fall theology institute set for sept....

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POUND COUNT Several animals are available at the Yankton Animal Shelter. For more information, call the Yankton Police Departmentʼs animal control officer from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday- Friday at 661-9494, or 668-5210. DAILY RECORD POLICY The Press & Dakotan pub- lishes police and sheriff reports as a public service to its readers. It is important to remember that an ar- rest should not imply guilt and that every person is presumed innocent until proven otherwise. When juve- niles are released from jail, it is into the care of a parent or guardian. It is the policy of the Press & Dakotan to publish all names made available in the police and court reports. There are no exceptions. ARRESTS • Antony Arnett, 42, Yankton, was arrested Tuesday on a parole hold. • John Rolston, 30, Yankton, was arrested Tuesday on a parole hold. • Allen Slagle, 26, Gayville, was arrested Tuesday on a warrant for reckless driving. • Natasha Feyereisen, 20, Ver- million, was arrested Tuesday for second-degree petty theft. • Jesse Mattson, 33, Yankton, was arrested Tuesday on a parole hold. • Robin Artz, 34, Yankton, was arrested Tuesday on a parole hold. • Craig Downie, 54, Yankton, was arrested Tuesday for driving under the influence. • Justin Grosshuesch, 23, Yankton, was arrested Wednesday on a warrant for failure to pay a fine. INCIDENTS • A report was received at 4:11 p.m. Tuesday of shoplifting in the 3000 block of Broadway Ave. One person was arrested for second-de- gree petty theft. • A report was received at 5:37 p.m. Tuesday of a potential assault in the 1100 block of E. 8th St. Nei- ther party wished to press charges. • A report was received at 9:52 p.m. Tuesday of the theft of 90 generic Xanax pills in the 1200 block of Peninah St. • A report was received at 1:51 a.m. Wednesday of suspicious ac- tivity in the 1500 block of Broadway Ave. A female individual reported a young male tried to get her to buy him alcohol, which she refused to do. She also said the male drove a white pickup without a tailgate and blocked her in. • A report was received at 9:21 a.m. Wednesday of the theft of a Playstation 3 from the 1000 block of Whiting Dr. • A report was received at 11:57 a.m. Wednesday of theft by conver- sion in the 2000 block of Elm St. CRIME STOPPERS Anyone wishing to report anonymous information on unlawful activity in the City of Yankton or in Yankton County is encouraged to contact the Crime Stoppers tip line at 665-4440. 75 YEARS AGO Monday, September 11, 1939 • President Roosevelt may an- nounce today the date when he will call Congress into a special session at which he wants the controverted arms embargo provision stripped from the neutrality law. • To prove she could live alone in the woods, Wilma Jacobson, 19, dressed in a gummy sack garment and equipped with only a bow and arrows and a hunting knife, entered the wild of southeastern Wyoming. 50 YEARS AGO Friday, September 11, 1964 • A.J. “Hap” Rhian was elected president of the Yankton Chamber of Commerce for next year to suc- ceed Laddie Cimpl shortly after Oc- tober 1 at the Chamber election meeting held in connection with the Thursday noon luncheon meeting of the Chamber board of directors at the Gurney coffee shop. • The Yankton Chamber of Commerce today warned against fraudulent and deceptive chain re- ferral sales schemes that employ high-pressure tactics to saddle con- sumers with debts on overpriced merchandise. 25 YEARS AGO Monday, September 11, 1989 • South Dakota used preventive medicine to avoid the severe nurs- ing shortage that ha infected other states, said lawmakers, educators and health-care experts. • The first in the fall series of noon forums at Mount Marty Col- lege, “Into Africa,” will be held at 12:05 p.m. Tuesday in the Roncali south dining room. THE PRESS & DAKOTAN WEATHER CENTER PAGE 2: THE REGION PRESS & DAKOTAN n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2014 DAILY RECORD BOARD OF TRADE eel Right. F heating e mak we , rier r, Car At thermostats. and controls products, At H eel Right. sy cooling and heating r But thermostats. e