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  • Tabor receives KCAC’s first award for sports excellence

    KCACCommissionersCupFrick Scott Crawford, KCAC Commissioner (second from left), presents Rusty Allen, Tabor College vice president of athletics, with a plaque recognizing Tabor as the winner of the inaugural KCAC Commissioner’s Cup. Tabor President Jules Glanzer and Associate Athletic Director Amy Ratzlaff look on. The award, presented during Tabor’s annual sports banquet, will be given annually to the conference school with the greatest cumulative performance over the three athletic seasons.

    Tabor College has earned the inaugural KCAC Commis­sioner’s Cup for its athletic achievements during the 2012-13 school year.

    “It’s exciting, it’s fun,” said Rusty Allen, Tabor vice president of athletics. “One of the things we had set as our goal was to finish in the top three of this every year, and so in the inaugural year to win it, we feel like we’ve accomplished a lot.”

    The award—designed to recognize the accomplishments of student-athletes and the KCAC schools they represent—will be given annually to the school with the greatest overall performance throughout the three athletic seasons, based on points.

    “Many of our peer conferences have a similar award,” said KCAC Commissioner Scott Crawford. “To align ourselves with those conferences, but also to highlight excellence at the athletic-department level, we moved forward with this award last spring knowing our first recipient would be recognized in spring 2013.”

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Back on his feet

Written by Don Ratzlaff Tuesday, 14 May 2013 13:24

RatzlaffAmyChristianDamian234 Amy, Christian and Damian Ratzlaff have endured a long journey on the way to getting Christian’s left knee back to health.

It appears one Hillsboro High School student-athlete will have a senior basketball season after all, thanks to an innovative surgical procedure to restore his dying knee.

“I feel my senior year will be great, and I’ll be ready to go because I have time to prepare for it,” said Christian Ratzlaff, who was forced to sit out his junior season this winter. “After that, I’d love to keep playing. It’s nice that I have that option now.”

As recently as a couple of months ago, that prospect seemed unlikely. Not only was Christian’s high school athletic career in jeopardy, but he was facing the possibility of a future without pursuing the physical activities he loves—and even worse.

“They were telling us he would be hoping just to walk right again,” his father, Damian, said about the speculation of one specialist. “It was like nothing will be the same if (the knee) gets to that degree.”

The culprit was Osteochon­dritis dissecans, or OCD, a joint disease that resulted in a loss of blood flow to the lower tip of Christian’s femur, near the knee, which in turn caused that part of the bone to die.

“When bone dies, cartilage doesn’t want to be attached anymore,” said Amy, his mother. “So the cartilage starts to detach itself because there’s no (blood) source for it.”

Read more: Back on his feet

 

Quilting by the numbers

Written by Don Ratzlaff Tuesday, 07 May 2013 13:52

QuiltMathFullClass024 Students in the early morning sixth-grade math class at Hillsboro Middle School work intently on their quilt project. Teachers Anne Janzen (far right) and Gita Noble (standing in the background) say the inaugural project has been a “fabulous way to apply math concepts in the real world.”

Two teachers at Hillsboro Middle School are combining a local tradition of quilting with the latest emphasis in teaching mathematics: real world, hands-on learning.

And it appears to be fun.

Students in both sections of sixth-grade math taught by Anne Janzen and Gita Noble have been busy creating individual quilt blocks that eventually will be part of a real, stitched quilt.

In the process, the students grapple with ratios, proportions, measuring, fractions and their decimal equivalents, as well as using bench marks.

Read more: Quilting by the numbers

 

Graduation season begins this weekend

Written by Patty Decker Tuesday, 07 May 2013 13:56

Graduation time has arrived for high school seniors in Marion County. Commencement ceremonies begin this weekend in Marion and next week at Hillsboro, Canton-Galva, Centre and Peabody-Burns.

Marion

Marion High School’s 58 graduates are considered one of the larger classes walking to “Pomp and Circumstance,” according to school officials.

Baccalaureate is at 7:30 p.m. Wednes­day, May 8, with the commencement ceremony at 4 p.m. Saturday, May 11, at the Marion Sports and Aquatic Center.

Elizabeth Goentzel and Ryan Nelson are this year’s valedictorians. Isaac Baldwin is the salutatorian.

All three students will address the graduates.

This year’s colors at MHS are orange and white.

Read more: Graduation season begins this weekend

   

Winter attire for spring sports

Written by Hillsboro Free Press Tuesday, 07 May 2013 13:57

HHSgolfMarCoInviteOllenberger

 

Hillsboro’s Evan Ollenburger tees off at Hole No. 5 on the Hillsboro Municipal Course during Friday’s Marion County Invitational tournament co-hosted with Marion.

Read more: Winter attire for spring sports

 

Weather slows walking ‘bus’

Written by Don Ratzlaff Tuesday, 30 April 2013 11:44

WalkingSchoolBus984B Evan Yoder, Hillsboro Elementary School principal, leads the Walking School Bus group Monday morning after crossing Washington Street. It was only the fourth time the Walking School Bus has functioned since spring break because of the cold and wet weather. The adult volunteer in back is Jana Dalke, who drives in from her rural business with her three children to be a leader. More adult volunteers would be welcomed, Yoder says.

The trial run for the USD 410 Walking School Bus program has been a bit bumpy so far. But it’s not for lack of student and family interest, nor a dearth of adult volunteers to chaperone the 15-block route.

“The weather has really been a detriment to our bus schedule,” said Evan Yoder, Hillsboro Elementary School principal. “We’ve only been able to run the bus four times due to cold or wet weather.”

The route begins at Trinity Mennonite Church on Elm Street. The students and adults who meet there for a 7 a.m. start, then walk about two blocks to Grand Avenue, then turn east for 10 blocks to Adams.

After a one-block jog south to Adams, the route turns east again on A Street and proceeds about two more blocks to the school.

Along the route, the bus stops at designated points to add passengers, much like a traditional bus route.

Read more: Weather slows walking ‘bus’

   

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