Alberta M. Voss, 90, of Fremont NE


Alverta M. Voss, 90, of Fremont, NE, passed away Sunday, January 10, 2016, at Providence Place in Fremont.

Alverta was born February 25, 1925, in Hooper, NE, to Gustav and Olga (Peters) Tienken. She grew up on a farm southwest of Hooper and graduated from Scribner High School in 1942. Alverta married Elra Lantefield on February 2. 1947 in Hooper. They lived in Hooper till 1953. Elra passed away February 22, 1953. Alverta moved to Fremont and married Wallace Voss on October 14, 1962 in Hooper. In 1962, they moved to Arlington, NE. Wallace passed away April 9, 1988 and Alverta moved back to Fremont.

Alverta was a member of Redeemer Lutheran Church in Hooper. She was a member of the Smile Club and enjoyed spending time playing cards in various card clubs.

She is survived by her nephews, Roger (Judy) Von Seggern of Scribner, NE, and Stanley Von Seggern of Fremont; great nephews, Martin (Paula) Von Seggern of Scribner, Scott (Angie) Von Seggern of Fremont; great nieces, Becky (James) Lynn of Uehling, NE, Barbara Von Seggern of Scribner, and Tracie (Russ) Quinn of Herman, NE.

She was preceded in death by her parents, husbands, Elra Lantefield and Wallace Voss; sister Almira (Raymond) Von Seggern.

The funeral service will be 10:00 AM, Thursday, January 14, 2016, at Redeemer Lutheran Church in Hooper, NE. The Rev Joel Schroeder will officiate. Visitation will be Wednesday, from 5 PM until 8PM at Moser Memorial Chapel in Fremont. Visitation will continue one hour prior to the service at the church on Thursday. Burial will be at Hooper Cemetery in Hooper.

Memorials may be directed to Redeemer Lutheran Church in Hooper, NE.

Alverta Voss

Alverta Voss

Joe Mitchell, 61, of Fremont NE


Joe Mitchell, 61 years, of Fremont, Nebraska, passed away Monday, January 11, 2016 in Omaha, Nebraska.

Visitation is Wed., Jan. 13th from 5:00-7:00 p.m. at Pelan Funeral Services in Tekamah NE.

The Funeral Service is Thurs., Jan. 14th at 11:00 a.m. at Pelan Funeral Services in Tekamah NE

Joe Mitchell

Joe Mitchell

Reminder: Beast Feast is Saturday in Oakland


The Oakland Chamber of Commerce is hosting a Beast Feast at the Oakland City Auditorium this Saturday, Jan. 16th from 5:00-7:30 p.m. A variety of delicacies will be on the menu, such as beaver, alligator, fish and mountain oysters. Tickets are available for purchase from Chamber members for a $25 donation, which will be designated for Oakland’s 150th celebration in 2018. Everyone is encouraged to attend!

Northeast Cougars Stretch Winning Streak


By Clare Wiltse, Sports Contributor

Northeast’s Cougars stretched their winning streak to eight games with wins over Wakefield and Tekamah-Herman this week.  In a battle of top ten teams on Saturday,  the Cougar boys stumbled in a road contest at Mead.

After their three games this week, a 61-53 conquest of Wakefield and a 60-43 win over Tekamah-Herman along with the 53-34 loss to Mead the LDNE Cougars have an 8-2 record.

Streaky shooting Wakefield provided more of a contest than their 3-9 record would suggest.   They hit  three of their first five shots and held a lead until the 1:38 mark of the opening period when Montana Riecken’s goal put Northeast on top. Later, Riecken’s bomb and a basket by Jacob Whitaker produced a tie at the end of the period, 13-13.

The Trojans got a five point jump on the Cougars at the start of the second period.   Riecken’s three and  Cole Christoffersen’s  two free throws tied the score.  Christoffersen got a put back at the 4:30 mark to establish a LDNE lead,  20-18.  Two short shots from the baseline by Hunter Ferguson kept the Maroon on top.  Riecken got his third trey of the half and Alec Anderson broke free from the Wakefield box-and one defense to end the half’s scoring with a three point play and a lay-in for a 32-27 lead.