it even more comfor ves, we mak incenti $2,650 to up with now And e is your home comfor what we really mak T TIN HEA AT HEA AT ankton, , Y Ya 920 Broadway y, rt t tabl ven more comfor R rier Car in $2,650 tab our home comfor NG & CO , SD • 665-9461 1700 Burleigh St. • Yankton, SD (605) 260-9284 • www.feccinc.com A United Way & Volunteer Services Agency FE CC Family Education and Counseling Center, Inc. LOST? LOST? LOST? Call for an appointment (605) 260-9284 MORNING COFFEE WEEKDAYS 7:40AM MONDAY THRU FRIDAY Yankton’s Home Team! ON THIS DATE WALL ST. RECAP LOTTERIES Town And Country Club To Meet The public is invited to attend the Yankton Town and Coun- try Club’s monthly meeting at 1:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12, at the Corps of Discovery Welcome Center, located 3 miles south of the Meridian Bridge. The guest speaker is Marilyn Kratz, who will discuss her lat- est book, “Feed Sack Dresses and Wild Plum Jam.” Everyone is welcome to stay for the light lunch prepared by the club hosstesses. More information, call Betts Pulkrabek at 605-463-2206. ‘Letters From The Attic’ To Be Presented FREEMAN — The presentation “Letters from the Attic” will be offered at the Heritage Hall Museum on the Freeman Acad- emy campus in Freeman at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12. South Dakota Humanities Scholar Phyllis Schrag will present the program. According to the South Dakota Humanities website: “Partici- pants will gain a perspective on the life and times of people who settled in Dakota Territory. The presentation is based on 50 let- ters in German script addressed to Schrag’s great-grandfather, F.J. Meier. These letters had been carefully saved, never trans- lated and handed down through the generations, and detail faith, personal experiences and the agrarian nature of Dakotas between 1878 and 1879.” The hour-long PowerPoint presentation is a fascinating edu- cational opportunity. A shortened version will be presented at Freeman Academy Chapel Sept. 12. For more information contact Stacey Walter, Heritage Hall Museum, Freeman, SD 57029. 1-800-595-9755; 605-925-7545, or email [email protected] or archives@freemanmu- seum.org/. Park Service Dedicates New Trails VERMILLION — The recently constructed Mulberry Bend Hiking Trail dedication will take place Saturday, Sept. 13. The event will begin at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry Bend Overlook, on the Nebraska side of the Vermillion-Newcastle Bridge connecting South Dakota Highway 19 and Nebraska Highway 15. MNRR Su- perintendent Rick Clark and Biologist Lisa Yager will welcome visitors with short presentations, followed by a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Missouri National Recreational River — northeast Ne- braska’s and southeastern South Dakota’s local unit of the na- tional park system — invites everyone to this dedication, which then provides an opportunity to take a ranger-guided “walk in the woods”. Hikers will experience unique flora and fauna, in- cluding 150-year old bur oak trees, and two vista points with sweeping views of the wild and scenic Missouri National Recre- ational River (MNRR). “A great deal of hard work and collaboration has gone into the completion of the Mulberry Bend Hiking Trail and we are ex- cited to announce that the trail is open for the public to enjoy. In honor of the trail dedication, we are pleased to offer several guided hikes on Sept. 13,” Yager said. Ranger-guided walks are scheduled for 1:30 p.m., 2:30 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. to introduce the public to the new trail system and the natural resources and history of the Mulberry Bend area. The trail is considered moderately difficult due to steep in- clines and potential uneven footing. Sturdy shoes, such as hik- ing or athletic shoes, are recommended. The trail length, including both vista point spurs, is three-fourths of a mile. The park’s unique Mobile Ranger Station, a visitor center on wheels, will be at the event from 1-4 p.m. with exhibits, activi- ties and ranger programs for all ages. Water will be provided. NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks broke two days