Yankton Daily Press & Dakotan ■ Monday, June 21, 2010 PAGE 2 www.yankton.net
Yankton Weather
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Yankton’s Forecast Regional Forecast
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Maps & Forecast Produced by:
Lake TemperatureLake ElevationDischargeTailwater
Gavins Point Dam
S. DakotaAberdeenBrookingsCusterDeadwoodMobridgeHuronMitchellPierreRapid CitySioux Falls
National Forecast
Military AbroadToday
Hi Lo WTomorrowHi Lo W
TodayHi Lo W
TomorrowHi Lo W
Weather key: su-sunny, pc-partlycloudy,mc-mostly cloudy, c-cloudy,
th-thunderstorms, sh-showers, r-rain,sn-snow, fl-flurries, w-wind
VermillionWatertownWinnerIowaDes MoinesSioux CityNebraskaNorfolkLincolnOmaha
a
TodayHi Lo W
TodayHi Lo W
TomorrowHi Lo W
WednesdayHi Lo WLocation:
AnchorageAtlantaBostonChicagoDallasDenverDetroitGreen BayHoustonKansas CityLas VegasLos AngelesMiamiMinneapolisNew York CityPhiladelphiaPhoenixSan FranciscoSeattleTampaWashington, D.C.
Location:
Baghdad, IraqDiego GarciaDoha, QatariFrankfurtKabul, Afghan.Kuwait CitySeoul, KoreaTokyo, Japan
Growing Degree DaysLowest Relative HumidityHours of SunshinePan Evaporation4” Soil Temperatrue
AG Information
Early and late scatteredthunderstorms
86°
69°
Partly cloudy, scatteredthunderstorms
90°
63°
Mostly sunny and warm
86°
61°
Partly cloudy
87°
66°
Partly cloudy, scatteredthunderstorms
85°
68°
FullJune 26
LastJuly 4
NewJuly 11
FirstJuly 18
84° / 66° 82° 58°
32° in 1895
0” 5.67”16.08”
5:51 AM 9:12 PM 5:51 AM 9:12 PM
113 88 pc81 80 sh
103 91 pc65 45 pc83 56 pc
114 92 pc81 58 pc85 70 sh
66 48 sh 61 43 r94 73 th 93 71 th86 65 su 80 63 th82 72 th 89 72 th
100 79 pc 100 78 pc91 62 th 90 63 th82 68 th 87 70 th
95 77 th 95 77 th73 61 th 78 66 th
94 75 th 95 74 th96 73 su 98 75 su77 61 su 80 61 su89 81 th 89 79 th80 66 th 85 66 th
89 73 pc 90 70 th85 70 pc 83 69 th
106 76 su 106 79 su67 52 su 67 54 su61 54 sh 68 55 pc91 75 th 92 77 th90 71 su 93 75 th
62 48 sh93 72 th80 66 th88 67 th98 78 pc86 63 pc87 67 th
95 77 th81 61 th
93 73 pc103 79 su81 62 su88 78 th83 63 th
90 71 th86 71 th
109 83 su67 54 su70 55 pc92 76 th95 74 th
85 71 th 89 64 th81 67 th 85 60 th86 66 th 87 60 th
83 71 th 90 71 th85 71 th 89 66 th
87 71 th 92 70 th88 72 pc 92 74 th
86 71 th 91 70 th
61 52 sh 67 52 pc81 67 th 84 61 th78 51 th 74 50 th
83 68 th 85 61 th
82 55 th 77 52 th
85 69 th 87 63 th
85 64 th 85 59 th
88 67 th 88 59 th84 58 th 80 53 th83 69 th 86 64 th
4:46 PM 2:06 AM5:56 PM 2:38 AM
106° in 1988
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
88 / 6783 / 68
81 / 67
83 / 69
82 / 70
85 / 71
86 / 69
88 / 72
86 / 71
85 / 69
85 / 68
86 / 69
86 / 66
86 / 68
85 / 71
21
22
23
24
25
11.26” 2.66 ” in 1909
75 1205.25
30,000 cfs 1158.20
NE, 5 to 15
SE, 10 to 20
NW, 10 to 20
SE, 10 to 20n/a
56%3
0.22"69
2 4 11 7 6 4
7 6 8 3 44 2 8 95 3 9 8
9 4 1 31 2 6 7 9
3 6 5 89 2 5
9 2 8 7 1 54 1 6 5 3 9 77 3 5 8 2 65 7 8 9 1 4
1 8 3 7 9 2 56 2 5 3 7 17 9 1 5 8 69 3 6 8 2 4 76 4 7 3 9 1
6 4 3
8 2
1 4 9
2 6 3
4 6
4 9 8
3 2 4
5 1
8 2 5
su do ku
Fill the puzzle so that every row, every column, and every
section contain the numbers 1-9 without repeating a number.