Wakefield opened the third quarter with a 13-0 run.  They made 5 of 8 shots while Northeast missed on six straight offensive possessions.  The Cougar’s dry spell continued until the 3:05 mark when Alec Anderson scored leaving the Cougars trailing 40-34.  Christoffersen and Anderson got baskets in the remaining minutes of the quarter.  Wakefield out scored Northeast 21 to 6 thanks to the help of five three pointers.

Northeast found themselves trailing by 12 points when the Trojans scored on their opening possession of the fourth quarter.  Marcus Hegy’s trey would start a rally that would produce an eight point win for LDNE.  Christoffersen scored two from the paint and point guard Montana Riecken attacked the lane and scored on two free shots and a three point play.  Northeast trailed 51-50.

While Wakefield struggled from the floor the Cougars continued to surge.  Marcus Hegy completed the comeback with a trey with 3:22 left.  With Northeast on top 53-51 Alec
Anderson added four more points and Montana Riecken iced the game with a pair of free shots.  Wakefield’s hot hand cooled with only two baskets in the fourth period.  They only made two of ten shots from the field and were 0 or 6 from beyond the arc.

In was a big night for Montana Riecken.  The junior point guard had a career-high 18 points to lead the team.  Marcus Hegy score eight of his ten points in the fourth quarter.  Alec Anderson battled Wakefield’s gadget defense to finish with 15 points.  Cole Christoffersen finished with 12 points.

Wakefield 13 14 21 5 -53
LDNE 13 19  6 23 -61

2pt 3pt FT Rb F TP
Riecken         2 3 5/5 4 2 18
O’Connor 0 0 0 5 2 0
Christiansen 0 0 0 1 0 0
Whitaker 1 0 0 0 0 2
Hegy 1 2 2/2 6 4 10
Ferguson 2 0 0 3 1 4
Anderson 5 0 5/6 6 2 15
Hardeman 0 0 0 2 0 0
Christoffersen 5 0 2/2 6 2 12
LDNE 16 5 14/15 33 13 61
Wakefield 9 9 8/12 17 15 53

The (2-9) Tekamah-Herman Tigers found the going tough in the first quarter.  They committed 8 turnovers and it deep into the period before they got a shot off.  In the meantime, Marcus Hegy scored three times and the Cougars took an 11-0 lead.

Hegy continued his offensive show with nine more points in the second quarter.  LDNE had a 29-14 lead at he half.

After intermission the Cougar offense took a six minute break.  T-H turned to a half court trap and six turnovers, two offensive fouls and five missed shots gave the T-H crowd some hope as the Tigers closed to within eight points, 29-21.   Point guard Montana Riecken picked up his fourth foul and without him the offense was in disarray.   Alec Anderson got a pair of free shots for Northeast’s first score.  LDNE closed with a flourish as Anderson scored again and Hegy added a pair of treys.  The Cougars were up by thirteen, 39-26.

Alec Anderson scored three times to start the fourth period.   Cole Christoffersen’s two and Marcus Hegy’s three made it 50-29 .  Coach Lahm turned to his reserves to close out the game.  Goals by Jon Christiansen, Nick Ronnfeldt and two free throws by Hunter Ferguson gave Lyons-Decatur a 56-32 lead.  The Tigers surged with eleven points  and the game ended with a 60-43 score.

Marcus Hegy had a career-high 24 points to pace LDNE.  Alec Anderson notched a double-double with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

Northeast out shot Tekamah-Herman 58% to  25%.  The Cougars made22 of 38 shots.  The Tigers made 13 of 52 shots.   Northeast out rebounded T-H 39 to 29.