of losses on Wednes- day as a jump in Apple shares helped push indexes higher. Apple rose 3.1 percent, its biggest gain since April, a day after announcing updated ver- sions of the iPhone, a new smart- watch and a mobile payment system. ON WEDNESDAY: The Dow Jones industrial aver- age rose 54.84 points, or 0.3 percent, to 17,068.71. The Standard & Poorʼs 500 index rose 7.25 points, or 0.4 percent, to 1,995.69. The Nasdaq composite gained 34.24 points, or 0.8 percent, to 4,586.52. FOR THE WEEK: The Dow is down 68.65 points, or 0.4 percent. The S&P 500 is down 12.02 points, or 0.6 percent. The Nasdaq is up 3.62 points, or 0.1 percent. FOR THE YEAR: The Dow is up 492.05 points, or 3 percent. The S&P 500 index is up 147.37 points, or 8 percent. The Nasdaq is up 409.93 points, or 9.8 percent. CHICAGO (AP) — Grain futures were mostly higher Wednesday on the Chicago Board of Trade. Wheat for Dec delivery fell 7.75 cents to $5.1975 a bushel; Dec corn was 1.50 cents higher at 3.4575 a bushel; Dec oats were 7.75 cents higher at $3.5675 a bushel; while Nov soybeans rose 1 cent to $9.9375 a bushel. Beef mixed and pork was higher on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. Oct live cattle rose .03 cent to $1.5970 a pound; Oct feeder cattle was .63 cent lower at $2.2712 a pound; while Oct lean hogs gained 1.33 cents to $1.0710 a pound. WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS 2 BY 2: Red Balls: 6-12, White Balls: 1-7 MY DAY: Month: 7, Day: 17, Year: 48 PICK 3: 4-3-4 PICK 5: 09-19-25-30-32 DAKOTA CASH: 01-04-09-12- 21 HOT LOTTO: 05-07-18-31-41 Hot Ball: 4 POWERBALL: 02-14-39-40-43, Powerball: 13, Power Play: 5 WILD CARD: 03-04-17-20-33, Wild Card: JH Summit Center To Close Aquatics Area For Cleaning The Summit Activities Center will be closing the aquatics area on Sunday, Sept. 14, for cleaning and rou- tine maintenance. The pool is tentatively scheduled to re- open on Saturday, Sept. 20. Water aerobics classes will resume Monday, Sept. 22, at 8:30 a.m. For further information, call 668-5234 or stop by the Summit Activities Center at 1801 Summit Street, Yankton. The Fall Theology Institute at Sacred Heart Monastery is the second of a series on funda- mentalism, focusing on Biblical interpretation. “How Do Catholics Read the Bible?” will be pre- sented by S. Marielle Frigge, OSB, on Saturday, Sept. 20, from 9 a.m.-noon in the Chapter Room of Sacred Heart Monastery. S. Marielle’s presentation follows the previ- ous Theology Institute on religious fundamen- talism, focusing on biblical fundamentalism and Catholic interpretation of scripture. She will ex- plore several Catholic teaching documents on Biblical interpretation, including significant shifts in approaches to understanding the Bible in the past 125 years, and how these changing views can affect theology and practice. As an example, she will discuss why Catholics can be- lieve in both the Bible’s account of the creation of humankind and scientific views of evolution of the human species. There will be an opportu- nity for questions and discussion. After 33 years of teaching Scripture and the- ology at Mount Marty College, S. Marielle now arranges and occasionally presents various op- portunities for continuing education and spiri- tual formation for the Sacred Heart Monastery community, other religious communities and various church, parish, and ecumenical groups. S. Marielle is the author of Beginning Biblical Studies, now in second edition (2013), and writes biblical commentaries for Liturgy Train- ing Publications, Chicago. The event is open to the public free of charge. However, for planning purposes, partici- pants are asked to register by Wednesday, Sept. 17, by calling 605-668-6000 or e-mailing S. Marielle Frigge at [email protected] . Further information about the presenter is available on the Sacred Heart Monastery Web site, http://tinyurl.com/l353en5 The Benedictine Sisters’ Theology Institute provides bi-annual half-day offerings for the on- going theological and spiritual formation of the Sisters of Sacred Heart Monastery. The ecu- menical public is also invited to attend these programs free of charge. Fall Theology Institute Set For Sept. 20

