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BY RENÉE JEAN WILLISTON HERALD WILLISTON — An alarm has been sounding for small credit unions, and it appears that alarm was heard Wednesday afternoon in Bismarck at a roundtable discussion put together by Senator Heidi Heitkamp with Debbie Matz, chair- man of the National Credit Union Administration. After hearing feedback from credit unions in the Dakotas, the NCUA has announced it will pull back on some of the limits that were hampering the sur- vival of smaller financial institutions. Among the voices heard during the roundtable session was one from Wil- liston. Melanie Stillwell, President/CEO of West- ern Area Credit Union, was among the panelists discussing problems fac- ing credit unions in North Dakota. "One of the issues that came up a fair amount of time were mortgage lend- ing regulations," Stillwell said. The additional require- ments and regulations came about in the wake of problems in the nation's housing industry. "There were many things wrong with the mortgage side of it, and the housing, and a lot of regulations came down because of it," Stillwell said. "We weren't really the problem in the first place, but now we have all these regulations." They have been an extra burden on the consumers, and often present one more obstacle in a market where affordable housing is so dif- ficult to obtain. "It's something that was put in place to protect the consumer, but many times it's not helping them," Stil- well said. "And it's costly, so it pushes prices up for us and for that consumer." Not only that, but it has meant many missed oppor- FRIDAY April 10, 2015 116th Year Number 198 Williston, ND www.willistonherald.com 50 Cents Faith United Methodist Church Rummage Sale 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m., Saturday, April 11 219 1st Ave W Hot Dogs & Caramel Rolls served in the Fireside room. | Proceeds benefit the United Methodist Women’s Mission Projects Down and out UND’s Frozen Four appearance was brief, falling to Boston on Thursday night. Page B1 Deaths Outside Index High: 66 Low: 39 High Saturday: 75 Page A5 Mary Ternquist Tucker Owen Harris Page A2 Classifieds B3-B7 Opinion A4 Comics A6 Data A5 Sports B1 Religion/Life A8 ND rig count 93 Source: North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources. ‘Where there is no vision, the people perish’ Williston Herald Sakakawea Levels Today 1839.3 Last Year 1832.3 Discharges Estimated Today 23,000 Yesterday 23,100 BY RENÉE JEAN WILLISTON HERALD WILLISTON — There will be two hearings to get public input on a rate increase requested by Montana Dakota Utilities for natural gas service. The sessions are being held across the state. The Williston-area sessions will be 7 p.m. Monday and noon Tuesday at Williston State College in Stevens Hall, Room 120. Officials from MDU will provide a presentation and give those attending a chance to ask ques- tions about the rate increase. The public will be able to listen to the presentation via webcast and submit questions by email, and an MDU repre- sentative will be present at each site to facilitate questions from the audiences. These hearings are not part of the formal tech- nical hearing, but PSC officials will be attending and may use information expressed during the session to identify public areas of concern that warrant further investigation during the formal hearing on July 20. The utility's proposed increase is $4.3 million annually over current rates, a 3.4 percent in- crease overall, which the company says is neces- sary to recover the costs of increased investment in natural gas facilities of $212 million by the end of this year. The requested increase will be added to the distribution charge, which is about 29 percent of a customer's bill. The remaining 71 percent is for the cost of gas, which changes monthly based on market conditions. The company doesn't earn a return on that portion of the bill, and it is not part of the rate case. The PSC had approved a request from the company for an interim increase of 3.4 percent, or $4.3 million over current rates. For the average customer, that's about $2.40 a month. Montana-Dakota Utilities serves about 105,000 natural gas customers in 74 North Dakota com- munities. They have also filed for rate increases in Wyo- ming last year, where they serve 17,900 natural gas customers in 10 counties, and Montana, where they serve 80,760 natural gas customers in 36 counties. The Montana rate increase was for $3 million annually over current rates, a 3.6 percent overall increase. An interim increase went into effect there for services rendered on or after Feb. 6 of