Saturday, October 8, 2011

Exeter-Milligan Update: Junior High Football

Exeter-Milligan Junior High Football

The Exeter-Milligan junior high football team hosted Hampton on September 26. At halftime, EM held a narrow 20-16 lead. Sean Maxson got the scoring started for EM in the first quarter on an 8 yard touchdown run, Johnathon Mounce added the two point conversion. In the second quarter, Sam Zeleny hit Maxson on 26 yard TD pass. Cameron White added a 43 yard TD run before half for EM.

In the second half, the young Timberwolves pulled away, scoring 28 points, while holding Hampton scoreless. On the first play from scrimmage in the third quarter, Zeleny hit Jack Dinneen on a slant for a 43 yard score. Zeleny added a 9 yard TD run and conversion run. Maxson ran 35 yards for another score, with Elliot Erdkamp running in the two point conversion. The final score came on a 37 yard interception return by Zeleny.

The solid EM defensive effort included interceptions by Zeleny and Maxson. Fumble recoveries for EM were by Maxson and Mounce. The final score in the contest was EM 48, Hampton 16.

On October 3, Exeter-Milligan traveled to Henderson to take on Heartland in their only away game of the season. At the end of a high scoring first half, EM held a 32-24 lead. EM scored TDs on a 9 yard run by Sean Maxson and a 1 yard dive by Johnathon Mounce. One of the two point conversion was successful when Sam Zeleny hooked up with Jack Dinneen. In the second quarter, EM scored three more touchdowns. Zeleny hit Maxson on a 10 yard pass, Dinneen ran 9 yards on an end around, and Zeleny scored from 1 yard out after Maxson was knocked out of bounds at the one yard lined on a long kick return.

The Exeter-Milligan offense added four TDs and three conversions in the second half. Maxson had a 60 yard run that led to a 5 yard TD run for Zeleny, Zeleny added a 5 yard TD run, and Maxson a 9 yard TD run. A 53 yard pass TD from Zeleny to Maxson was in the second half as well. Zeleny threw to Dinneen and Trevor Luzum for two point conversions, with Maxson running in another.

The defense was solid in the final two quarters, holding Heartland to just 8 points. Luzum led the way for the Timberwolves defense with an interception and two fumble recoveries. Mounce and Zeleny also had fumble recoveries. The final score in the game was EM 62, Heartland 32. The Exeter-Milligan team finished the season with a 2-2 record.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Death Notice: Theodore Larsen

Funeral services for Ted Larsen will be Saturday, October 8, 2011 at 2:00 p.m. at the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church in Cordova, Nebraska. Interment will be in the Zastrow Cemetery. Memorials are directed to the Trinity Evangelical Lutheran Church, Exeter Fire & Rescue Units or the Exeter Senior Center.

New United Methodist Pastor in Exeter and McCool Junction

The Exeter and McCool Junction United Methodist Churches have a new pastor in residence at the Exeter parsonage.Pastor Ray Underwood, his wife Sharon and their young son Derrik have moved to the parsonage in Exeter.

Underwood grew up as the son of a minister and never imagined that he would find himself in the same vocation growing up. As a child he was very involved in church, “My first year in college I went to church about a dozen times when my parents were there to visit,” explained Underwood.

At Centre College in Danville, KY, Underwood was a German Language major and spent some time overseas in their campus in France. He experienced some difficulties there and upon his return “started to seriously reevaluate what I believed,” according to Underwood.

It was during a student led prayer group and Bible study that Underwood found his way, “I got honest with myself and with God and realized I could continue to live my life my own way or choose to let God lead me.”
He didn’t respond positively to God’s call to the ministry immediately. It took a week to accept the feelings that were directing him toward following his father’s footsteps. He headed to Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary as he grew up a Presbyterian, however the school also trains Methodist pastors.
After he received his M.Div in 2000 there wasn’t a full time ministry position available so he joined the Army for “reliable income, and good leadership skills.” Underwood was deployed on active duty from 2001-2005 stationed at Fort Bragg, NC from February 2002-May 2005 and served in Kuwait traveling north to Iraq when Sadaam was removed from power from 2003-2004.