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Page 1: Fall Theology Institute Set For Sept. 20tearsheets.yankton.net/september14/091114/091114_YKPD_A2.pdf · will resume Monday, Sept. 22, at 8:30 a.m. For further information, call 668-5234

POUND COUNTSeveral animals are available

at the Yankton Animal Shelter. Formore information, call the YanktonPolice Departmentʼs animal controlofficer from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday-Friday at 661-9494, or 668-5210.

DAILY RECORD POLICYThe Press & Dakotan pub-

lishes police and sheriff reports asa public service to its readers. It isimportant to remember that an ar-rest should not imply guilt and thatevery person is presumed innocentuntil proven otherwise. When juve-niles are released from jail, it is intothe care of a parent or guardian.

It is the policy of the Press &Dakotan to publish all namesmade available in the police andcourt reports. There are noexceptions.

ARRESTS• Antony Arnett, 42, Yankton,

was arrested Tuesday on a parolehold.

• John Rolston, 30, Yankton,was arrested Tuesday on a parolehold.

• Allen Slagle, 26, Gayville, wasarrested Tuesday on a warrant forreckless driving.

• Natasha Feyereisen, 20, Ver-million, was arrested Tuesday forsecond-degree petty theft.

• Jesse Mattson, 33, Yankton,was arrested Tuesday on a parolehold.

• Robin Artz, 34, Yankton, wasarrested Tuesday on a parole hold.

• Craig Downie, 54, Yankton,was arrested Tuesday for drivingunder the influence.

• Justin Grosshuesch, 23,Yankton, was arrested Wednesdayon a warrant for failure to pay afine.

INCIDENTS• A report was received at 4:11

p.m. Tuesday of shoplifting in the3000 block of Broadway Ave. Oneperson was arrested for second-de-gree petty theft.

• A report was received at 5:37p.m. Tuesday of a potential assaultin the 1100 block of E. 8th St. Nei-ther party wished to press charges.

• A report was received at 9:52p.m. Tuesday of the theft of 90generic Xanax pills in the 1200block of Peninah St.

• A report was received at 1:51a.m. Wednesday of suspicious ac-tivity in the 1500 block of BroadwayAve. A female individual reported ayoung male tried to get her to buyhim alcohol, which she refused todo. She also said the male drove awhite pickup without a tailgate andblocked her in.

• A report was received at 9:21a.m. Wednesday of the theft of aPlaystation 3 from the 1000 blockof Whiting Dr.

• A report was received at 11:57a.m. Wednesday of theft by conver-sion in the 2000 block of Elm St.

CRIME STOPPERSAnyone wishing to report

anonymous information on unlawfulactivity in the City of Yankton or inYankton County is encouraged tocontact the Crime Stoppers tip lineat 665-4440.

75 YEARS AGOMonday, September 11, 1939

• President Roosevelt may an-nounce today the date when he willcall Congress into a special sessionat which he wants the controvertedarms embargo provision strippedfrom the neutrality law.

• To prove she could live alonein the woods, Wilma Jacobson, 19,dressed in a gummy sack garmentand equipped with only a bow andarrows and a hunting knife, enteredthe wild of southeastern Wyoming.

50 YEARS AGOFriday, September 11, 1964• A.J. “Hap” Rhian was elected

president of the Yankton Chamberof Commerce for next year to suc-ceed Laddie Cimpl shortly after Oc-tober 1 at the Chamber electionmeeting held in connection with the

Thursday noon luncheon meetingof the Chamber board of directorsat the Gurney coffee shop.

• The Yankton Chamber ofCommerce today warned againstfraudulent and deceptive chain re-ferral sales schemes that employhigh-pressure tactics to saddle con-sumers with debts on overpricedmerchandise.

25 YEARS AGOMonday, September 11, 1989

• South Dakota used preventivemedicine to avoid the severe nurs-ing shortage that ha infected otherstates, said lawmakers, educatorsand health-care experts.

• The first in the fall series ofnoon forums at Mount Marty Col-lege, “Into Africa,” will be held at12:05 p.m. Tuesday in the Roncalisouth dining room.

T H E P R E S S & D A K O T A N W E A T H E R C E N T E R

PAGE 2: THE REGION PRESS & DAKOTAN n THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 2014

DA I LY R E C O R D

B OA R D O F T R A D E

eel Right. Fheating e makwe ,rierr,CarAt

thermostats. and controls products,

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NG & CO, SD • 665-9461 •

1700 Burleigh St. • Yankton, SD ( 605) 260-9284 • www.feccinc.com

A United Way & Volunteer Services Agency

F E C C

F amily E ducation and C ounseling C enter, Inc.