© 2008 KrazyDad.com
Check tomorrow’s paper for thesolution to today’s puzzle.
Yesterday’s Solution
EASY
CH BOOK 8 #2
EA BOOK 8 #3
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Andersen
60th Wedding Anniversary
Leo Andersen and Glenna Strunk were married June 26,1950 at Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Yankton, SD.
A road trip was made to Washington to visit grand-children and friends.
The have 3 sons and families.
Mr. & Mrs. PutnamRichard L. (Dick) and Betty J. (Schneider) Putnam
will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary from 2-
4 p.m. Saturday, June 26, 2010, at the Gayville
Community Center, Gayville, SD.
The event will be hosted by their
children and families. Friends, relatives
and former co-workers are invited to
join the couple in celebrating this
joyous occasion. The couple requests
no gifts, please.
Dick and Betty have four children:
Danny L. Putnam of Gayville, SD; Greg
A. Putnam of Yankton, SD; Richard J.
Putnam of Rapid City, SD; and
Kimberly S. Doty of Gayville, SD. They
have 10 grandchildren and two great-
grandchildren.
Greetings may be sent to: PO Box
35, Gayville, SD 57031-0035.
50th Anniversary
50th Wedding AnniversaryMr. & Mrs. LeRoy Beste
LeRoy and Sally (Burbach) Beste will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on June 27, 2010. A private family gathering hosted by their children will be held at the Beste farm.
The couple has five children: Sue Beste, Minneapolis, MN;Jane (Beste) and Bob Lewton, Sturgis, SD; Jeff and Teri Beste,Omaha, NE; Pam Beste, Sioux City, IA; and Russ and ShariBeste, Wynot, NE. They have 2 grandchildren and 4 step- grandchildren.
Their family requests a card shower. Cards may be sent to: 89173 – 573 Avenue, Wynot, NE 68792.
Mr. & Mrs. StrunkRay and Elaine (Gildseth) Strunk will be
celebrating their 50th anniversary at Our
Redeemer’s Lutheran Church, rural Irene, SD, on
Sunday, June 27th, 2010.
Friends and neighbors are warmly
invited to a program beginning at 1:30
p.m., which will be followed by a cake
reception. The couple requests no
gifts.
Ray and Elaine were married on
June 30, 1960, in Oldham, SD. They
have three children: Cdr. James and
Krista Strunk of Hayward, WI; Sanford
and Alisa Strunk of Dinwiddie, VA;
and Dawn and Mark Whittenburg of
Burnsville, MN. Their four
grandchildren are Keegan, Alan,
Jessica and Thomas.
Cards may be sent to their home
at 2403 Cedar Terrace, #7, Yankton,
SD 57078.
50th Anniversary
75 YEARS AGO Friday, June 21, 1935
• FDR offers “Share Wealth”Plan. President Roosevelt in seek-ing to smash great fortunes andreduce large incomes by tax propos-als took Congress by surprise.
• The mechanical genius of Col.Charles A. Lindbergh, switched toscience, has perfected a newmechanical heart and lungs at theRockefeller Institute, where he hasbeen working for several years inseclusion of his own choosing withDr. Alexis Carrel.
50 YEARS AGOTuesday, June 21, 1960
• Miss Judy Hart of YanktonCollege, from Newington, Conn.,was named Miss Yankton onSaturday night. First runner-up wasMary Desmond of Yankton and sec-ond runner-up was Doris Hartz ofLaPorte, Ind.
• Ten officers and 110 enlisted menof the 115th Signal Support company,Yankton and Vermillion unit of theSouth Dakota National Guard, undercommand of Capt. Clifford Hicks, willparticipate in a two-week encampmentat Camp McCoy, Wis., June 25-July10.
25 YEARS AGOFriday, June 21, 1985
• Shiite Muslim militia leaderstoday were considering releasingtwo of the 40 American hostagesfrom the hijacked TWA jetliner andletting them fly out of Lebanon formedical treatment. The Shiites areseeking to exchange the Americansfor 766 prisoners being held byIsrael.
• Mensa (originally created 40years ago as a nonprofit, apoliticalorganization that hoped an allianceof high-IQ brain power would pre-vent wars and solve world problems)celebrates 25 years of smarts.
O N T H I S D AT E
REGION DIGESTLibrary Meeting To Be June 23
The Yankton Community Library Building Task Force/Board ofTrustees will hold a joint meeting at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday, June 23,in the Library meeting room, 515 Walnut
For further information, call 668-5275.
Relay For Life Meeting Set For June 21The Relay for Life team meeting will be held at 5:30 p.m. today
(Monday) at Yesterday’s Café. Survivors can still register for the Relay by contacting the
Avera Sacred Heart Cancer Center, or they can register online atwww.relayforlife.org/yanktonsd.
