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News for 12-16-21

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12-16-21 front page

Basketball is in full swing, with the first home game double header held Tuesday evening! Plus, chickens will be allowed again within city limits, Garretson Middle School Student Council and REACH students passed kindness around, and the Garretson School Board discussed fixing the sports complex while voting to hire an engineer, and more!

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News for 12-16-21 (E-Edition)

12-16-21 front crop

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Click this link to download and read Issue #49 Full Version

Basketball is in full swing, with the first home game double header held Tuesday evening! Plus, chickens will be allowed again within city limits, Garretson Middle School Student Council and REACH students passed kindness around, and the Garretson School Board discussed fixing the sports complex while voting to hire an engineer, and more!


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Obituary: Corrinne “Cory” Holzapfel, age 74

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Cory Holzapfel

Corrinne “Cory” Holzapfel, age 74, of rural Sherman, passed away on Wednesday, December 8, 2021, at her home. Services were held on Sunday, December 12, 2021, with a short service and time of sharing beginning at 7:00 PM at the Minnehaha Funeral Home, Garretson.

Corrinne (Cory) Sanders was born March 31, 1947, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Helen Allaire and Gerald Sanders.  She spent her early years in Massachusetts before moving to Sioux Falls when she was a teenager.  Cory graduated from Washington High School in 1964. 

After graduation she worked at McKennan Hospital as a ward clerk.  It was there she met Richard Holzapfel, her future husband, while his Grandpa Charlie Vandersnick was in the hospital.  He worked up the courage to ask her out and after three dates he proposed marriage in “Matt Dillon Country” as Cory called it (Palisades outside of Garretson), which included leaving everything in South Dakota and moving to Alaska…..only 3,050 miles away! She accepted!  Rich went back to work in Alaska for 6 months and did not return to Sioux Falls until their wedding on October 29, 1976.  Cory then went on the biggest adventure of her life for the next 45 years.

In their early years of marriage the two enjoyed league bowling, hiking, biking and 3-wheeling in Alaska.  Cory was the official score keeper for Rich’s softball team for 12 years and always made sure the umpires agreed with her score. 

March 10, 1979, the couple welcomed their only child Heather Marie.  Cory was a leader for Girl Scouts and volunteered at North Pole Elementary where she helped with PTA and would monitor recess.  She then volunteered at North Pole Middle School in the office until 1993 when she went to work for Guided Independent Study in Fairbanks.  She made many great friends and enjoyed her 15 years there.  Cory was always at all of Heather’s performances or concerts, no matter what.  Once Heather graduated from High School, Cory travelled around Alaska with Rich on the Alaska Railroad work train and saw much of Alaska many people never get to see. Both Rich & Cory retired on April 1, 2008, and moved to Shady Acres outside of Garretson in July of that year where she enjoyed 13 years of retirement.

Cory’s only grandson, Finnlay Richard, was born June 23, 2012.  She enjoyed spending time with him and going to all his school concerts and soccer games.  She was always “all in” on everything.  She never missed a thing.

Cory loved to read anything and everything, gardening (especially her hostas), crafting when she could, and loving her grandson Finnlay as much as possible. 

Cory is preceded in death by her parents Helen & Gerald.  Grateful  to have shared her life are, her loving husband Richard of 45 years, daughter Heather (Jason DelGuidice) Holzapfel, and her favorite grandson Finnlay Richard Seeloff.  Her step-mother Alice Tuttle and siblings Gerald Sanders of Missouri, Wayne Sanders of Sioux Falls, Kevin (Vicki) Sanders of Sioux Falls, Vicki (Randy) Jacobsma of Sioux Falls, Michelle (Troy) Renken of Sioux Falls.  

www.minnehahafuneralhome.com

GHS Wrestling gets off to a good start facing Flandreau with Lady and Gentlemen wrestlers!