T-H 2 11 13 17 -43
LDNE 11 18 10 21 -60

2pt 3Pt FT Rb F TP
Riecken         1 0 1/2 1 4 3
O’Connor 0 0 0/2 1 2 0
Christiansen 3 0 0/1 5 2 6
Whitaker 0 0 1/2 1 2 1
Hegy 6 3 3/4 8 0 24
Ferguson 0 1 2/4 2 3 5
Ronnfeldt 1 0 1/2 2 1 3
Anderson 5 0 4/8 11 2 14
Hardeman 1 0 0 3 2 2
Christoffersen 1 0 0 4 1 2
LDNE 18 4 12/24 39 20 60
T-H 7 6 11/20 29 23 43

A pair of 8-1 teams clashed on Saturday at Mead.  Fresh off of wins over Parkview Christian and Yutan the Raiders were t the top of their game when the Cougars came to town.

Northeast drew first blood in the game as Alec Anderson opened the scoring.  Later he added a free throw.  Mead led 7-3 at the end of the quarter.

The Cougars spent the rest of the half trying to catch up with the Raiders.  After Anderson closed the score to 6-7 with a three point play Mead opened a six point lead.  Treys by Ferguson and Hegy halved the margin. Two free throws by Hegy made the score 16-19.  Montana Riecken tied the score at 19 with the Cougar’s third trifecta of the period.  Mead answered with a three pointer just before half.   Mead 22  LDNE 19.

Mead had  7-2 jump on the Cougars as the second half started.  Alec Anderson’s goal followed two Mead scores.   Christoffersen’s basket and Hegy’s free throw made it 29-24. Two Christoffersen free thrown matched a Mead basket.  Riecken followed with a trey and it was 31-29.  A basket by Anderson was the lone points for LDNE as the Raiders closed with a 7-2 run to take a 38-31 lead into the fourth period.

The fourth quarter did not go well for Northeast.  Hegy fouled out and the Cougars only scored three points as Mead pulled away for a 53-34 win.

Alec Anderson led Northeast with 15 points.  Riecken and Hegy had 6,  Christoffersen 4 and Ferguson 3.  Mead  was led by Tristan Hoover with 20 and Dylan Taylor with 13.

LDNE 3 16 12 3 -34
Mead 7 15 16 15 -53

2pt 3pt FT F TP
Riecken         0 2 0 2 6
O’Connor 0 0 0 2 0
Whitaker 0 0 0 1 0
Hegy 0 1 3/4 5 6
Ferguson 0 1 0 0 3
Anderson 6 0 3/5 3 15
Christoffersen 1 0 2/2 3 5
LDNE 7 4 8/11 16 34
Mead 15 4 11/15 13 53

Village of Decatur Meeting Agenda


VILLAGE OF DECATUR

REGULAR BOARD MEETING AGENDA

January 12th, 2016

4:30 P.M. CITY HALL

 

NOTE: Everyone must use the microphones at the table. The audience must be quiet during the meeting. If you want to ask a question and you are not on the Agenda, you must raise your hand, get permission from the Chairman, and come to the microphone before speaking. If you are on the Agenda the same rule applies.

 

THE VILLAGE BOARD HAS THE RIGHT TO MODIFY THE AGENDA AT THE PUBLIC MEETING WHEN CONVENED. MEETING IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. A COPY OF THE OPEN MEETINGS ACT IS LOCATED ON THE NORTH WALL.

 

1)         Meeting Called to Order by Chairman Kellogg

 

Roll Call: Kellogg_____, Siecke__________, Tolby _____

 

2)        Agenda and minutes of the previous month’s meeting received:

 

Roll Call: Kellogg_____, Siecke__________, Tolby _____

 

3)        Approval and/or correction and suspended reading of the previous month minutes.

 

Roll Call: Kellogg_____, Siecke__________, Tolby _____

 

4)        EXCUSE BOARD MEMBERS NOT ATTENDING THE MEETING:

 

Roll Call: Kellogg_____, Siecke__________, Tolby _____

 

5)         REPORTS OF OFFICERS, BOARDS AND OR COMMITTEES:

 

1)         Police: Monthly Report

 

2)         Lights: Monthly Report
3)         Water & Sewer: Monthly Report
4)         Parks: Monthly Report- The tree committee will be meeting to discuss placement of the tree’s from the   Celebrate trees grant

 

5)         Streets: Monthly Report -October’s city sales tax $3068.88.

