LDNE Boys Basketball Statistics


By Clare Wiltse

Sports Contributor

2013-14 Boys Basketball Statistics

 

Name Total Pts. P/G Shot % 2Pt. 3Pt. FT Reb. Assist Steals Fouls

 

Chevy Henneman 192 8.7 31 27/65 35/133 32/45 40 27 31 66

Alex Brehmer 138 6.3 45 62/126 1/13 11/30 105 78 50 47

Bobby Simpson 228 10.4 37 35/66 42/139 32/41 37 43 37 39

Taylor Fuston 27 1.2 52 12/18 0/5 3/4 16 8 6 36

Dakota Riecken 284 12.9 62 103/165 0/0 78/123 134 18 25 58

Marcus Hegy 158 7.2 45 54/107 2/17 44/72 92 11 25 53

David Bishop 38 1.7 33 18/53 0/0 2/8 48 4 17 26

Montana Riecken 11 0.5 21 2/7 1/7 4/7 9 7 9 8

Dylan Hardeman 11 0.5 20 4/12 1/13 0/0 4 2 7 7

Cole Christoffersen 0 0.0. 0 0/2 0/0 0/0 2 0 0 0

Alec Anderson 36 1.6 55 15/27 0/0 6/11 23 2 3 14

Tyler Hardeman 4 0.2 40 2/5 0/0 0/0 4 0 0 0

 

 

LDNE TOTALS 1126 51.2 42 334/655 82/327 212/341 581 200 213 355

 

OPPONENTS 1083 49.2 43 335/661 67/253 211/376 616 — 166 327

Girls Basketball Statistics


By Clare Wiltse

Sports Contributor

2013-14 Girls Basketball Statistics

 

Name Total Pts. P/G Shot % 2Pt. 3Pt. FT Reb. Assist Steals Fouls

 

Darcey Simonsen 137 5.7 34 39/82 8/40 35/62 80 31 26 45

Kelly Wakeley 45 2.0 27 12/44 5/17 6/13 15 39 71 13

Madie Ronnfeldt 79 3.3 30 19/54 4/21 29/57 51 18 23 67

Brianne Haskell 163 10.2 28 51/165 6/33 43/81 66 55 26 46

Blair Preston 0 0.0 0 0/1 0/2 0/0 2 0 0 5

Haley Bacon 166 6.9 32 44/112 12/61 42/80 68 47 57 63

Tessie Collins 38 1.7 31 12/24 3/23 5/10 29 9 7 13

Lexie Bacon 135 5.9 36 11/20 35/106 8/11 38 29 33 24

Libby Henneman 32 109 29 3/7 8/30 2/2 15 7 8 11

Vanessa Peterson 183 7.6 47 70/146 0/2 43/94 155 10 25 56

Abby Peterson 55 2.3 28 39/82 0/3 35/62 121 32 22 31

 

LDNE TOTALS 1033 43.0 34 280/718 81/338 230/448 738 250 241 377

 

OPPONENTS 1147 47.8 38 407/958 49/239 186/349 613 107 — 382

 

 

 

Name

Special Oakland City Council Meeting


The Oakland City Council is having a special meeting tomorrow, Monday March 24th at 7:00 p.m. The special meeting is in regards to the upcoming building of the Dollar Store. Public is welcome and encouraged to attend.

The First Day of Spring


A very happy Robin on the first day of Spring, enjoying a warm, sunny day! Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Editor and Chief, Kat Country Hub.

A very happy Robin on the first day of Spring, enjoying a warm, sunny day! Photo Credit/Denise Gilliland, Editor and Chief, Kat Country Hub.

Annabelle M. Kai, 76 of Pender, NE


Annabelle M. Kai, 76, of Bancroft, NE passed away Friday, March 21, 2014 at Pender Community Hospital in Pender, NE. Funeral services will be held Tuesday, March 25, 2014 at 10:30 a.m. at First Presbyterian Church in Bancroft, NE; with Pastor Charity Potter officiating. Burial will be in the Bancroft Cemetery in Bancroft, NE. Visitation will be held Monday, March 24, 2014 from 3:00 until 7:00 p.m. with the family present from 5:00 until 7:00 p.m. at Munderloh – Smith Funeral Home in Bancroft, NE. Memorials may be given to the family for future designation. Arrangements are under the direction of Munderloh – Smith Funeral Home in Bancroft, NE.

Annabelle was born on January 7, 1938 at home northeast of Pender to Herman and Edna (Lawton) Kai. She attended grade school at District 33 near Pender, NE, graduating from Pender High School in 1956. She moved with the family to Bancroft, NE that same year. After graduation, she held various Jobs. Annabelle worked at Jim’s Market for several years, and as a grounds keeper for the John G. Neihardt Center until her retirement.

She was an active member of the First Presbyterian Church in Bancroft and a loyal Nebraska Cornhusker football fan, attending many games until her health would no longer allow.

Annabelle is survived by her brothers and sisters-in-law: August (Janet) Kai of Aurelia, IA, Paul (Rosemary) Kai of Oakland, NE, Glenn (Roberta) Kai of Bancroft, NE and Robert (Glenda) Kai of Lincoln, NE, a sister-in-law Connie Kai of Omaha, NE and her sisters Ruby Duncan of Emerson, NE and Sibyl Kai of Bancroft, NE, as well as many nieces and nephews.