After he was released from active duty he felt God calling him to Nebraska and enlisted in the National Guard and found work at the Tecumseh State Correctional Institution in 2006. He met his wife Sharon online before his second deployment and neither was looking for a relationship. They became friends, and during his deployment corresponded regularly.

Sharon moved to Omaha from Baltimore, MD and they started to date, marrying in 2008.  Sharon recalled “On our way home from our honeymoon we got a call that Ray’s unit was going to be mobilized.”

As part of the 192nd Military Police Ray spent about a month responding to Hurricanes Gustave and Ike before returning to Nebraska for more training and then heading to Baghdad. This deployment, Ray worked a desk in the International zone with law enforcement, but his primary responsibility was working with licensing vehicles in the area. He enjoyed “working with the different cultures in a way that was very positive.”

When his tour was done he returned to Syracuse and his job at the correction facility. Prior to deployment, Ray and Sharon searched for a church home and found the Syracuse United Methodist Church where they became involved in several ministries.

Their minister was actively recruiting Ray for a ministry position especially after he learned of Ray’s education. However, there were no ministry openings in that district. Ray began to look at the possibility of becoming a chaplain in the military until he heard about the opening in Exeter and McCool.

After interviews and visits Ray started the job on August 1st commuting until the parsonage was ready for his family to move in to. So far the family is enjoying the community and the churches. They are expecting another child in the spring. They hope to spend some time getting to know the community and seeing its needs. “We hope to build on the traditions that are already here,” said Sharon.

Ray wants to focus on “learning what the felt needs of the community are. Until you meet the basic needs of people you won’t be able to address the spiritual needs of people.”

He faces several challenges with the change in venue; coming from the Department of Corrections and military background to working full time in the church will be an adjustment. The ministry position is a three quarter time position, which works for Ray as he is still a guard member and spends one weekend a month at drills.
The biggest challenge as Ray sees it is, “Two different communities, two different backgrounds, two different histories, two different strengths and challenges and learning the differences and working with the two churches.”

His goal in working with both congregations is to help them grow spiritually, “If they don’t have a healthy spiritual relationship with God they will not experience God’s blessings as richly as they could. A church is never going to grow and sustain growth if the pastor is doing all the work. The church has to do outreach as the pastor won’t be there forever.”

Services at the McCool Junction United Methodist Church are at 9:00 and the Exeter United Methodist Church meets at 11:00.

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Exeter Fire Department discovers bullet holes in building

 From the exterior of the Exeter Fire Hall, the hole is visible in a window that has been covered up on the inside.
 From the inside of the Exeter fire hall the hold caused by a bullet is visible in the locker area.

 
Jacob Miller holds his fire helmet showing where the bullet richocheted preventing damage to the nearby fire truck.
 
 Scuff marks are visible on Miller's helmet where the bullet impacted.

 A bullet ripped through the garden hose the department uses to wash the fire trucks.
 
With Miller's fire coat back in the locker, the hole is visible.
 
Monday night during a Junior Fire Patrol meeting, members of the Exeter Fire Department discovered damage caused by a bullet shot into the Exeter Fire Hall.
 
Fireman, Jacob Miller, put on his fire gear to show the fifth graders present for the Junior Fire Patrol and when he removed his gear from his locker noticed a large hole in the wall.
 
Miller, recalled that on Friday, September 23rd one of the regular garden hoses had several holes in it when he washed one of the large fire trucks in preparation for the Homecoming pep rally. The last time the hoses were used on August 11th, there were no holes in them.
 
Once the hole in the wall of the fire hall was found, obviously made by a bullet, the department members present examined the hose and found several bullet holes, they also found a bullet lodged in the hose.
 
As far as department members could tell, the bullet entered the building and richocheted off of Miller's helmet changing it's course away from the fire truck and toward the hose that was on a reel nearby.  "We suspect my helmet took the brunt of the bullet and prevent damage to the fire truck," said Miller.
 
