Thursday,  Dec. 26, 2013 • Vol. 16--No. 163 • 17 of 28

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the two teams that finished ahead of them to win the conference tournament.
• From there they conquered the regional tournament, earning them a berth in the Elite Eight in San Antonio. The Vikings scored a huge upset in their first game there, knocking off undefeated and No. 1 Clayton State to advance to the Final Four.
• The dream ended in the next round with a loss to Dowling College, but with a school-record 27 wins and a pair of banners to hang, it was the most successful season in the history of an already successful program.

SD lawmakers press farm bill, help for ranchers
HENRY C. JACKSON, Associated Press

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- Negotiating and implementing Congress' multibillion-dollar farm bill so that it helps South Dakota, including ranchers who suffered heavy losses during October's blizzard, will be the first order of business in 2014, the state's congressional members say.
• The House and Senate has each approved a version of the five-year, roughly $500 billion bill, but there are major differences between the two regarding crop subsidies and how much to cut food stamp programs. A new farm bill also would restore emergency protections for livestock producers, a key element for the state.
• Lawmakers hope to work out a compromise by early next year, which would mark the first a farm bill has been approved since a 2008 deal. That deal expired in 2012 but was extended until September 2013.
• "The immediate priority for 2014 is to get it passed," Republican Sen. John Thune said. "But part of passing it, and with any major bill, is implementing it. We want to make sure it works, the commodity title, the safety net reforms and everything we're fighting to get in it."
• The emergency protections for livestock producers would potentially bring relief to South Dakota ranchers who lost between 15,000 and 30,000 cattle when an early-season blizzard swept through part of the state in October.
• "Disaster assistance will help a lot," Thune said. "There's been a lot of suffering in the state."
• South Dakota also has a stake in negotiations between the House and Senate over a water projects bill. Republican Rep. Kristi Noem said she wants the legislation to include a provision that would stop the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from charging some South Dakota residents to use water from the Missouri River.
• If that language isn't included in the legislation, which negotiators hope to finalize by early next year, the corps "could essentially start taxing people for their own wa

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