this year. [email protected] MDU seeks input on increase Courtesy photo Melanie Stillwell, far left, was a member of a roundtable discussion with Debbie Matz, chairman of the National Credit Union Administration. The discussion was organized by Sen. Heidi Heitkamp to discuss issues that have been bearing down on credit unions and forcing many to close their doors. Williston’s Stillwell sits on panel SEE CREDIT UNIONS, PAGE A2 Joins Sen. Heitkamp about credit unions’ worries BY DAVE KOLPACK ASSOCIATED PRESS FARGO (AP) — A six- decade tradition of Friday night dances is staying alive at a Red River Valley farmstead after new owners decided to keep running the honky-tonk at Johnson's Barn. Julie and Delon Cahoon initially had no such plans for the Johnson farm, about 35 miles northwest of Fargo. "When we bought the property, we weren't plan- ning on doing dances. We were looking for someplace to keep our cows," Julie Ca- hoon said. "We looked at the barn as a big place for stor- age. We never even thought about it." The Cahoons were per- suaded after attending the last three dances before the property changed hands. They saw people who came from 250 miles east and west, including a group that rode a bus from St. Cloud, Minnesota. They saw happy, well-behaved dancers, most of whom are between 17 and 25 years old, dressed to the country nines. And they saw 400 people line-dance to canned music when the band was on break. "Have you ever seen these kids dance?" Julie Cahoon asked. "They're so good. They're out there jitterbug- ging and flipping people over their heads. It's so cool." The venue near the town of Arthur was christened in 1952, Delon Cahoon said, when owner Herb Johnson was asked to sponsor a dance as a fundraiser for the local volunteer fire depart- ment. It cost less than a buck to get in, and wound up raising $850. So he decided to try it again. Before long, Herb Johnson's barn on Friday nights was the place to be. Nowadays, it's a $10 entry fee. And the name going forward will be Arthur's Barn. The first dance under new ownership, on Friday night, features a band called Jacked Up — which Delon Cahoon said will fit the Couple to carry on with 63-year-old barn dance Dave Kolpack/Associated Press Delon and Julie Cahoon show off a Wurlitzer juke box inside her busi- ness, Julie's Radio Ranch, in Fargo. The Cahoons recently purchased a farmstead near Arthur, where they plan to continue a 63-year-old tradi- tion of barn dances. The couple will host their first dance today. SEE BARN DANCE, PAGE A2 BY AMY DALRYMPLE FORUM NEWS SERVICE WILLISTON — Mayhem at the Williston Walmart that began with the alleged theft of a $13 pair of shoes landed a man in jail facing a dozen charges, including the assaults of three police officers. Willis- ton police received a report last Friday morning of an unruly male after Walmart employees saw a man ripping the tags from a pair of shoes and walk past the cashiers without paying for them. The man, later identified as William Dean Jessop of Williston, is accused in court records of striking a female Walmart employee in the face with the shoes after she ap- proached him about the theft. Court records say: Officers approached Jessop in the Subway restaurant within Walmart and he be- came combative, head butt- ing one of the police officers and breaking his glasses. After police used a Taser on Jessop, he continued to fight with officers and kicked the first one in the face and struck a second officer in the face. Jessop then ran through the produce aisle, throwing a bag of oranges at an officer, knocking down a small child and knocking a tray of bread products into an officer’s path. After the officers had Jessop in custody, Jessop at- tempted to head butt a third officer and repeatedly said the officer was “going to die.” The drama did not end after Jessop was in custody. Later the same day, the Wil- liams County Sheriff’s Office received a report of home burglary and a stolen pickup. Investigators tied Jessop to the stolen vehicle – which was found in the fire lane of Walmart – through video surveillance and a set of keys he discarded during the struggle, court records say. Jessop is charged with three counts of simple as- sault of a peace officer, class C felonies, as well as class A felony theft of property, class C felony burglary, class C felony criminal attempt, class C felony preventing arrest and several misde- meanor offenses. When interviewed by officers, Jessop said he had been smoking meth all week. Among the misdemeanor charges were theft and posses- sion of drug paraphernalia. Walmart shoe theft spirals into fight with officers Jessop

