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POST-BULLETIN • www.PostBulletin.com THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 A3
Local news
By Kay Fate
Its a remarkably clear
and riveting — 90 seconds of
video.
In it, Officer Jeffery Stobbs
and Sgt. Brad Anderson can be
seen first talking to the man,
then approaching him quickly
and pulling him to the ground.
All in a day’s work for Roch-
ester Police officers, typically,
but this particular exchange
occurred at 2 a.m. on a snowy,
frigid night at the edge of the
top floor of a parking ramp.
The man was threatening
suicide.
What the viewer doesn’t see
is the hour that came before, as
Stobbs and Anderson negoti-
ated with the man, who was
often hanging over the edge of
the railing. With the negotia-
tions making little progress,
Stobbs offered a cigarette to
the man to distract him. As
the man struggled to light the
cigarette, the officers moved
in, grabbed him and pulled
him to safety.
For their actions that night
last winter, Stobbs and Ander-
son on Wednesday received
the departments Lifesaving
Award.
The semiannual ceremony
honors employees and citizens
who have gone above and
beyond in their efforts to keep
the community safe.
After showing the video of
the rooftop rescue captured
by a security camera atop the
structure — Chief Roger Peter-
son made the presentation, two
of 10 Lifesaving Awards given
during the program.
“It’s one of the best things
you can do during your day,
he said.
Also featured during the
event was another video, this
one from a squad car. It was
recorded the night of Jan. 14
when a fire broke out in an
eight-unit apartment complex
at 2040 8 1/2 St. S.E.
The flames on the dashboard
camera are visible as the of-
ficer pulls into the parking lot,
but the heart of the video is
the audio, which catches the
rescue efforts of officers Aaron
Penning and Shamus Ryan. To-
gether, they were able to save a
woman and five children from
the building.
“That’s what it sounds like
to be running toward a fire
when everyone else is running
away,” Peterson said.
Officer Josh Thompson re-
ceived the departments Letter
of Recognition, presented for
his “persistence, initiative and
attention to detail” that led to
the removal of four handguns
from Rochester streets in a
six-month period. Each of the
weapons was in the hands of
convicted felons, Peterson said.
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OPEN A MACY’S ACCOUNT FOR EXTRA 20% SAVINGS THE FIRST 2 DAYS, UP TO $100, WITH MORE REWARDS TO COME.
Macy’s credit card is available subjec
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to credit approval; new account savings valid the day your account is opened and the next day; excludes services, selected licensed departments, gift cards, restaurants,
gourmet food & wine. The new account savings are limited to a total of $100; application must qualify for immediate approval to receive extra savings; employees not eligible.
Excludes: Everyday Values (EDV), specials, super buys, furniture, mattresses,
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for him, her & kids,
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Fine jewelry specials are only available at stores that carry fine jewelry.
³REG. & ORIG. PRICES ARE OFFERING PRICES AND SAVINGS MAY NOT BE BASED ON ACTUAL SALES. SOME ORIG. PRICES NOT IN EFFECT DURING THE PAST 90 DAYS. ONE DAY SALE PRICES IN
EFFECT 5/10 & 5/11/13. *Intermediate price reductions may have been taken. **May contain rose-cut diamonds. ‡All carat weights (ct. t.w.) are approximate; variance may be .05 carat. Jewelry photos may be
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com/gemstones or ask your sales professional. Extra savings taken off of already-reduced prices; special” prices reflect extra savings. Specials are available while supplies last. Advertised merchandise ma
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Elizabeth Nida Obert / [email protected]
Rochester Police Chief Roger Peterson, right, presents a Police
Lifesaving Award to Sgt. Brad Anderson, left, and Ocer Jeery
Stobbs, center, on Wednesday at the Rochester Police Department
Awards Ceremony.