In addition to the hole in the window there is a great deal of evidence of additional shots fired at the building, hitting a door, the wall of the building, the metal gutters and metal roof. 
 
Anyone with information should contact the Fillmore County Sheriff's Department who are investigating the damage.

Exeter-Milligan Update: One-Act Play

The Exeter-Milligan One Act Team, under the direction of Jami Adelman, will be performing The Insanity of Mary Girard this season. Our first performance will be at the One Act Dessert Luncheon on November 6th at 2 P.M. We invite the public to attend our performance. Desserts and refreshments will be provided by the E-M FCCLA. A free will donation to support both the One Act Team and the FCCLA will be collected at the door.

(Pictured: Ashley Miller, Megan Waldron, Brady Bristol, Nolan Beatham, Amber Pribyl, Becca Vossler, Deidre Stevens, Meredith Emshoff, Kylie Briske, Sierra Christensen, Hunter Stride, Kaitlyn Hertzel, and Toni Bossaller. Not Pictured: Meghan Miller)

Sunday, October 2, 2011

Exeter-Milligan Update: Third and Fourth Graders attend Festival

 Kayla Geiger and Anna Sluka make slime.

 Jackson Beethe making slime.




On Friday, September 23rd, the Exeter-Milligan 3rd and 4th grade students attended the Plum Creek Literacy Festival at Concordia University in Seward. While there they saw authors and illustrators. They also participated in a Fun Science for Kids class and made slime.

Saturday, October 1, 2011

Exeter Milligan Holds Annual Outdoor Ed Day


The second graders are blindfolded by their teacher Mrs. Weber around the "senses" table.

 
 
Junior Alicia Bigelow, left, helps second grader Becca Krupicka make a pinecone birdfeeder at the Exeter-Milligan Outdoor Ed Day.
 
 
It's become a tradition at Exeter-Milligan for the high school students in Lorie Sliefert's Biology II class to spend a day teaching all about nature to their counterparts in the Exeter-Milligan second.
 
Outdoor Ed Day began when Marla Weber, Exeter-Milligan second grade teacher, had the idea for the program as a college student.
 
Each year Weber shares idea packets with Sliefert's class of juniors and they choose a subject from the ideas offered they would like to teach to the second graders. The packet guides the juniors to create hands-on fun activities that are easy for the juniors to teach and interest everyone. One of the favorites for the juniors in this year's event was a senses station where students listened, tasted, touched and smelled different objects. 
 
Some of the other stations, all taught and directed by the twelve high school students, included hug a tree, making pinecone birdfeeders, learning about the wind, and playing some ecological games.
 
Second grader Wesley Ronne liked the new GPS scavenger hunt the best, "My favorite game was geocaching.  We had to walk to make the GPS work."
 
This was a scavenger hunt that required the second graders to use coordinates on the GPS to find items the high school students had hidden in Gilbert's Park. With the day of the event being unseasonably cool and cloudy Sliefert wasn't sure if the active games were more popular because everyone warmed up when they were moving around or if the kids just enjoyed those activities more.
 
The students all enjoyed playing Bat and Moth which simulates how bat's find their prey and how moth's have to be quiet to not be eaten. With all of the activities the students even created lots of items to bring home with them including a rainstick, a plaster cast of animal prints, a timeline of the events in their short lives written like tree rings, the journal they kept all day and a weathervane.  The items are dual purpose according to Weber, "The students make it for fun and then are able to take the items home to their parents. Telling about the items reinforces the lesson and also helps the students explain to their parents what they did." 
 
Both teachers emphasized the opportunity that this event holds for the high school students, "It's really a win-win for both of the classes," said Weber, "the elementary students have role models and learn that they have to listen to the high school students and at the same to it's an opportunity for the high school students to interact and demonstrate what they know."
 
Sliefert noted that "It boosts the older students self-esteem, they can feel positive about themselves knowing that they can pass on their knowledge to the younger students."
 

