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KIM (WANDA) JENSEN

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had a successful year of dog shows. Ketchum, her home-bred male pictured above, received grand champion, several best of breed, several terrier group placements, best in shows, and two best of the best, awards ranking him third. Scooter, Jensen’s home bred female, finished her UKC championship and her AKC championship receiving several breed wins, terrier group placements, two reserve best in shows, ranking her second in the UKC and eighth in the AKC nationally. This makes six bred champions for Kim. All dogs are bred by Jensen and she has finished sixth, ranking nationally.

| Thank You |

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The Boelus Fire Department and EMTs would like to thank the community for their continuous support and showing up for the pancake feed. They would also like to say thank you to their volunteers for helping make the annual pancake feed fundraiser a success. Thanks again, Boelus Fire Department and EMTs

| COLLEGE NOTES |

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The August graduating class of the Nebraska College of Technical Agriculture was a small but mighty group of Aggies who made the most of their final session in the summer of 2023. These eight students completed degrees and certificates and are well-prepared to impact the agriculture and animal health industries. Among the eight students to graduate was Joshua Jerabek of St. Paul, who earned his Agriculture Certificate.
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Elba thespians take a chance with historical drama

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Elba Public Schools students are testing their acting chops this one-act season with a staging of a historical drama set in the Third Reich, Dark Road by Laura Lundgren Smith. Billed as “a powerful drama about the choices that allow evil to become ordinary,” the play follows the reflections of Greta (Shia Rasmussen), whose desire to support her country and provide for her sister, Lise (Addison Wysocki), lead her to become a guard at a nearby Ravensbrück women’s concentration camp.

Boelus News

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As of Sunday evening, the South Loup River is up ten cfs since I last wrote, at 160 cfs, and the Middle Loup River is up 100 cfs, with a reading of 1430 cfs. With the cold weather, there was some ice on the Loup River, but it was open and flowing just fine.
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Will a Laugh a Day Keep the Doctor Away?

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The Bible has surprisingly little to say about laughter but, what it does say is important. Proverb 17:22 tells us “A cheerful heart is a good medicine, but a downcast spirit dries up the bones.” This ancient wisdom is getting confirmed by modern science, with some studies suggesting that laughing may actually boost the immune system and thereby help us to fight disease. In the late 1800’s William James suggested a novel idea about emotions, i.e., that the mental state follows the physical body. As he put it, “We don’t sing because we are happy, we are happy because we sing.” According to James, if we aren’t feeling particularly happy the thing to do is to make the body do something that looks like happiness, such as laugh or sing. Even fake laughing will sometimes seem funny enough to get us really laughing. In the 1970s Norman Cousins popularized the idea that laughing could actually be curative after he treated his ankylosing spondylitis (a form of arthritis) with repeated doses of vitamin C and Marx brothers’ films. In recent years, researchers have continued to explore the connection between laughing and physical health, and while the conclusions are still tentative, there is little doubt that laughing has an anesthetic effect, relieving us of pain via a surge of endorphins, and it also decreases the levels of the stress hormone cortisol. So, we should laugh, it’s probably good for us, and it certainly can’t hurt.
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Days Gone By

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On Sunday, November 10th, Joseph Marshall, III presented a program to a capacity crowd in Dannebrog. Marshall is an enrolled member of the Sicangu Lakota (Rosebud Sioux) tribe and is one of the premier scholars in his field…He read portions of his most recent book, “Returning to the Lakota Way: Ancient Values to Save the Modern World”… After the program, the Pawnee Arts Center hosted a reception for Marshall and members of the audience were able to ask questions and get books signed.
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Remember when

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Taken from the files of The Wolbach Messenger Ten Years Ago, 2013 The cast of Greeley-Wolbach’s one-act play will be performing in Greeley on Friday, November 22nd on the stage of the Greeley Sacred Heart Gymnasium. It will be in conjunction with a free-will donation spaghetti feed that begins at 6:30 p.m.