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Page 1: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

BY RENÉE JEANWILLISTON HERALD

WILLISTON — An alarm has been sounding for small credit unions, and it appears that alarm was heard Wednesday afternoon in Bismarck at a roundtable discussion put together by Senator Heidi Heitkamp with Debbie Matz, chair-man of the National Credit Union Administration.

After hearing feedback from credit unions in the Dakotas, the NCUA has

announced it will pull back on some of the limits that were hampering the sur-vival of smaller financial institutions.

Among the voices heard during the roundtable session was one from Wil-liston. Melanie Stillwell, President/CEO of West-ern Area Credit Union, was among the panelists discussing problems fac-ing credit unions in North Dakota.

"One of the issues that came up a fair amount of

time were mortgage lend-ing regulations," Stillwell said.

The additional require-ments and regulations came about in the wake of problems in the nation's housing industry.

"There were many things wrong with the mortgage side of it, and the housing, and a lot of regulations came down because of it," Stillwell said. "We weren't really the problem in the first place, but now we have all these regulations."

They have been an extra burden on the consumers, and often present one more obstacle in a market where affordable housing is so dif-ficult to obtain.

"It's something that was put in place to protect the consumer, but many times it's not helping them," Stil-well said. "And it's costly, so it pushes prices up for us and for that consumer."

Not only that, but it has meant many missed oppor-

FRIDAYApril 10, 2015

116th Year

Number 198

Williston, ND

www.willistonherald.com

50 Cents

Faith United Methodist ChurchRummage Sale

9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m., Saturday, April 11 219 1st Ave WHot Dogs & Caramel Rolls served in the Fireside room. | Proceeds benefit the United Methodist Women’s Mission Projects

Down and out

UND’s Frozen Four appearance was brief, falling to Boston on Thursday night.

Page B1

• Deaths

• Outside

• Index

High: 66Low: 39High Saturday: 75

Page A5

Mary TernquistTucker Owen Harris

Page A2

Classifieds B3-B7Opinion A4Comics A6Data A5Sports B1Religion/Life A8

• ND rig count

93

Source: North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources.

‘Where there is no vision, the people perish’

Williston Herald

• Sakakawea

LevelsToday 1839.3Last Year 1832.3

DischargesEstimated Today 23,000Yesterday 23,100

BY RENÉE JEANWILLISTON HERALD

WILLISTON — There will be two hearings to get public input on a rate increase requested by Montana Dakota Utilities for natural gas service.

The sessions are being held across the state. The Williston-area sessions will be 7 p.m. Monday and noon Tuesday at Williston State College in Stevens Hall, Room 120.

Officials from MDU will provide a presentation and give those attending a chance to ask ques-tions about the rate increase. The public will be able to listen to the presentation via webcast and submit questions by email, and an MDU repre-sentative will be present at each site to facilitate questions from the audiences.

These hearings are not part of the formal tech-nical hearing, but PSC officials will be attending

and may use information expressed during the session to identify public areas of concern that warrant further investigation during the formal hearing on July 20.

The utility's proposed increase is $4.3 million annually over current rates, a 3.4 percent in-crease overall, which the company says is neces-sary to recover the costs of increased investment in natural gas facilities of $212 million by the end of this year.

The requested increase will be added to the distribution charge, which is about 29 percent of a customer's bill. The remaining 71 percent is for the cost of gas, which changes monthly based on market conditions. The company doesn't earn a return on that portion of the bill, and it is not part of the rate case.

The PSC had approved a request from the

company for an interim increase of 3.4 percent, or $4.3 million over current rates. For the average customer, that's about $2.40 a month.

Montana-Dakota Utilities serves about 105,000 natural gas customers in 74 North Dakota com-munities.

They have also filed for rate increases in Wyo-ming last year, where they serve 17,900 natural gas customers in 10 counties, and Montana, where they serve 80,760 natural gas customers in 36 counties.

The Montana rate increase was for $3 million annually over current rates, a 3.6 percent overall increase. An interim increase went into effect there for services rendered on or after Feb. 6 of this year.

