050917_YKMV_A2.pdf
May 9, 2017 • Page 2
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Missouri National Recreational
River Tourism Creates $7.6 Million
In Local Economic Benefit
A new National Park Service
local communities within the 98-mile camping fees (2.5 percent).
(NPS) report shows that 148,200
river corridor from Pickstown, South
Report authors this year provisitors to the Missouri National
Dakota to Ponca, Nebraska that enduced an interactive tool. Users can
Recreational River in 2016 spent
compasses the park's boundaries."
explore current year visitor spend$6.4 Million in communities near
The peer-reviewed visitor spending, jobs, labor income, value added,
the park. That spending supported
ing analysis was conducted by econ- and output effects by sector for
102 jobs in the local area and had
omists Catherine Cullinane Thomas
national, state, and local economies.
www.missourivalleyshopper.com
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a cumulative benefit to the local
of the U.S. Geological Survey and
Users can also view year-by-year
economy of $7.6 Million.
Lynne Koontz of the National Park
trend data. The interactive tool
"Missouri National Recreational
Service. The report shows $18.4
and report are available at the NPS
River welcomes visitors from across billion of direct spending by 331
Social Science Program webpage:
the country and around the world,"
million park visitors in communities go.nps.gov/vse.
are delighted to share the story of
istered by the National Park Service.
The report includes information
this place and the experiences it
This spending supported 318,000
for visitor spending at individual
provides. We also feature the park
jobs nationally; 271,544 of those jobs parks and by state. To learn more
as a way to introduce our visitors
are found in these gateway comabout national parks in South Dakoto this part of the country and all
munities. The cumulative benefit to
ta and Nebraska and how the Nationthat it offers. National park tourism
the U.S. economy was $34.9 billion.
al Park Service works with the states
is a significant driver in the national
According to the 2016 report, most
communities to help preserve local
economy, returning $10 for every $1 park visitor spending was for lodghistory, conserve the environment,
invested in the National Park Sering (31.2 percent) followed by food
and provide outdoor recreation, go
vice, and it's a big factor in our local and beverages (27.2 percent), gas
to www.nps.gov/southdakota or www.
the partnership and support of our
and fees (10.2 percent), souvenirs
nps.gov/nebraska.
to give back by helping to sustain
cal transportation (7.4 percent), and
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Visit Daugaard
Gov. our Web site at
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Proclaims May
8-12 Teacher
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AppreciationWeek
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PIERRE, S.D. – Gov.
Dennis Daugaard has proclaimed May 8-12 Teacher
Appreciation Week in South
Dakota.
“We all have an experience with a favorite teacher
– someone who made a
difference in our lives. For
me, that was my high school
biology teacher. We remain
in contact, and to this day, I
turn to him for professional
advice,” said Secretary
of Education Dr. Melody
Schopp. “Whether you are
a student, a parent, a grandparent, or an aunt or uncle,
I encourage you to reach
out to a teacher this week
and thank them for their
commitment to the teaching
profession and the children
of South Dakota.”
The Department of
Education will be using the
hashtag #ThankATeacher
on social media throughout
the week. Members of the
public are invited to share
a message of thanks for the
teachers impacting students
across the state and the
country.
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When Harley Jacobsen came into Doc’s office the other
day for his physical it was a treat for Doc.
Harley is one of Doc’s favorite people. Harley is a farmer.
A 24/7 farmer. Ol’ Harley can make hair grow on a bald
head and wheat grow on rocks.
When he’d been thumped and bumped and listened to
and pumped up and partially drained, Harley asked Doc for
the verdict.
“Not bad at all for someone your age, Harley,” Doc said,
grinning. “But you look tired. Take some time off and go
fishing or take Gladys to the beach.”
“Can’t right now, Doc,” Harley said. “Planting.”
“Well, how about later on?”
“There’s plowing summer fallow, you know, then harvest,
and the trees will have to be pruned before winter, and then
the winter wheat will go in. Have to overhaul the wheel tractor this winter and by then it’ll be time to plant again.”
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“Harley, you need two weeks with nothing to do. to place
someone to help with the farm and go do something fun.”
“I just can’t do it in two weeks, Doc,” Harley said. “Took
60 years of farming to get this tired.”
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“When will softball ever help you get a job and earn a
living?” Dean’s mother asked in exasperation.