Friday, September 30, 2011

Exeter-Milligan Soccer Teams Play Last Game of the Season

Exeter-Milligan Timberwolf second and third grade soccer team is pictured with their coaches.  In the front row from the left are Cameran Jansky, Jaiden Papik, Emma Olsen, Briana Capek, Alivia Hartmann, Becca Krupicka.  The back row from the left are Coach Kendra Jansky, Jackson Beethe, Casey Underwood, Ben Bartu, Alec Schlueter, Braden Capek, Kohl Svec and Coach Melanie Schlueter.

Exeter-Milligan Timberwolf fourth, fifth and sixth grade soccer team is pictured with their coaches.  In the front row from the left are Caleb Horne, Kayla Geiger, Anna Sluka, Caitlin Murphy, Cayden Hartmann, Jacy Schlueter.  In the back row from the left is Coach Brian Murphy, Josie Kresak, Kate Jansky, Joey Bartu, Peytan Brandt, Patrick Murphy and Coach Brady Bristol. Not pictured are Ty Underwood and Hannah Horne.


Exeter-Milligan elementary students will play their last soccer games of the season Saturday morning in Geneva.  The fourth, fifth and sixth grade team will play at 9 a.m. The second and third grade team will play at 10:30 and the Pre-K, K and first grade team will play at 8:30 and 10:30 a.m.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Exeter-Milligan Homecoming 2011


 
 Exeter-Milligan Seniors Rode to the pep rally on the fire truck and walked in together.

The Exeter-Milligan Junior High girls got into the spirit of "Spirit Day".  Front row from the left are Kaitlyn Clift, Joan Strate, Lucy Murphy and Sam Horne.  Back row are Ella Wilkins (left) and Sydney Hall (right).

Exeter-Milligan students enjoyed a week of "Kicking It Old School" for their 2011 Homecoming celebration.
Each day was a different dress-up theme with Pajama Day starting off on Monday.  On Tuesday, each class, along with the faculty was assigned a different decated starting with the 40's.  Wednesday each class was assigned a different color to wear and Thursday was Sports Throw Back Day that sported plented of Milligan Rooster purple and Exeter Eagle outfit's. 
Everyone got into the theme of Friday's Spirit Day and family and friends attended the pep rally held at the Exeter site football field.  The Cheerleaders had games for the senior girls and boys to play and then the faculty led a cheer. The Exeter-Milligan band played and several of the seniors spoke to the crowd.  The Cheerleaders performed a dance routine to pump up the crowd before school dismissed.
After the Timberwolves defeated the Meridian Mustangs 60-8 behind the strong defense of Nate Bigelow, Nolan White and Kyle Jensen.  The Timberwolves scored 30 points during the first quarter with James Sluka scoring two touchdowns, Robbie Androyna, Nolan White and Derek Luzum each scoring one apiece.  Sluka scored another touchdown bringing the score to 52-0 before the Mustangs placed 8 on the board. The final score was a 48 yard run by Jensen.
After the game the Homecoming court was crowned.  Attendants from the freshman class were Madison Horne and Kyle Jensen.  Sophomore class attendants were Brooke Manning and Garrett Pribyl with Taylor Erdkamp and Jacob Kroll representing the junior class.   Becca Vossler and Blake Mark were crowned Duke and Duchess, with Lana Kennedy and Jalen Maxson named Prince and Princess. Claire White and Nate Bigelow were crowned the Exeter-Milligan 2011 Homecoming King and Queen.  They were presented gifts from the student body by Quinten Loontjer before pictures and heading to the dance.
DON'T MISS THE SLIDESHOW WITH MORE ATTENDANTS PICTURES AND PICTURES FROM THE FOOTBALL GAME>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Exeter-Milligan Update: First Grade News

Exeter-Milligan 1st grade news by Sharon Lott

First Grade students have been learning about the Pledge of Allegiance. They are learning what the big words mean. They watched a video given to us from the Legion. They will be explaining the meaning of the pledge at our Grandparents Day program on October 21.

Pictured is the first grade (L-R): Olivea Swanson, Brianna Wiederspan, Cecelia Murphy, Chase Vnoucek, Gabe Jindra, Morgan White, Cade Kresak (holding the flag) and Marcus Krupicka.