[email protected]

MDU seeks input on increase

Courtesy photo

Melanie Stillwell, far left, was a member of a roundtable discussion with Debbie Matz, chairman of the National Credit Union Administration. The discussion was organized by Sen. Heidi Heitkamp to discuss issues that have been bearing down on credit unions and forcing many to close their doors.

Williston’s Stillwell sits on panel

SEE CREDIT UNIONS, PAGE A2

Joins Sen. Heitkamp about credit unions’ worries

BY DAVE KOLPACKASSOCIATED PRESS

FARGO (AP) — A six-decade tradition of Friday night dances is staying alive at a Red River Valley farmstead after new owners decided to keep running the honky-tonk at Johnson's Barn.

Julie and Delon Cahoon initially had no such plans for the Johnson farm, about 35 miles northwest of Fargo.

"When we bought the property, we weren't plan-ning on doing dances. We were looking for someplace to keep our cows," Julie Ca-hoon said. "We looked at the barn as a big place for stor-age. We never even thought about it."

The Cahoons were per-suaded after attending the last three dances before the property changed hands. They saw people who came from 250 miles east and west, including a group that rode a bus from St. Cloud, Minnesota. They saw happy, well-behaved dancers, most of whom are between 17 and 25 years old, dressed to

the country nines. And they saw 400 people line-dance to canned music when the band was on break.

"Have you ever seen these kids dance?" Julie Cahoon asked. "They're so good. They're out there jitterbug-ging and flipping people over their heads. It's so cool."

The venue near the town of Arthur was christened in 1952, Delon Cahoon said, when owner Herb Johnson was asked to sponsor a dance as a fundraiser for the local volunteer fire depart-ment. It cost less than a buck to get in, and wound up raising $850.

So he decided to try it again. Before long, Herb Johnson's barn on Friday nights was the place to be.

Nowadays, it's a $10 entry fee. And the name going forward will be Arthur's Barn. The first dance under new ownership, on Friday night, features a band called Jacked Up — which Delon Cahoon said will fit the

Couple to carry on with 63-year-old barn dance

Dave Kolpack/Associated Press

Delon and Julie Cahoon show off a Wurlitzer juke box inside her busi-ness, Julie's Radio Ranch, in Fargo. The Cahoons recently purchased a farmstead near Arthur, where they plan to continue a 63-year-old tradi-tion of barn dances. The couple will host their first dance today.SEE BARN DANCE, PAGE A2

BY AMY DALRYMPLEFORUM NEWS SERVICE

WILLISTON — Mayhem at the Williston Walmart that began with the alleged theft of a $13 pair of shoes landed a man in jail facing a dozen charges, including the assaults of three police officers.

Willis-ton police received a report last Friday morning of an unruly male after Walmart employees saw a man ripping the tags from a pair of shoes and walk past the cashiers without paying for them.

The man, later identified as William Dean Jessop of Williston, is accused in court records of striking a female Walmart employee in the face with the shoes after she ap-proached him about the theft.

Court records say:Officers approached Jessop

in the Subway restaurant within Walmart and he be-came combative, head butt-ing one of the police officers and breaking his glasses.

After police used a Taser on Jessop, he continued to fight with officers and kicked the first one in the face and struck a second officer in the face. Jessop then ran through the produce aisle, throwing a bag of oranges at an officer, knocking down a small child and knocking a tray of bread products into an officer’s path.

After the officers had Jessop in custody, Jessop at-tempted to head butt a third officer and repeatedly said the officer was “going to die.”

The drama did not end after Jessop was in custody.

Later the same day, the Wil-liams County Sheriff’s Office received a report of home burglary and a stolen pickup.

Investigators tied Jessop to the stolen vehicle – which was found in the fire lane of Walmart – through video surveillance and a set of keys he discarded during the struggle, court records say.

Jessop is charged with three counts of simple as-sault of a peace officer, class C felonies, as well as class A felony theft of property, class C felony burglary, class C felony criminal attempt, class C felony preventing arrest and several misde-meanor offenses.