She was preceded in death by her parents, two brothers Floyd and Chuck Kai, a sister Alyce Schleusener, brother-in-law Roy Duncan and Arthur Schleusener, three nephews and a niece.

Lyons-Decatur Patrons on Consolidation: Look at Other Options


By Brian Depew, Lyons Area Resident

Can also be read at burtcountyschool.com

Around 100 Lyons-Decatur patrons gathered in their school gymnasium in Lyons tonight to hear from school officials, the architectural firm engaged by the board and the bonding agency to discuss county-wide consolidation.

The proposed $61 million project includes a $5.5 million elementary renovation and addition in Lyons. Due to projected teacher lay-offs, the current projection is that Lyons-Decatur taxpayers would save 3 cents on the levy compared to current operations.

The overarching theme of patrons in attendance was a desire to look at other options to address the challenges the district faces. Ideas raised in small group discussions included: co-oping activities with a neighboring district, sharing teachers, unification rather than consolidation, and consolidation with other districts.

Asked to rank the most important principles for the future of the district, patrons ranked quality education first followed by: consider other options, keep school in town, and community involvement.

On the final question of the night, 36% of those voting chose county-wide consolidation, 35% chose different consolidation, 26% other and 3% do nothing. The total voting for an option other than a Burt County School was 64%.

70% Tekamah-Herman Residents Want New Tekamah School


By Brian Depew, Lyons area resident

Can also be viewed at burtcountyschool.com

A crowd of over 300 people gathered in the Tekamah-Herman gymnasium this evening. Following two hours of presentations comparing costs, levy rates, curriculum and activities offerings, Tekamah-Herman residents voted overwhelming to build a new school in Tekamah.

70% of those voting chose the option of building a new school in Tekamah. Only 23% chose county-wide consolidation. Applause broke out in the room when the tabulated results appeared on the overhead screen. Superintendent  Brandon Lavaley called the results “helpful direction for the School Board to make decisions with going forward.”

The fiscal impact of Tekamah-Herman building a new facility on their own rather than joining the proposed Burt County School is 7.4 cents on the levy, or $74 per $100,000 of valuation. Tonight, residents indicated they were willing to pay that extra levy to maintain their community school closer to home.

All options presented included closing the Herman location.

 

Benefit for Hunter Simonsen


Hunter Simonsen Benefit

Oakland-Craig Holds Public Meeting on Consolidation


By Brian Depew, Lyons Resident

Can also be viewed at burtcountyschool.com

More than 175 people gathered in the Oakland-Craig gymnasium this evening to hear a presentation on the prospects of a Burt County School. The meeting opened with a statement that the meeting was being held to seek the public’s input on possible consolidation ahead of any decisions and that presenters had no planned agenda.

However, the presentation and framing of key questions all leaned heavily in favor of consolidation. Attendees who were members of the Oakland-Craig district were offered handheld clickers that they used to weigh in on a series of questions throughout the evening. For instance, residents were asked “What level of trust to you have in your board to make the right decision for the community.” 40% of those responding with clickers stated they had “full trust” in the board. 60% stated they had either “partial trust” or “no trust” in the board. Not all residents picked up a clicker to vote.

Oakland-Craig Superintendent Joe Peitzmeier reviewed the several-year process the Oakland-Craig district has been involved in including consolidation discussions with Logan View and West Point. Numbers were presented by DA Davidson, the bonding agency hired by the three boards. New bonded debt for the total project is estimated to be $56,370,000. This includes elementary projects in Tekamah and Lyons and demolition costs in all three towns with school facilities.

With absorption of a portion of the Oakland-Craig debt, total debt of a Burt County district would be $61,213,500. Oakland-Craig would retain $2 million of their existing debt, costing Oakland-Craig taxpayers an additional 3.3 cents on their levy above what other district residents would pay. One patron asked each board member to state whether they were in favor of consolidation and why or why not. 7 of the 9 board members gave answers that boiled down to yes. 5 were strong yeses and 2 were slightly hedged. Gus Ray was the only Board member to firmly say he was opposed to consolidation.

He was also the only Board member to offer an alternative articulation of the future for Oakland-Craig throughout the evening. Later two patrons pointed out that the Board had opened the meeting indicating they were there to get public input into how to proceed, but that a majority of them had clearly already made up their mind in favor. The final question the audience was polled on was for options to proceed.

Three choices were offered by Jim French, representative of DLR Group, the architect engaged by the boards to assist with the process. He framed the question on his slide as: (A) Do Nothing (B) Consolidate (C) Other Perhaps sensing a fair amount of skepticism in the room, in reading the question off ahead of the vote, French said, “Voting for consolidation doesn’t necessarily mean you are for it.

It means you want your Board to keep talking to find out more information.” With this framing of the question, a slim majority, or 53% of those voting, indicated their preference was for the Board to continue the discussions. 47% voted for “do nothing” or “other.” Framing the final question of the evening as “do nothing” being offered as the alternative to “consolidate” did not actively offer patrons a chance to vote for other sensible options such as sharing teachers, co-oping activities, sharing classes or curriculum, etc. Patrons interested in such options could vote for “other.”

The meeting adjourned at 9:40pm.

School Consolidation Thoughts


I wasn’t able to attend the school consolidation meetings due to illness. I would like to hear from those that did attend. What did you take away from the meeting? Which one did you go to? Did you think those in attendance were for or against the consolidation?