Wednesday, January 28, 2026
Home Blog Page 4528

Pratt Wrestling Fourth in Region, Seven Headed to Nationals

0

Pratt Community College

The Pratt Community College wrestling team competed at the Region VI Championships this weekend in Colby, Kan.  The team placed fourth behind #2 NEO A&M, #7 Labette & #12 Neosho and placed above #20 Northwest Tech & #23 Colby.  (Full match results)

Seven wrestlers claimed a birth to the NJCAA National Tournament which will be held in Des Moines, Iowa Feb. 27-28.  Of those seven, Austin Hughey is a returning national qualifier at 157 lbs. while Zachary Schridde (133lbs.), Andrew Beck (141 lbs.), Daniel Melcher (149 lbs.), Dylan Beckner (165 lbs.), Travis Quarterman (174 lbs.) and Micah Felton (184 lbs.) each earned their first shot at becoming an All-American.

These seven wrestlers also set a new standard by breaking the previous school record of six wrestlers to qualify for the NJCAA National Tournament out of the 10 weight classes.

Pratt Livestock sees benefit to hiring college students

0
pratt cc

credit – Pratt Community College

After attending Pratt Community College and starting their careers while they were in college, both David McComb and Jake Lewis find it important to hire college students at the sale barn.

Each year Pratt Livestock employs about five college students.

“The majority of the time the students are hard workers and it works out well for us,” Lewis, assistant manager at Pratt Livestock said.

After graduating from PCC, both Lewis and McComb went on to KSU to receive degrees and came back to work at Pratt Livestock.

Many of the fulltime employees at Pratt Livestock have degrees from PCC. He said many of them have been faithful employees and have more than 15 years’ of experience.

One employee who is newer to the team is Tyler Beat, a freshman from Kingman.

While at work Beat does a little bit of everything including opening gates, pushing and sorting cattle, loading cattle onto semis and trailers and calls out pen numbers if the main person isn’t there to do it.

“I really like working there,” Beat said. “My family has a cattle business so it’s an easy and fun job for me.”

Since working at the sale barn, Beat said he has learned a lot about the business side of cattle.

“On the farm I see the side where we are feeding and taking care of the animals,” he said. “At the sale barn I see the market prices and what they are going for.”

Beat is hoping to be able to work there this summer and next school year as well.

The best parts of the job are the people has met while working out there, the flexible work schedule and having to reason to leave campus every now and then. Beat said he is also happy to know that he will have a professional reference when he finishes at PCC.

“Tyler handles the job well and is mature and responsible for his age,” said McComb, the yard foreman. “It is good for college students to have jobs. A lot of them don’t and when they get out of college they don’t know how to work.”

Beat is majoring in Farm and Ranch Management and is on the rodeo team, where he is a team roper and bulldogger.

The Spongebob movie showing at Kingman Historic Theatre

0

Kingman Historic Theatre

Showing this weekend at the Kingman Historic Theatre is The Spongebob movie. On Fri(Feb 20) at 7:30P.M. On Sat (Feb 21) at 7:30P.M. and Sun (Feb 22) at 5:00! This movie is rated PG and stars Tom Kenny, Antonio Banderas and Bill Fagerbakke!

Seven simple steps to heart health

0
Jasleen Kaur

February is National Heart Month. Take some time to assess your heart health and then make the needed changes to decrease your risk for cardiovascular disease.

The American Heart Association has an online tool called My Life Check® to help you assess your health. The survey asks questions about seven areas of your health. The results tell you where you are excelling and how you can make improvements.

“We can all make some changes in our health habits that will not only make us feel better, they will decrease our risk for heart attack,” said Tammy Roberts, nutrition and health education specialist with University of Missouri Extension.

The American Heart Association also developed Life’s Simple 7 which are steps you can take to improve heart health and live better. They include:

  1. Get active
  2. Control cholesterol
  3. Eat better
  4. Manage blood pressure
  5. Lose weight
  6. Reduce blood sugar
  7. Stop smoking

For more in-depth tips on how you can improve your health in these 7 areas, plus information on the warnings signs of heart attack and stroke, see the full version of this article at http://missourifamilies.org/features/healtharticles/health99.htm

Tips for 2015 tax filing season

0
Photo courtesy of Getty Images

Adapted from MU Office for Financial Success Tip of the Week blog post by Andrew Zumwalt, Assistant Extension Professor & Associate State Specialist, Personal Financial Planning, University of Missouri Extension

We would typically discuss changes to the tax code, but 2014 is very similar to 2013 with the slight addition of the Affordable Care Act. With no major changes to cover, here are some old tips and new tips for the current tax season.

The tips cover the following topics:

  • Affordable Care Act Quick Summary
  • Use a Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) site or Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE) site
  • File a tax return even if you are not required to
  • Collect your tax documents in one place
  • Never spend your refund before it arrives
  • If choosing Direct Deposit, triple check your routing and account number
  • Your public pension may not be taxed in MO

Don’t miss out on the important information provided on these topics — see the full version of this article at http://missourifamilies.org/features/financearticles/cfe87.htm