When interviewed by officers, Jessop said he had been smoking meth all week. Among the misdemeanor charges were theft and posses-sion of drug paraphernalia.

Walmart shoe theft spirals into fight with officers

Jessop

Page 2: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

mood of the dancers."These kids, they come

out there to dance," he said. "They come through that door and they hit the dance floor. There's no standing around, watching and waiting until the last hour of the night. You can feel the electricity in the air. It's just unbelievable."

The Cahoons, who have

been married for 15 years, are moving from rural Cas-selton. Julie Cahoon owns Julie's Radio Ranch in Fargo, where she repairs car stereo systems. Delon Cahoon supervises a steel crew for a construction company during the day and at night watches over his hobby farm of 15 cows and three horses — which will be housed in a sepa-rate, smaller barn.

Their second and last dance before the usual summer break is April 24. The official grand open-ing is set for Aug. 28, when they plan to host a lawn party with a pig roast.

They also intend to make a few tweaks to cater to older dancers, many of whom came to the barn when they were younger.

Julie Cahoon says her parents ran a tavern in her hometown of Walcott, so she feels like running the dances will be second nature.

"If it feels good, it is right," she said. "It feels good."

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It is with great sadness we announce the passing of our Mother, Sister, Grand-mother, Great Grandmother and Aunt. Mary was born and raised on the south side in Edmonton, AB. In the early 1970’s Mary married Arnett Ternquist and moved to Williston, North Dakota where she lived for forty plus years and just recently moved to Kelowna, BC. Re-membered and sadly missed by her Daughter Jeane (Garry) Owens of Sum-merland BC, Grandson Ken (Pam) Owens of Kelowna BC, Granddaughter Dawn (Paul) Coburn of Nanaimo BC, Grandson- Late Chris

(Josephine) Owens of Abbotsford BC, Great-Grand-daughter Kassidy Co-burn, Great-Grandson Tristan Owens. Survived by one Brother Robert “Red” (Jean) McK-enzie of Edmonton Alberta, two Sisters Jeannie (late Walter) Jensen of Vancouver BC, Jessie (Jackie) LaPlante of Edmonton AB. Mary was predeceased by her Daughter Dawn Harrington, Grandson

Chris Owens, First Husband Nelson Harrington, Second Husband Arnett Ternquist, Mother Jane McKenzie and Father Alexander McKenzie. Her love of life and total in-dependence right up till the moment she died made her a very special person to us all. There will be a Memorial Gathering on Sunday April 19 at 2 p.m. at Michaelbrook Golf Club, 1085 Lexington Drive, Kelowna, BC V1W 4M8. Memorial tributes may be made to the Charity of your Choice.

Condolences may be sent to the family through www.providencefuneralhomes.com.

Mary TernquistFeb. 1, 1925 - March 12, 2015

Ternquist

CREDIT UNIONS: Play vital role in N.D. citiesFROM PAGE A1

tunities. Growth from the energy boom has many new businesses seeking loans throughout the Bakken, but because of all the addition-al requirements mandated by NCUA, credit unions often lose out on those lend-ing opportunities.

The pressures and uncer-tainties related to compli-ance risks have forced some credit unions to retreat from the market, Heitkamp says, and fewer options do not serve North Dakota or the nation well.

"Too big to fail has be-come too small to succeed," Heitkamp said during a Senate committee hearing on the subject in Septem-

ber, "and we need to fix that problem."

Other regulations and their effect on credit unions were also discussed. Among these were recent large data breaches, such as the one that struck Target in mid-December 2013.

"It's their breach and their problem, but we have the cards, so the costs of re-placing the cards falls back on us," Stillwell said.

North Dakota has 38 credit unions serving 215,500 members. Western Area Credit Union has two offices in Williston, and others in Ray, Dickinson, Beach, Hebron and Glen Ullin.

Stillwell has been in the credit union industry for 30

years, 17 of them in Wilis-ton. She believes credit unions play a vital role in communities such as Wil-liston by providing com-petitive rates and fees.