LOST? LOST? LOST? Call for an appointment (605) 260-9284

MORNING COFFE E

WEEKDAYS 7:40AM MONDAY

THRU FRIDAY

Yankton’s Home Team!

O N T H I S DAT E

WA L L S T. R E C A P

L OT T E R I E S

Town And Country Club To MeetThe public is invited to attend the Yankton Town and Coun-

try Club’s monthly meeting at 1:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12, at theCorps of Discovery Welcome Center, located 3 miles south ofthe Meridian Bridge.

The guest speaker is Marilyn Kratz, who will discuss her lat-est book, “Feed Sack Dresses and Wild Plum Jam.”

Everyone is welcome to stay for the light lunch prepared bythe club hosstesses.

More information, call Betts Pulkrabek at 605-463-2206.

‘Letters From The Attic’ To Be PresentedFREEMAN — The presentation “Letters from the Attic” will

be offered at the Heritage Hall Museum on the Freeman Acad-emy campus in Freeman at 7 p.m. Friday, Sept. 12. South DakotaHumanities Scholar Phyllis Schrag will present the program.

According to the South Dakota Humanities website: “Partici-pants will gain a perspective on the life and times of people whosettled in Dakota Territory. The presentation is based on 50 let-ters in German script addressed to Schrag’s great-grandfather,F.J. Meier. These letters had been carefully saved, never trans-lated and handed down through the generations, and detailfaith, personal experiences and the agrarian nature of Dakotasbetween 1878 and 1879.”

The hour-long PowerPoint presentation is a fascinating edu-cational opportunity. A shortened version will be presented atFreeman Academy Chapel Sept. 12.

For more information contact Stacey Walter, Heritage HallMuseum, Freeman, SD 57029. 1-800-595-9755; 605-925-7545, oremail [email protected] or [email protected]/.

Park Service Dedicates New TrailsVERMILLION — The recently constructed Mulberry Bend

Hiking Trail dedication will take place Saturday, Sept. 13. Theevent will begin at 1 p.m. at the Mulberry Bend Overlook, on theNebraska side of the Vermillion-Newcastle Bridge connectingSouth Dakota Highway 19 and Nebraska Highway 15. MNRR Su-perintendent Rick Clark and Biologist Lisa Yager will welcomevisitors with short presentations, followed by a ribbon-cuttingceremony.

Missouri National Recreational River — northeast Ne-braska’s and southeastern South Dakota’s local unit of the na-tional park system — invites everyone to this dedication, whichthen provides an opportunity to take a ranger-guided “walk inthe woods”. Hikers will experience unique flora and fauna, in-cluding 150-year old bur oak trees, and two vista points withsweeping views of the wild and scenic Missouri National Recre-ational River (MNRR).

“A great deal of hard work and collaboration has gone intothe completion of the Mulberry Bend Hiking Trail and we are ex-cited to announce that the trail is open for the public to enjoy.In honor of the trail dedication, we are pleased to offer severalguided hikes on Sept. 13,” Yager said.

Ranger-guided walks are scheduled for 1:30 p.m., 2:30 p.m.and 3:30 p.m. to introduce the public to the new trail systemand the natural resources and history of the Mulberry Bendarea.

The trail is considered moderately difficult due to steep in-clines and potential uneven footing. Sturdy shoes, such as hik-ing or athletic shoes, are recommended. The trail length,including both vista point spurs, is three-fourths of a mile.

The park’s unique Mobile Ranger Station, a visitor center onwheels, will be at the event from 1-4 p.m. with exhibits, activi-ties and ranger programs for all ages. Water will be provided.

NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocksbroke two days of losses on Wednes-day as a jump in Apple shares helpedpush indexes higher. Apple rose 3.1percent, its biggest gain since April,a day after announcing updated ver-sions of the iPhone, a new smart-watch and a mobile payment system.