 

6)        Recycling Report:

  1. A) Income received of $217.12 from October’s cardboard hauled. We have recycling that needs to be hauled to Tekamah.

 

6)        OLD BUSINESS

1) Street repairs-

A)Knife River sent an email stating that they would like to do the patching on our streets next                                   spring.

 

2) David Malloy- Question about taps on main line

 

3) Patty Plugge- Economic Development Corporation- To explain the Demo Grant available.

 

4) Kay Kellogg- Relay for Life

  1. A) Ball Field
  2. B) Port a potties

 

5) Tim Slaughter- Streets

 

7)        OATH OF OFFICE: Cheryl Gatewood

 

8)        NEW BUSINESS

 

1) Justin Smith- Speed sign for road coming off the bridge.

 

2) Liquor license for Fireman’s Ball Feb. 6th

 

3) Fire hall would like use of Village’s port a potties for Feb. 6th

 

4) Rob Mayo Sanitation- Curbside recycling

 

5) Nico Hardeman

 

6) Peggy Smith- Discuss 1 & 6 year Road Plan

 

7) Discuss hiring of a city crew member

 

 

9)         CORRESPONDENCE

Robert Richards resigned as of 1/11/2016
 

10)       ANNOUNCEMENTS

 

Next Regular Board meeting will be held Thursday February 11th at 4:30.

 

11)       APPROPRIATIONS AND CONSIDERATION OF THE CLAIMS:

 

1) Claims preapproved by Siecke & Tolby

 

2) Motion to Approve the Claims as Submitted

 

________________2nd_________________

 

 

Roll Call: Gatewood___________, Kellogg_____, Siecke__________, Tolby _____

 

Are there any questions from the audience?

 

 

12)       MOTION TO ADJOURN THE MEETING          

_______________2nd________________
 

Adjournment Time:

Beast Feast in Oakland January 16th


katcountryhub's avatarKat Country Hub

“I promise this will be a meal you will never forget,” Kim Helzer says of the Beast Feast to be held in Oakland.

“The Beast Feast is at the city auditorium on Sat., Jan. 16th from 5:00-7:30 p.m.,” Kim stated.

If you enjoy dining on game feed, this is the place for you. “On the menu is alligator, bacon wrapped elk, bacon wrapped deer, barbecued beaver, pheasant, fish, deer sausage, goose sticks, duck with kraut and dumplings, leg of lamb, potato sausage, pork specialty hot dogs, dala dogs and mountain oysters,” Kim shared.

Side dishes will consist of scalloped corn, cole slaw, baked beans and rolls. Cold beverages will also be sold.

“Most items on the menu have been donated,” Kim said.

There are other items on the menu if game feed isn’t what you prefer. “There will be pork for sandwiches and potato sausage, among other things,” Kim…

View original post 94 more words

Tekamah-Herman Participating in reVision Grant


By Brandon Lavaley, Tekamah-Herman Superintendent

Welcome back to the second semester! I hope everyone was able to have an enjoyable break and spend some important quality time with family. These next two months are two of the most important, yet most difficult months of the school year for teachers and students. Typically, the weather is not very accommodating, there tends to be a lot of sickness going around, and there aren’t any breaks built into the calendar. However, this is a final push toward our spring testing window for state assessments (NeSA) and local assessments (MAP). Please encourage your student to continue working as hard as they can to improve, make sure they are getting plenty of sleep and eating appropriately. Though these two months may seem long, they fly by and the fourth quarter will be upon us before we know it.

The other topic for this article is the reVISION grant in which Tekamah-Herman is participating. The reVISION process is an initiative in career and technical education to make sure students are graduating high school with the skills and characteristics necessary to be successful when they eventually are employed, whether right after high school or upon graduation from college. The grant is a cooperative effort among 10 schools in northeast Nebraska. The primary purpose is to have the businesses in each community become more engaged with the school district, providing opportunities to students and helping guide curriculum decisions.

The benefit of this process for the school district is preparing our students and giving them opportunities to be successful after high school. The benefit for businesses is working directly with students, potentially preparing them for careers that they can fill within that business. The benefit for the community is helping replace and potentially bring in new jobs, allowing the population to maintain or grow instead of the continual decline we see in rural Nebraska. Businesses in our area have received a mailed invitation to attend an informative, interactive meeting with Nebraska Department of Education. The planning this year will hopefully go toward implementation of programs next year. Your input is vital and I encourage you to RSVP and attend the meeting in Oakland on January 20th. If anyone has more questions about reVISION, please feel free to contact the school and speak with myself, Mr. Gross, or Ms. Nuss about reVISION and the benefits for our students.

Brandon Lavaley, Tekamah-Herman Superintendent

Brandon Lavaley, Tekamah-Herman Superintendent

Farmer’s Tax Guide Not Available


For years, the Extension office has received a shipment of the Farmer’s Tax Guide and we have distributed those to banks and other locations around the county for people to pick up. We just found out that we will not be receiving this publication this year as the IRS has dropped the number of publications they are printing. If you still need a copy of this publication, you can access it for free from the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov/uac/About-Publication-225.

Private Pesticide Applicator Training Offered


Farmers needing to be certified or recertified to purchase and/or apply restricted use pesticides to land they farm, whether owned or rented, will want to attend the training offered on Wednesday, January 27. Two sessions will be held that day at 1:30 p.m. and 6:30 p.m. at the First National Bank Northeast meeting room in Tekamah. Preregistration is not required, just attend the session that is most convenient for you.

Burt County farmers whose certification expires this spring should have received a letter from me as well as the Nebraska Department of Agriculture in December. However, if your certification expired in previous years or if you have never been certified in the past, but need certified now, you will want to be sure to make note of these training dates and plan to attend.

If this date does not work, I have a list of when training is offered in surrounding counties or you may go to http://pested.unl.edu/ for a list of all private applicator classes offered across the state.

Crop Production Clinics Next Week


By John Wilson, Extension Educator

Each year I tell folks, if farmers could only attend one meeting all winter, the Crop Production Clinics would be the one I’d recommend. Just looking at this year’s program, you’ll see what I mean by the questions that will be answered there, including:

 

  • What does it take to produce 80 bu/ac soybean routinely?
  • How can you control glyphosate-resistant weeds?
  • What can you do to delay corn rootworm resistance?
  • Where is the safety in the farm income safety net?
  • What are the truths and the legends regarding cover crops?
  • What’s new in field crop disease, insect, and weed management?
  • How much does soybean defoliation affect my yields?
  • How can you employ climate-resilient irrigation systems?
  • What are the trends in Nebraska cropland markets and cash rental rates?, and my favorite…
  • What are the potential uses of drones in crop production systems?

The Crop Production Clinics are one-day workshops that feature location-specific topics as well as timely research updates and recommendations for any farm. Pesticide applicator recertification for private applicators as well as for commercial and noncommercial applicators in the ag plant, demonstration & research, and regulatory categories will also be available.

The clinics provide high impact training for agricultural professionals and farmers. This is a multi-disciplinary program designed to help farmers and ag professionals learn about the latest topics on cropping systems; soil fertility; insect, disease, and weed management; irrigation; soil water management; agribusiness management and marketing.

Each participant will receive the 2016 Guide for Weed Management in Nebraska and the Crop Production Clinic proceedings as well as refreshments and a noon meal. You can preregister online at http://agronomy.unl.edu/cpc. Online preregistration is $65 or you can register at the door, but the fee goes up to $80 at the door. Online preregistration closes at 3:00 p.m. the day before the clinic.

A maximum of six continuing education units, or ceu’s, will be available to Certified Crop Advisors in the areas of crop production. nutrient management, integrated pest management, water management, or professional development.

This program will be offered at nine locations across the state, but the two closest locations are:

Wednesday, January 20, at the Lifelong Learning Center in Norfolk

Thursday, January 21, at the Saunders County Extension Office or ARDC near Mead

Both programs start at 8:45 a.m. and end at 4 p.m.

To see a program flyer with all topics to be presented at each location or to complete an online registration, go tohttp://agronomy.unl.edu/cpc. Otherwise, for other information, contact your local Nebraska Extension office.