"If we're able to offer very cost-efficient products, it keeps the competition going," she said. "They go well, we gotta do that too. We cannot charge too much, or they'll go to the credit union."

Each financial institu-tions in the community has an important niche, Still-well says. Thus the surviv-al of each type of institu-tion provides a diversity of services that strengthens community.

[email protected]

BARN DANCE: Cahoon will take tradition onFROM PAGE A1

BY KATHERINE LYMNFORUM NEWS SERVICE

KILLDEER — An oil tank explosion near Kildeer last month that was felt from miles away was caused by an equipment malfunction, operator Marathon Oil found in its investigation.

An in-line flame arrestor failed and allowed the flare flame to get into the tanks, company spokesman Zac Weis said.

The company wrapped up its investigation on the

March 7 incident this week."Essentially, that failed

and allowed the flame to backflow into the tank," he said.

The three oil tanks exploded just before 9 a.m. that Saturday and burned throughout the day. The explosion blew the tops off the tanks, Dunn County Emergency Manager Denise Brew previously said.

The site is about five miles north of Killdeer.

According to the North Dakota Industrial Commis-sion followup report, 244 barrels of oil and 45 barrels of saltwater were spilled.

The oil burned off, said Alison Ritter, spokeswoman for the North Dakota Department of Mineral

Resources. According to the depart-

ment's report, all of the saltwater was recovered.

Weis said Marathon will make sure to thoroughly check the arrestors during inspections.

"What we're gonna see is proper maintenance on all those in the future and proper inspections and rou-tine inspections looking for that specific malfunction," he said.

Ritter said while she hadn't heard of this piece of equipment failing before, malfunctions in general are common causes of incidents like this one.

"What it boils down to is just a malfunctioning piece of equipment," Ritter said.

Investigation: Equipment malfunction caused massive Killdeer explosion

BY EMILY WELKERFORUM NEWS SERVICE

FARGO — Eliminating gang activity is going to be a full-time job for six officers from the police departments in Fargo and West Fargo, and the Cass County and possibly Clay County sheriff's depart-ments, as part of a street crimes law enforcement unit launched earlier this month.

A rise in local gangs and the growing threat of a feud in the region between two national motorcycle gangs prompted the creation of the unit, much like a similar effort in the 1990s to address gang activity in Fargo-Moor-head.

Members of Lic Squad--self-identified as a Fargo-based rap music act--deny they are part of one of the biggest and most dangerous local gangs, which police said have operated in the Fargo-Moorhead area for the past year.

A dispute between mem-bers of Lic Squad and an-other local gang, Fast Money Boys, erupted into violence last fall when a mobile home in the Countryside Trailer Court here was set afire and a pet pit bull was stabbed to death, according to police.

It was one in a series of incidents, including drive-by shootings, that police identi-fied Thursday as being the work of these and two other major gangs operating in the Fargo area.

Acting Fargo Police Chief Dave Todd said Fargo and its surrounding communities are at "a tipping point" in terms of public safety from gangs.

"We have to stomp this out now," Todd said.

Lic Squad member Marvin Berry, a Fargo South High School student, said Thurs-day that his group was made up of rap artists, not gang members.

Berry said Lic Squad mem-

bers were not involved in the Countryside trailer events, or other criminal activity.

"It makes us feel like we have to move somewhere else," he said. "Is it the way we present ourselves, the way we dress?"

Lic Squad members ar-rived in Fargo under the premise they were a rap act, Fargo police Lt. Mike Mitchell said, but it quickly became apparent it was a front for gang activity.

Gang members today don't necessarily dress in a signa-ture style, as they did back in the 1990s when gang activity last erupted in the metro area, police said.

Gangs also don't always share a single ethnic identity, they don't always answer to a specific leader, and modern gangs are not always bound by traditional affiliations and old feuds established in regions like Detroit, Chicago or Minne-apolis, police said.