ON WEDNESDAY:The Dow Jones industrial aver-

age rose 54.84 points, or 0.3 percent,to 17,068.71.

The Standard & Poorʼs 500 indexrose 7.25 points, or 0.4 percent, to1,995.69.

The Nasdaq composite gained34.24 points, or 0.8 percent, to4,586.52.

FOR THE WEEK:The Dow is down 68.65 points, or

0.4 percent.The S&P 500 is down 12.02

points, or 0.6 percent.The Nasdaq is up 3.62 points, or

0.1 percent.

FOR THE YEAR:The Dow is up 492.05 points, or

3 percent.The S&P 500 index is up 147.37

points, or 8 percent.The Nasdaq is up 409.93 points,

or 9.8 percent.

CHICAGO (AP) — Grain futureswere mostly higher Wednesday on theChicago Board of Trade.

Wheat for Dec delivery fell 7.75cents to $5.1975 a bushel; Dec cornwas 1.50 cents higher at 3.4575 abushel; Dec oats were 7.75 centshigher at $3.5675 a bushel; while Novsoybeans rose 1 cent to $9.9375 abushel.

Beef mixed and pork was higheron the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.

Oct live cattle rose .03 cent to$1.5970 a pound; Oct feeder cattlewas .63 cent lower at $2.2712 apound; while Oct lean hogs gained1.33 cents to $1.0710 a pound.

WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS2 BY 2: Red Balls: 6-12, White

Balls: 1-7MY DAY: Month: 7, Day: 17,

Year: 48PICK 3: 4-3-4PICK 5: 09-19-25-30-32DAKOTA CASH: 01-04-09-12-

21HOT LOTTO: 05-07-18-31-41

Hot Ball: 4POWERBALL: 02-14-39-40-43,

Powerball: 13, Power Play: 5WILD CARD: 03-04-17-20-33,

Wild Card: JH

Summit Center ToClose Aquatics

Area For CleaningThe Summit Activities

Center will be closing theaquatics area on Sunday,Sept. 14, for cleaning and rou-tine maintenance. The pool istentatively scheduled to re-open on Saturday, Sept. 20.

Water aerobics classeswill resume Monday, Sept. 22,at 8:30 a.m.

For further information,call 668-5234 or stop by theSummit Activities Center at1801 Summit Street, Yankton.

The Fall Theology Institute at Sacred HeartMonastery is the second of a series on funda-mentalism, focusing on Biblical interpretation.“How Do Catholics Read the Bible?” will be pre-sented by S. Marielle Frigge, OSB, on Saturday,Sept. 20, from 9 a.m.-noon in the Chapter Roomof Sacred Heart Monastery.

S. Marielle’s presentation follows the previ-ous Theology Institute on religious fundamen-talism, focusing on biblical fundamentalism andCatholic interpretation of scripture. She will ex-plore several Catholic teaching documents onBiblical interpretation, including significantshifts in approaches to understanding the Biblein the past 125 years, and how these changingviews can affect theology and practice. As anexample, she will discuss why Catholics can be-lieve in both the Bible’s account of the creationof humankind and scientific views of evolutionof the human species. There will be an opportu-nity for questions and discussion.

After 33 years of teaching Scripture and the-ology at Mount Marty College, S. Marielle now

arranges and occasionally presents various op-portunities for continuing education and spiri-tual formation for the Sacred Heart Monasterycommunity, other religious communities andvarious church, parish, and ecumenical groups.S. Marielle is the author of Beginning BiblicalStudies, now in second edition (2013), andwrites biblical commentaries for Liturgy Train-ing Publications, Chicago.

The event is open to the public free ofcharge. However, for planning purposes, partici-pants are asked to register by Wednesday, Sept.17, by calling 605-668-6000 or e-mailing S.Marielle Frigge at [email protected] . Furtherinformation about the presenter is available onthe Sacred Heart Monastery Web site,http://tinyurl.com/l353en5

The Benedictine Sisters’ Theology Instituteprovides bi-annual half-day offerings for the on-going theological and spiritual formation of theSisters of Sacred Heart Monastery. The ecu-menical public is also invited to attend theseprograms free of charge.

Fall Theology Institute Set For Sept. 20