GHS Wrestling

Place finishers: (L to R) Brock Bonte, Hannah Frewaldt, Hanna Hovarth, Jayse Miller, Hunter Abraham. (Photo by Kristen Westover)


            On Saturday, December 4, Garretson Wrestlers headed to Flandreau to take on several area schools at the Flandreau Invitational.

            "Out of 11 wrestlers 5 of them placed in the top 4 in their weight classes," said Head Coach Brady Schleuter.

            Varsity wrestlers Jayse Miller (132) placed 2nd, Brock Bonte (138) placed 4th, and Hunter Abraham (145) placed 3rd.

            This year, Garretson has 23 total wrestlers on its roster: 21 boys and 2 girls, Hannah Frewaldt and Hannah Hovarth. Both placed 2nd in the tournament.

            "These two girls are the first women to ever place in a varsity tournament in Garretson wrestling history," Schleuter pointed out.

            South Dakota High School Activities Association sanctioned girls' wrestling in 2019, becoming the 25th state to do so at the high school level. In its first year, 2020-21, there were 31 schools who fielded female wrestling teams.

            Dan Swartos, head of SDHSAA, said he expected that number to grow for 2021-22.

            “We’ve known for a while that we’ve got a good population of girl wrestlers in our youth wrestling programs and up to our AAU stages, and then when they get up to middle school or high school, those girls, the regions would go away, so to continue, they’d have to wrestle boys,” Swartos stated in an interview with SDPB. “The key is at the youth level. At a young age, getting the kids interested in it.”

            Garretson has been no exception, with at least a couple girls practicing or wrestling each year at the youth level.

            The Frewaldt name isn't unknown in wrestling, either. Shannon Frewaldt held the All-Time South Dakota Wrestling record for 1989, 1991, and 1992 in the 103, 125, and 130 weight classes and has been inducted in the SD Wrestling Hall of Fame.

            Garretson will next participate in the Parker Quad today (Thursday), hitting the mat against the Sioux Valley, Parker, and Mount Vernon/Plankinton/Corsica-Stickney teams. The first home meet will be on Thursday, December 16 at 5:00 p.m. with Parker, McCook County/Montrose, and Howard.

GHS Wrestling
Hannah Frewaldt (Photo by Kristen Westover)
GHS Wrestling
Jayse Miller (Photo by Kristen Westover)
GHS Wrestling
Isaac Stoterau (Photo by Kristen Westover)

AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY – DECEMBER, 2021

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The American Legion Auxiliary meeting was held on December 2 with Cheryl opening the meeting and Sue leading us in prayer.  The pledge of allegiance was given as well as the roll call of officers.  Officers absent were Rhonda, DaNann and Ethel.

 The secretary’s minutes were read, approved and placed on file.

The treasurer’s report was read, approved and placed on file for audit.

It was reported that membership is now at 152 with a goal of 183.

There was no card report.

There will be no meeting in January.

A special thank you was given to Judy Hanson for delivering apples and candy to 85 school emloyees.

Poems and essay information will be taken to the school by Denise Schmidt.

Girl’s State information will be brought to the school with a March 1 deadline.

Cheryl gave future dates for auxiliary and community activities.

Care packages will be assembled in February and items can be brought to the meeting then,.  More information will be given in our February newsletter.

Our donations will include $250.00 for the local food pantry and the Veterans Center in Sioux Falls will be contacted to see what their needs are.

Our next meeting is February 3 with no meeting in January. 

Sue closed the meeting with prayer.

Kathy Evenson, Secretary Pro temp

School’s food drive gathers items for local food pantry

school staff food drive

754 items were collected and delivered to the local Food Pantry this week, thanks to the generosity of Garretson School District employees. Here, Mallory Zell, teacher assistant, Norinda Northrup, administrative assistant, Julie Months, food service, Jacki Lester, kindergarten teacher, and Nick Sittig, band director, smile, knowing that everything collected will help keep their students and their families fed this winter.