Winners
Citizen Lifesaving Award:
Sherry Thornburg
Bob Nelson
Department Letter of Recognition:
Officer Josh Thompson
Department Lifesaving Award:
Officer Joe Mayerle
Officer Jeffery Stobbs
Sgt. Brad Anderson
Officer Travis Riggott (8th award)
Officer Aaron Penning
Officer Shamus Ryan
Officer Paul Gronholz (2nd award)
Sgt. Steve Thompson (4th award)
Department Commendation Award:
Sgt. Frank Ohm (2nd commendation)
Sgt. Matt Krambeck (2nd commendation)
Officer Lynne Lowney
Allison Stone
Officer Joel Blahnik (4th commendation)
Officer Josh Laber
Officer Tracy Nepper
Officer Bert Otto
Officer Mark Peterson
Sgt. Paul Wilson
Officer Anthony Heaser (member of Owatonna
Police Dept.)
Chad Blanchette (2nd commendation)
Jared Pankratz (2nd commendation)
Sarah Clayton
Tonya Klees
Officer Greg Jeardeau
Officer Carrie Koehler
Officer Greg Marx
Capt. John Sherwin (3rd commendation)
Local lifesavers receive recognition
By Matthew Stolle
When Carl Zander thinks
about his years at then-Kel-
logg Junior High, the retired
teacher recalls a kind of
Golden Age.
“We had just such a beauti-
ful location,” said Zander, 85,
who started working there
when the school opened in
1962. “We had an excellent
staff.”
Such memories, multiplied
by hundreds of retired and
current school employees
and students, are fueling a
celebration of the Roches-
ter middle school, which is
marking its 50th anniversary.
The festivities begin May 17
with a private reunion staff
dinner from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m.
The public portion of the
party begins at 6:30 p.m. A
band will be playing in the
front patio, and a museum of
all things Kellogg will be on
display inside.
“It started out as cake and
punch, and it’s turned into
this monster celebration,”
said Kellogg science teacher
Bruce Rodgers, who estimates
that 100 retired Kellogg teach-
ers plan to attend the bash.
“It’s really quite remarkable
— the excitement and enthu-
siasm that’s being generated
about this thing.”
Construction of the school
started in 1961, and it opened
in 1962 — a year in which
John F. Kennedy was presi-
dent, John Glenn became the
first American to orbit the
earth, and Elvis Presley’s
“Can’t Help Falling in Love”
was a No. 1 song.
Kellogg was built in what
was considered the boonies,
as Rochester was consider-
ably smaller then. None of
the subdivisions that now
surround the school were
there. It was the first school
built as a junior high in
Rochester, and it was sign
of impending growth, as the
opening of IBM in the late
1950s foreshadowed a popula-
tion boom.
Rodgers said what has
made Kellogg special is the
people. Many teachers, once
they arrived at Kellogg, never
left. Those who did move on
became leaders in the district
and the city.
“If you look at our prin-
cipals and assistant princi-
pals, they have all gone on
to do even bigger and better
things,” Rodgers said.
The school’s architecture
also was distinctive. Unlike
many of the square school
buildings that predominated
then, Kellogg had a long,
narrow design. You could get
from one end of the build-
ing to the other quickly. And
when you stick your head out
the door, you see both ends
of the building and every
student in the hallway.
“It’s got a real homey feel,”
Rodgers said.
Not that the school didn’t
have its warts, Zander said.
District leaders cut corners
to save money when the
school was built. They put
in two gyms but provided no
seating — just bare walls. The
swimming pool was small.
And the stage, built next in
the lunchroom, was so small
“you could put two cows and
a horse there, and that was
about it.”
But those things only made
the school more enduring.
Zander says he still meets
once per week with about 10
to 15 retired Kellogg employ-
ees and teachers at Arby’s in
northwest Rochester.
“We chew the fat and just
have a ball,” he said. “Those
years were just fun.”
Kellogg celebrates its 50th anniversary
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POST-BULLETIN • www.PostBulletin.com THURSDAY, MAY 9, 2013 A3Local newsBy Kay [email protected]’s a remarkably clear — and riv

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