Underhand fast-pitch softball was big in the communities before World War II, and Dean was a crazy fast pitch
at it, with an emphasis on crazy. His pitches were incredibly fast, but they were also all over the place. He and some
of his brothers would play every chance they could, even
when they should be home working.
Dean’s mother had grown weary of it all. More than once
she had to dispatch one of her daughters to fetch Dean and
his brothers from the ball diamond long after they were supposed to be home. She had learned it did no good to send
another brother because they would just end up playing,
too.
Then the war came, and Dean and his brothers were
drafted into the army. Dean soon found himself in Europe.
When there were breaks in fighting and all the other things
that went along with war, the men would organize softball
teams. Dean had a lot of chances to play, and he enhanced
his control, and his skill became well known.
Once he came home from the war, there wasn’t a lot of
time to play ball. It was time to find work and get on with
life. He still played when he could, but the work that was to
be had with farm labor skills was not necessarily high paying and meant lots of extra hours to make a living.
Some big construction jobs started, and the jobs paid
well, but the competition was fierce. One big construction
firm was building a large commercial lodge at Jackson Lake.
They decided that it would be good promotion for the company and the lodge to form a fast-pitch softball team among
their workers. But in their first game, they were trounced
soundly by a local team.
Those managing the construction crew didn’t feel it
looked good for their team to be beaten, and especially
not as badly as they were. They started searching around
for better players, and Dean’s name came up. A company
representative traveled over one-hundred miles from the
construction site to St. Anthony, Idaho. When Dean was offered a construction job at a much higher wage than what
he received where he was currently working, he jumped at
the chance.
In the next game, Dean, pitching for the construction
crew team, struck out many of their opponents, but there
were still holes in his team. In the times the ball was hit,
Dean watched too many misses by the shortstop. Dean
went to the office to see the construction foreman.
“We needed a good shortstop if we are going to have a
really good team.”
“Do you know one?” the foreman asked.
“My brother, Glen.”
“Has he worked construction before?” the foreman
asked.
“Not any more than I have,” Dean answered.
The foreman turned to the administrative person in the
office. “Hire his brother.”
Glen was hired, and the team did well. Dean and Glen
were also learning construction. But the catcher couldn’t
hold on to some of the pitches that Dean threw at him.
The foreman pulled Glen aside. “Can you catch the
pitches your brother throws?”
“I can if I am the one that tells him what to throw,” Glen
answered.
“You work that out with him, then,” the foreman said.
The team started doing better, but they came close to
losing a couple of times. They were coming up against some
even tougher teams, and a competitor company sponsored
one of them. The foreman watched the team and realized
that some of his players were good at construction, but they
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were only mediocre at softball. This time he went to Dean.
“Do you know any others that are good at softball?” he
asked.
“I have other brothers and cousins,” Dean replied.
And that’s how Dean’s motherwww.missourivalleyshopper.com
came to admit that softball might have a place after all.
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tion, “Pioneer Girl Perspectives: Exploring Laura Ingalls
Wilder,” was unveiled at the
April 28-29 history conference
of the South Dakota State Historical Society in our Falls.
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cessful career and work with
Rose Wilder Lane. “Perspectives” will be available to the
public on May 18 for $29.95.
“Perspectives” is a companion to a series the South
Dakota Historical Society Press
plans to release about Laura
Ingalls Wilder. Two additional
volumes dedicated to sharing
her publishing journey are
planned.
The second volume in the
“Pioneer Girl” series, titled “Pioneer Girl: The Revised Texts,”
is slated for publication in
2018. It will examine the edited
typescripts that came after
Wilder’s original, handwritten
autobiography, constituting
a rigorous study of Wilder’s
daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, as
an editor of these works.
The third volume, titled
“Pioneer Girl: The Path into
Fiction,” will showcase material that leads readers directly
from Wilder’s “Pioneer Girl”
texts featured in the first
two volumes to the rough
draft of “Little House in the
Big Woods”—the book that
launched Wilder’s Little House
novels.
The Pioneer Girl Project
is a research and publishing program of the South
Dakota Historical Society Press
that produced the national
bestseller “Pioneer Girl: The
Annotated Autobiography”
by Wilder, edited by Pamela
Smith Hill.
More information about
the Pioneer Girl Project and
its publications can be found
at pioneergirlproject.org or by
calling (605) 773-6009.