This week, county commissioners hear about ballot drop boxes, insurance, grant apps

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By Dave Baumeister

County Correspondent

SIOUX FALLS — This week, the Minnehaha County Commission met for a monthly Building Committee meeting prior to their regular session on Tuesday, Dec. 7, and one of the topics of discussion was ballot drop boxes.

Prior to the 2020 election, the auditor’s office invested in two ballot drop boxes to help deal with the large number of expected absentee ballots.

Unless a new variant of the coronavirus pushes things back to 2020 conditions, that probably won’t be the case in 2022, but the auditor still wants to allow people to drop off absentee ballots directly to the county, as opposed to chancing regular mail delivery.

Susan Beaman with that office explained one change they wanted to make with the placement of those drop boxes in Sioux Falls.

Last year, one box was located at the entrance to the Minnehaha County Administration Building, and another was placed across Dakota Ave. at the Election Center.

Beeman said that the auditor’s office is looking to move the box from the Election Center to the Administration Building parking lot adjacent to Minnesota Ave., to allow for drive-up access.

Last year, with the placement of the two boxes, only walk-up access was available.

To address security, Beaman said that the box on the west edge of the parking lot would be behind a concrete barrier, and even though it would be covered by cameras, they felt having the box so near the busy Minnesota Ave. location would make the box even more secure.

The only question on the boxes came from Vice-Chairperson Cindy Heiberger (Commission chair Dean Karsky was absent) who was concerned about the number of parking spaces the drive-up box would take up.

Although that hadn’t been addressed, Beaman said she would keep that concern in mind in preparing the final report.

From the look of the photos presented, voters dropping off ballots to the “drive-up” box would still need to get out of their vehicles to deposit them, but they would be able to drive up fairly close to make casting their ballots more convenient.

The Building Committee also heard a presentation from Todd Flickema of the SilverStone Group on property insurance for next year.

His group, which manages the county’s property insurance has been having difficulty locking down a provider for the next term.

As Flickema told commissioners, insurance companies have been hurting due to unusually large payouts from natural disaster claims (floods, fires, hurricanes, etc.) in recent years.

Most of the companies they looked at have either declined or want to put deductibles in place of more than $100,000.

Flickema pointed out that the county’s current carrier, The Travelers, is unsure about renewal.

This year, the county is paying The Travelers over $200,000 for its annual premiums.

Flickema showed figures that Minnehaha County has only made two claims on its property insurance in the past six years: one in 2018 on a fire at the county jail for $939,851, and the second just this past summer on emergency repairs on the roof of the Sioux Empire Fair Expo Building for $155,727.

No action was taken on anything concerning insurance, but Flickema wanted to keep commissioners informed of the processes they were going through.

Regular meeting

During the regular Dec. 7 meeting, commissioners gave their approval to applying for several grants, including a $3.1 million MacArthur Foundation Urban Institute Equitable Housing Grant for which they were invited to apply.

Presiding judge of the Second Judicial Circuit Robin Houwman spoke about the prestigious nature of the grant, in that groups must be invited to apply, and those invitations come based, in part, on past community work in the areas of lowering homeless and incarceration numbers.

She said only around two dozen receive invitations to apply, and of those, only 10 are selected for an interview to receive the grants.

After the interview process, grants are awarded to four applicants.

Houwman said that if the grant would be awarded to the county, the first stage would be to establish “community partners” to determine needs and how best to implement them.

A main area of concern, she added, is to look at emergency and crisis stabilization housing.

Commissioner Jean Bender said she was “completely in support” of applying for the grant, as it would be building on work the county has already been doing.

In moving forward on this, Houwman was asking the county to be the government agency attached to the application, to which all commissioners readily agreed.

Other grant applications discussed dealt with bridge replacement work near Baltic, Dell Rapids and Garretson.

Next week, there is no regular commission meeting scheduled; however, according to Commissioner Jeff Barth, they will use that day, Tuesday, Dec. 14,to look at how to spend the $35 million in COVID-relief money the county received.

