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Hot shooting Lady Cougars win easily over Colby

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The Barton Community College women’s basketball team scored the first seven points and never looked back Wednesday night at the Barton Gym rolling to a 78-51 victory over Colby Community College.  Shooting over 50% for the first time since November, Barton led by fourteen at the break and scored forty-four second half points to snap a two game losing streak.  Solidifying its hold on fourth place in the Jayhawk West, Barton improves to 7-7 and 17-9 while dropping Colby to 4-11 and 11-18.   The Lady Cougars have two games remaining in the regular season with a two-game lead on fifth place Pratt Community College who stands next on the schedule.  Barton and the Lady Beavers will square off in a 6:00 p.m. Saturday contest at Pratt’s Dennis Lesh Sports Arena.

Indiah Cauley led four Lady Cougars in double digit scoring with fifteen points while tying for the team lead in rebounds with seven and dished out five assists.  Ciera Lampe, who knocked down 3-of-3 from behind the arc in the first half, finished with thirteen while fellow Dodge City native Katrina Roenfeldt was 3-of-6 behind the arc scoring twelve.  The Lady Cougars’ leading scorer, Phikala Anthony, finished with ten points on 5-of-8 shooting from the floor.  Roenfeldt’s seven boards shared team rebound honors with Cauley while Dominique Baker‘s six dimes led a sixteen assist on thirty field goal effort by the Lady Cougars.

Jada Grady led a balanced Colby team in scoring with ten points as five players scored eight or more points.  Amanda Miller led in rebounding with seven while Deja Cato led in assists with three.

Sedgwick Industrial Park makes room for new company

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A new company, Wilbur-Ellis, has begun construction in the Sedgwick Industrial Park. Wilbur-Ellis is “a leading international marketer and distributor of agricultural products, animal feed and specialty chemicals and ingredients,” according to its website

 photo credit – Heather Durinin

City Council will have empty spot in Bentley

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Screen Shot 2015-02-19 at 6.14.13 PMWith three spots open on the Bentley City Council, only two candidates are running. Bentley typically has five Council members in addition to the mayor.

Stay on Track with Your Wellness Goals

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(Family Features) With dreams of bettering their lives, people of all ages pledge to create resolutions with the start of every year. Many people discover, however, that it’s easy to make a resolution but difficult to stick to it.

 

With these helpful tips from Sunsweet and Dawn Jackson Blatner, registered dietitian, certified specialist in sports dietetics and licensed dietitian nutritionist, it’s easy to get back on a healthy living track:

health

  1. Get Back on Track

Falling off the wagon can be discouraging, but don’t let your mind get in the way of your might. Track your daily meals and snacks to help you stay focused on what and how much you are eating. Writing in a food journal is a great way to look back over your week to see what you did well and could do better next week.

  1. Pack Your Lunch

Being in control of what you eat throughout the day is powerful in staying on track with your resolutions. Why hit the greasy food truck outside when you can whip up a fresh salad at home? Sunsweet’s Quinoa, Grape and Prune Salad is an easy, protein-packed lunch that will power you through the day.

 

  1. Choose Right at Snack Time

The 3 p.m. slump is almost unavoidable. You’re three hours past lunch and it’s too soon for dinner. Instead of reaching for an unsatisfying bag of pretzels or chips, bring Sunsweet Ones Individually Wrapped Prunes or nuts from home to curb the afternoon hunger. Ones are lower in sugar than other dried fruit and have a low glycemic index of only 29. Prunes are digested and absorbed slowly by the body, which helps to sustain energy over a longer period of time compared to foods with a higher glycemic index.

 

  1. Get Moving

Everyone has a lot on their plate and with a busy schedule comes loads of stress and anxiety, but much of that can be alleviated with exercise. If you think about it, 30-40 minutes of exercise a day is only 2 percent of your day. Small changes, like walks around the block or using an app to count steps is a great way to track your movement throughout the day.

 

  1. Make it Fun

Instead of making drastic resolutions early in the year, and inevitably falling off the wagon a month or two later, embrace a Healthy Living Lifestyle. The key to lasting, lifelong health is to make changes you enjoy. Make eating well and exercising fun and it won’t be hard to stick with.

 

Staying on track takes will power and determination, but by squeezing a few easy hacks into your day you’ll be on your way to reaching your wellness goals.

Light goose conservation order extends hunting season

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Goose hunters pursuing snow, Ross’ geese may hunt through April 30

PRATT — For some waterfowl hunters, seasons seem to come and go all too fast. It may feel like hunters and their canine companions have just warmed up when the regular seasons close. However, hunters looking to enjoy a few more weeks afield hunting geese can participate in the Light Goose Conservation Order from Feb. 16-April 30, 2015. During this special season set by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, hunters may take an unlimited amount of snow and Ross’ geese.

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service established this special season in 1999 in an effort to increase the harvest of light geese, a population that has increased more than 300 percent since the mid-1970s. These historic numbers of geese have denuded portions of their fragile tundra breeding habitat in the arctic, which may take decades to recover. This impacts other bird species that nest there, including semi-palmated sandpipers and red-necked phalaropes.

To increase hunter success, the conservation order authorizes hunting methods not allowed during the regular seasons, including the use of electronic calls and unplugged shotguns. Shooting hours are one-half hour before sunrise to one-half hour after sunset.

For more information on this season, visit www.ksoutdoors.com and click on “Hunting/When to Hunt/Migratory Birds.”

Source: Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism