described how they met, and how they decided that nothing — not even a Stage 3 colon cancer diagnosis — was worth postponing their engagement.

“Ever since we met, it’s just been easy with her,” Engel said. “I don’t really see the cancer changing any of that.”

To Engel, the diagnosis provided all the more incentive to propose. He was at the doctor’s office when Longville first learned she might have colon cancer. Doctors wanted to wait on test results to be sure before diagnosing her. It was a shock, and Engel felt helpless — but not deterred.

“I knew I was going to find a ring for her, even before the cancer,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons I wanted to show her I was in it for the long haul.”

Right from the start, Longville said Engel has been a strong support system for her. Any time she had doubts or concerns, Engel was there.

“He looked at me and said, ‘We’re going to get it,’ ” Longville said. “We decided we’re not going to think anything negative.”

They’ve maintained that positive focus, and try to juggle, work, wedding planning and Longville’s treatments. They have an Aug. 22 date set for the wedding, which will be in Winner. Longville, a Kennebec native and Dakota Wesleyan University graduate, said she plans to move to Winner once they are married, but will still work in Kennebec. She is excited for her first appointment to look at wedding dresses on Feb. 21.

Engel joked he was looking forward to the reception, but the part he’s most looking forward to?

“Im excited to say ‘I do,’ ” Engel said.

“Good answer,” Longville responded with a laugh.

Teresa, who jokingly described Engel as her “favorite child,” said she knew from the first time she met Engel that he was “the one” for her daughter.

“I’ve never seen her act that way,” she said.

Engel and Longville, often laughing and teasing, agree they “just clicked” from the start. They like to sing together, often in the car, watch movies, and Engel is trying to convert Longville into a football fan.

“We like to watch the Cowboys,” Engel said, which elicited a laugh from Longville.

“You like to watch the Cowboys,” she responded, but added: “It doesn’t really matter what we do. As long as we’re together, we have fun.”

‘I’m still me’

Longville was diagnosed officially on Oct. 28, four days after the colonoscopy where doctors told her she might have cancer. She got the call while she was at Kennebec Elementary, part of the Lyman School District, where she teaches junior kindergarten.