He added that there have already been around $110 million in requests for the money, so commissioners will have their work cut out for them as they go through requests.

That meeting will begin at 8 a.m.

But the next regular meeting will start at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 21, on the second floor of the Minnehaha County Administration Building at 6th and Minnesota in Sioux Falls.

There is time allotted at each government meeting for public comment.

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Mark Garry to retire after 41 years in insurance

by Carrie Moritz, Gazette

Mark Garry
Mark Garry

            On Wednesday, a retirement party was held for Mark Garry of Peoples Insurance in Garretson, and another one will be held next week in Jasper. Garry will be wrapping up 41 years in the insurance business at the end of this month.

            Mark Garry hadn't planned on getting into insurance.

            When he graduated from Sioux Falls College, he fully intended on becoming a teacher and a coach. With a degree in Psychology and Secondary Education, his new career began at Chester High School, 78 miles one way. Despite a lack of a classroom and a fully-packed schedule- he taught six periods of World History, Civics, Geography, and PE, grabbing a room wherever one was available, along with coaching three sports- he enjoyed it immensely.

            It was the salary that chased him out. His first-year contract was for $9,000, which is equivalent to approximately $43,780 today.

            "If the salary had been there, I'd still be teaching," he said. In 1981, Garry and his wife, Shirley, were expecting their second child. Shirley was also a teacher and a coach in Garretson, and they realized that financially and schedule-wise, there was no way they could make it work.

            Garry's father, Gerald, had worked in insurance since 1968 and invited Garry to join him. Garry wrapped up his final year of teaching, and joined Farm Bureau in 1981.

            "Dad was the manager of Farm Bureau East River," Garry said. They held that partnership until 1987, then Gerald and Mark went independent as Garry Financial Services until 2004.

            The 2004 market was a time called a "hard market," which is something that occurs approximately every five years. At that time, it became difficult to write policies, and it was imperative that smaller insurance agents joined forces with larger companies, which could more easily write off losses or save money by employing underwriters.

            Many of the contracts Garry held at that time already banked at Dacotah Bank, "so it just made sense to join them," he said. He then traveled to Sioux Falls a few times per week and maintained his offices in Garretson.

            He transferred to Peoples Insurance in February 2012. Their office in Jasper was a perfect fit for Garry.

            He described insurance as a way to protect your belongings, livelihood, and liabilities.

            "We have too many people looking for an easy dollar these days," he said, "so the liability and medical payments on a home insurance is quite valuable.

            "Today's a good example," he said, referring to the light snow that had fallen overnight. "If a child was going to school today and slipped and fell on your sidewalk in front of your house, who's liable? It's to protect you and your investments."

            He said he normally tells clients that insurance is a way to put you back to where you were one second before the accident.

            One of the memories he has from his work has been the ability to help families recover from a fire. Garry spent 25 years on the Garretson Fire Department, and said that when there was a fire and it was one of his clients, he knew he would be able to help them put their house back together.

            Garry helped many people along the way, writing policies for everything from health and medical to home and business to farm and crop insurance.

            "A jack of all trades and a master of none," he said, describing the different types of policies he specialized in. "When I was being groomed for this job, he [Gerald] said, 'The more chances you can keep a person out of your portfolio, the better you are. This means you sell one person as many items as he needs, so the next person can't come in and offer something else."

            He mused about how the insurance world has changed in his 41 years as an agent.

            "When we started out, these things [computers] weren't available, this was it," he said, pointing to a yellow pad. Everything was figured out by long-hand, a method Garry prefers to this day.

            He marveled at how computers have changed the world of insurance. He noted things that used to take an hour can be done in thirty seconds now.

            He's grateful for the agent who has been working with him for the past year, Nicholas DeWit. DeWit brought many strengths to the table, including his knowledge of computers and his ability to keep abreast of all the technological changes happening today. Garry believes DeWit will be a great agent and will help carry the legacy he and his father started in Garretson.

            Garry is happy to pursue retirement, though. Shirley retired from teaching in 2015, and he said he got a taste of it this past year when he dropped down to part-time. He intends to spend plenty of time going to his five grandchildren’s activities, helping around the house with yard work, and doing some traveling.

            "Whatever my wife says to do," he jokes. "We'll take it one day at a time."

Local memories on the 80th Anniversary of the Pearl Harbor attack

by Garrick A Moritz, Gazette

Eighty years ago, on Dec. 7, 1941, Japan attacked the US Naval base at Pearl Harbor. The next day, President Franklin D. Roosevelt addressed congress, asking them for a declaration of war and addressing the nation over the radio waves.

“Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a date, which will live in infamy, the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan,” Roosevelt said.

There are many Garretson area residents who remember that day. On a recent trip, Kris Frerk went to the Pearl Harbor Museum, and because of that experience she came to the Gazette office with an idea. With our staff, she created a list of local citizens who were around at that time, and we called those citizens to ask what they remembered.

“I remember the day, though I don’t remember exactly what I was doing at the time,” said Darlene Zweep. “I remember the radio broadcast though. I had two uncles who went into the service just a few months after that.”

“I honestly don’t remember much, as I was only ten years old at the time,” said Bernice Semmen, “but I do remember that we had some special goings on at the church that night, and it was what everybody was talking about. That the United States had been attacked at Pearl Harbor and there would be war. I didn’t know where Pearl Harbor was, as again, I was just a little girl, but I do remember it, and learning a lot more about it in the years that came after.”

“I was a freshman at Augustana Academy,” said Doreen Rollag. “I was actually in the hospital at the time. I had to have surgery to remove my appendix, which was a pretty big deal at the time. I was recovering from my surgery, while I was in the hospital all the nurses were talking about it and I didn’t know what was going on. They told me all about it and didn’t want to talk about anything else. I went in to have an operation and the world changed around me.”

“I remember that speech very well,” said Frank Koens. “I was just about 10 years old. My family lived on a farm north of Garretson. It’s actually I believe the farm where the VanHollands live now, the home of our now famous first Lady Dragon Football player Jenna VanHolland. I was in school, but it was the weekend and we were all home, and doing chores around the farm. We didn’t’ have a television, we didn’t have anything like that in those days. Just a battery-operated radio. Dad called us boys over, saying that the United States had been attacked and that we’d better listen.”

“I remember when I heard about the attack,” said Owen Wiese. “I was just about 12 years old, and I remember how it greatly affected my father. We were living in St. Paul Minnesota at the time. My dad worked for the Civilian Conservation Corps, at their headquarters there.” (For those who don’t know what the CCC was, it was probably the most popular public work relief program of the Great Depression and FDR’s New Deal. At its height in employed almost 300,000 people ages 17-28, and did public works all across the nation.) “With this attack, well it greatly affected my dad because he knew that it would be the end of the CCC. The CCC as an organization was run by the US Army to build projects nationwide. Anyone who was in a management role at the CCC was military trained, or was in the reserves. And the workforce was made up of men, all of draftable age. My dad knew that they would go into active service soon, and that’s just what happened. The attack had a real and permanent effect on my family. It changed the course of my dad’s life and it’s why we moved back to South Dakota in fact.”

“I remember the President’s words,” said Koens. “That day that will live in infamy. Just a few months later, my older brother Ben Koens was inducted into the military. He went through the whole war. He was a tank driver, and luckily, he got through the whole thing without a scratch. Said he had a few tanks shot out from under him, but he always got away and got a new one. He was part of General Patton’s third battalion. He landed at Normandy, fought in the Battle of the Bulge. All of it.”

“I can remember too when Hitler took power in Germany,” said Koens. “I was just eight or so, so I didn’t know too much, other than he’d been in the German Army and fought us before. I was just a boy at the time, but I knew that he was a bad man, an evil man. If Hitler didn’t like what you had to say, if you got in his way or even just who you were born as, then you wound up dead. It was a terrible war, so many people died, more civilians than army people. But we beat them, it took a lot, but we beat them and the world recovered.”