Carrie Snyder / The Forum

BCI Director Dallas Carlson, front, along with from left, Moorhead Police Chief David Ebinger, Clay County Sheriff Bill Bergquist, West Fargo Police Chief Mike Reitan, Cass County Sheriff Paul Laney, and Interim Fargo Police Chief David Todd address the growing crime concerns in the metro area during a press conference at the Fargo Public Library in downtown Fargo on Thursday.

‘At a tipping point,’ F-M police aim to curb gangs

Funeral services for Tucker Owen Harris, 6 months, will be held on Sat-urday, April 11, at 2 p.m., at the Assembly of God, Sid-ney, Montana with Pastor Les Anderson officiating.

Interment will be in the Sidney Cemetery, Sidney

under the direction of the Fulkerson Funeral Home of Sidney.

Remembrances, condo-lences and pictures may be shared with the family at www.fulkersons.com.

Anyone is welcome to at-tend the services.

Tucker Owen Harris age 6 months died in his parents arms at 8:45 p.m on April, 1, 2015, at Saint Vincent Hos-pital in Billings, Montana. after struggling with Spinal Muscular Atrophy type 1 (SMA), he passed gently into the arms of Jesus.

Tucker Owen Harris

Page 3: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

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A custumer waits for in front of an Apple Store to have a look at the Apple Watch in Berlin today. Consumers flock to Apple Inc's stores to get the world's first up-close look at the tech giant's smartwatch, which the company hope will be its next runaway hit.

BY ASTRID WENDLANDT AND PAULINE ASKINREUTERS

PARIS/SYDNEY — Con-sumers flocked to Apple Inc's stores around the world on Friday to get the first close-up look at the tech giant's smartwatch, which the company expects will be its next runaway hit.

The Apple Watch, CEO Tim Cook's first new major product and the company's first foray into the personal luxury goods market, was available for pre-order on-line and to try out in stores -- but not to take home.

On April 24, consumers will be able to buy it online or by appointment in shops including trendy fashion boutiques in Paris, London and Tokyo, part of Apple's strategy of positioning the wearable computer as a must-have accessory.

Testing Apple's mastery of consumer trends, the watch is an untried concept for the California-based company. It straddles a technology market accustomed to rapid

obsolescence and luxury goods whose appeal lies in their enduring value.

Before the Paris Apple store opened at 0900 lo-cal time, about 100 people were queuing outside. Staff cheered and applauded the first customers, most of them men aged under 30.

"I have everything from Apple so now I need to get the watch," said 19-year-old Jeremy Dugue wearing an Armani leather jacket after ordering the stainless steel model at 1,149 euros.

The Apple Watch sport starts at $349 while the standard version comes in at $549 in the U.S. High-end "Edition" watches with 18-karat gold alloys are priced from $10,000 and go as high as $17,000. Within the first hour in Paris, many customers had pre-ordered their watch, and several went for the entry-level model with a black plastic bracelet.

High demand means some shoppers in Paris will have to wait 4-6 weeks before

their watch arrives. "It was comfortable, I

didn't think it would be that comfortable. It's an easy way of managing your busy life," said 19-year old student Omar Alborno, one of the first to try on the watch at London's luxury Selfridges department store.

MIXED REVIEWSEarlier on Friday, Apple's

flagship store in Sydney's fi-nancial district was packed with those hoping to get the first peek at the device, although just around 20 die-hard fans queued out front, modest by the standards of a major Apple launch.

Based on recent customer interest at its stores, Apple expects demand for the watch, which allows users to check email, listen to music and make phone calls when paired with an iPhone, to ex-ceed availability at launch.

Reviewers this week praised the watch, which also helps users monitor their health and exercise, as "beautiful" and "stylish"

but gave it poor marks for relatively low battery life and slow-loading apps. Sales estimates for 2015 vary widely.

Piper Jaffray predicts 8 million units and Global Se-curities Research forecasts 40 million. By comparison, Apple sold nearly 200 million iPhones last year. Apple's watch is widely expected to outsell those by Samsung , Sony Corp and Fitbit, that have attracted modest inter-est from consumers.

It will likely account for 55 percent of global smartwatch shipments this year, according to Societe Generale.