OHS Slams Brakes On Texting And DrivingPIERRE — Twenty-three times more likely to be in a crash or
near-crash. According to a study by the Virginia TechTransportation Institute, those are your odds if you send text mes-sages while driving.
And a study by Car and Driver magazine shows it takes drivers70 feet to hit the brakes when sending a text message, comparedto 4 feet when legally drunk. Findings like these are prompting theSouth Dakota Office of Highway Safety <http://lspr.pr-optout.com/Url.aspx?514891x822680x-798940> to take action inhopes of reducing distracted driving in the state.
The office has developed a public service announcement toraise awareness of the dangers of texting and driving<http://lspr.pr-optout.com/Url.aspx?514891x822679x-1315035> .The 30-second television spot confronts viewers with the risk theypose not only to themselves, but also to others when texting whiledriving.
“The ultimate goal of the texting while driving spot is to keepSouth Dakota’s drivers and roadways safe,” says Lee Axdahl,director of the Office of Highway Safety. “We want to educate thepublic about this dangerous, deadly habit. Sending a quick textmessage may seem inconsequential, but taking your eyes off theroad, even for a few seconds to send a short message, couldcost a life.”
The television spot entitled “Texting and Driving. Save a Life.Save it for L8R” will start playing on television stations acrossSouth Dakota the week of June 21.
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Hay Farms near Gayville, werelucky to get their first cutting ofhay finished in early June. Theywork on a 28-day rotation, usingthe weeks in between cuttings toplant corn and beans.
While the 28-day mark for thesecond cutting is approaching,Freeburg hopes the weather iscool and dry, despite what Juneand July weather typicallybrings.
“Normally we will get fourcuttings off all our fields, andbecause we started as early aswe did, there’s no reason weshouldn’t get that crop,”Freeburg said. “For a lot of farm-ers who didn’t get in there andget started, they might not getthat last crop. They might onlyget two to three cuttings at themost.”
Still, farmers like Freeburgand Van Gerpen are worriedabout their crops in lower areasthat have been plagued by stand-ing water.
“We’ve got standing water inspots that most generally younever see it,” Van Gerpen said.“Five inches over a three- orfour-day period has got to bepretty rare.”
The biggest problem of anoverly wet year, both farmers
said, is the long-term effects.Alfalfa hay, a perennial crop, isplanted in the same field for fouror five years. Rain damage oneyear will affect the field’s pro-duction capabilities every yearafter that.
Heavy equipment andmachinery driving on the wetfields creates problems later on,too.
“Wherever there’s wheeltracks from semis or heavyequipment, grass wants to comeup in those areas,” Freeburgsaid. “It’s a challenge.”
All those problems contributeto the overall hay quality.
Without bright and sunnydays, the quality of the hay is atrisk. Dairy farmers especially arelooking for the best quality ofhay because their milk produc-tion depends on it, Freeburgsaid.
“I project production will beup, and the quality will bedown,” Van Gerpen said, “butthat can all change.”
For now, area farmers playthe waiting game.
“Grass in town dries up quick-ly, and people think it’s the samein the country,” Freeburg said.“All you have to do is drive overto the Gayville, Volin, Mecklingand Mission Hill area. That’swhere your ground water table isand it’s very high. It’s been highall spring and it’s going to take awhile for that water to go down.
HAYFrom Page 1
fiscal year. There are fewerparole violators among themen, but more first-timeoffenders.
The average length of stay —14 months for women and 20months for men — is changed lit-tle from a year ago.
A May report showed that 38percent of the inmates convict-ed of violent crimes were inprison for rape or aggravatedassault. For nonviolent crimes,the largest percentage ofinmates (12 percent) were therefor possession of a controlledsubstance.
Bartling, D-Burke, said it’simportant that the state contin-ue to fund CorrectionsDepartment programs to provideeducation or GeneralEducational Development (GED)classes to inmates.
“That’s an area that I thinkmoney could be very well spent,and just continuing some educa-tional opportunities. ... I’m a firm
believer all the way around thata good education is a verystrong part of a person’s life andability to make good for them-selves and their families” shesaid.
Part of the reason for a level-ing off in the prison count is astate population that is growingolder. Young people are mostoften those at risk to commitcrimes, Feiler said.
Programs that target aninmate’s specific needs, such asending methamphetamine use,also are helping, she said.
Gov. Mike Rounds has creat-ed the Re-entry Council to lookfor ways to keep releasedinmates from committing anoth-er crime. The state’s recidivism,or re-offending rate, is 30 per-cent.
Feiler said the DOC mightrelax some policies if that canhelp minimize parole violations.For example, it might be betterfor some parolees to have familysupport and be without a jobthan to require that they haveboth a place to live and a job,she said.
The number of parolees willaverage 2,800 this fiscal year.
PRISONFrom Page 1