“My war was the Korean war,” said Koens. “I served until the tail end of it, and left its shores three weeks after the cease fire. I always figured I was pretty fortunate. You see just one person dead, you never forget it, and there were so many dead after the second world war. Then we had Korea, Vietnam, and so many others, just one after another. It’s pretty sad actually. Makes you wonder if there will ever be a day when we’re not fighting somebody. But I will also say this, that the people back home worked and sacrificed just as much as the guys who fought. Everybody was working to end the war.”

“The attack directly affected every part of our lives,” Zweep said. “I remember the rationing. The stamps, tokens, shoes, sugar, tires, and gas rationing. You could only own so many pairs of shoes, that was the level of rationing that happened. My mother was smart and bought a large stock of sugar before they started rationing, and we made our own butter. Good thing too. You couldn’t get things without the right ration tokens, flour, gas, tires, real necessities. All the schools got rations, and we ate things like beans, noodles and rice, and we were often happy just to get a hot meal.” (Most certainly not up to today’s national nutrition standards.)

“I remember D-Day and then V-Day, when it was over, better,” said Zweep. “When it was all over, the big parade in Brookings downtown. The celebration, that’s what I remember best. How happy everyone was that it was finally over.”

“It really affected us students,” said Rollag. “We had an early graduation that year so that the boys would be free to go to war. Everybody was getting drafted. When I went to St. Olaf’s college there were no men enrolled. It was a very serious time, nothing was normal and it left a scar on the nation. People talk about these shortages because of the pandemic, but they have no idea what shortages are really like. Having to stand in line for hours in a Sioux Falls department store just to get a single pair of nylons. My father couldn’t drive me to college because he needed every gallon of gas for the farm because of the rationing, so I took the train instead.”

Rollag also recalled helping on the farm, pulling a disc to plow the field because there was no one else to help. She also got a job early at the First National Bank in Sioux Falls, because there were so few people in the workforce that they needed anyone.

“I remember an accident I had, I went into the ditch and my first big worry was the tires because we needed our tire ration for the farm,” she said. “We couldn’t waste a single one. Thankfully it was fine, they pulled me out and it was all right.”

“I still have my ration book from World War two,” said Koens. “We all had one, and you had to have it if you wanted to get groceries of any kind. It’s just what you had to do. I know there was a black market that existed, but I never did any business with them. It was hard, but if you were careful you could make it work.”

Talking with these elders from our community about the anniversary of Pearl Harbor yielded more than a few pearls of wisdom. Their sacrifices bought us the liberties and freedoms we enjoy today. So, thank a veteran and/or elder in your life.

“If people really want to show their gratitude and their patriotism, they should go out and get the COVID vaccine if they haven’t done it yet,” said Rollag. “Not getting the vaccine is an act of idiocy and selfishness. People don’t remember polio, well, I had a nephew that died of polio. It was a terrible disease, especially for children and it was everywhere. But when they developed a vaccine, everyone got it. Everyone. We beat polio because everyone came together to fight it, just like we did after Pearl Harbor. So do what’s right and get your shots.”

Update 12-15-21: The original version of this article incorrectly quoted Frank Koens as serving only three weeks. This has been corrected.

News for 12-9-21

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12-9-21 front page

Pearl Harbor was recognized on Tuesday, 80 years after the attack. Garretson residents speak about their memories of that time, and how it affected their lives. Local insurance agent Mark Garry is retiring after 41 years in his career, and the GHS girls basketball and the wrestlers see some great success in their season openers. Plus, Christmas in South Dakota through the decades and the Garretson School staff pull together for the local food pantry.

There's a lot going on in our community. Keep up with all of it with the Community Events Calendar on page 4 in the on-line or paper version. With your on-line subscription, you can download it here and have it easy to hand!


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