"Apple will outsell its wearable rivals by a very wide margin but it will do this on the power of its brand and its design alone," independent technology an-alyst Richard Windsor said. "Consequently, I am sticking to my 20 million forecast for the first 12 months and see the potential for some soggi-ness in the stock as reality sets in."

Strong turnout to try Apple Watch

BY SARA BURNETT AND TAMMY WEBBERASSOCIATED PRESS

FAIRDALE, Ill. (AP) — A tornado brought chaos to a tiny northern Illinois town, killing one person, injuring eight more and sweeping homes off their founda-tions, as large storm system rumbled across much of the country.

DeKalb County Sheriff Roger A. Scott said in a news release early Friday that 15 to 20 homes in Fair-dale were destroyed by the twister that hit the ground around 7 p.m. Thursday.

Matthew Knott, division chief for the Rockford Fire Department, told The Asso-ciated Press that just about every building in the town about 80 miles northwest of Chicago "sustained damage of some sort."

A 67-year-old woman was found dead inside her home, DeKalb County coroner Dennis Miller told reporters early Friday. Scott said of the 150 Fairdale residents, another eight were taken to hospitals after the storm hit.

Authorities expressed confidence that there would be no more victims found in the devastated town but that they would be working to account for every resi-dent Friday. All homes were evacuated and power was out across the area. The Red Cross and Salvation Army established a shelter at a high school.

Matt Friedlein, a me-teorologist with the Na-tional Weather Service, said Friday that at least two tornadoes swept through six north-central Illinois coun-ties, and that damage survey teams would visit the area to determine how long they stayed on the ground, their strength and the extent of the damage.

After raking Illinois, Thursday's storm and cold front headed north-east, dumping snow in Michigan's Upper Penin-sula and sweeping across the Ohio Valley overnight, Friedlein said. The system was headed into the Ap-

palachian region Friday morning with the potential for severe thunderstorms but "not anywhere near the threat" that it packed in the Midwest, he said.

Kirkland Community Fire District Chief Chad Connell said he watched the tornado move toward Fairdale from his porch.

"I've never seen anything like it in my life," he said, almost lost for words.

Some 20 additional homes were severely damaged or destroyed in Ogle County, adjacent to DeKalb, Sheriff Brian Van Vickle said, add-ing no deaths or significant injuries were reported there.

Van Vickle said 12 people were trapped in the storm cellar beneath a restaurant that collapsed in the storm in Rochelle, about 20 miles southwest of Fairdale.

One of those rescued from the Grubsteakers restau-rant, Raymond Kramer, 81, told Chicago's WLS-TV they were trapped for 90 minutes before emergency crews were able to rescue them, unscathed.

"No sooner did we get down there, when it hit the building and laid a whole metal wall on top of the doors where we went into the storm cellar," Kramer said. "When the tornado hit, we all got a dust bath. Every-one in there got shattered with dust and debris falling out of the rafters."

The severe weather, the re-gion's first widespread bout, forced the cancellation of more than 850 flights at Chi-cago's O'Hare International Airport on Thursday and dozens of others at the city's Midway International Air-port. The outlook was much improved Friday, although about 90 flights at the city's two airports were cancelled and dozens of delays were expected.

Elsewhere, a severe thunderstorm Thursday night damaged the roof of a nursing home in Longview, East Texas, and prompted the evacuation of about 75 residents.

1 dead, homes destroyed in Ill. town after tornado

BY JEFFREY COLLINS AND MICHAEL BIESECKER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

NORTH CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Dashboard video shows a police officer making a routine traffic stop. Cellphone video shows the officer shooting the fleeing motorist in the back. What remains a mystery is what happened during the minutes in between that led the polite officer to become a killer.

The dash cam footage released by state police on Thursday showed North Charleston Officer Michael Thomas Slager pulling over black motorist Walter Scott for a broken brake light last weekend. Slager, who is white, has been charged with murder in Scott's death.

Saturday's traffic stop opens like so many others as Scott was stopped in a used Mercedes-Benz he had purchased days earlier, footage from the patrol car showed. At the outset, it's a strikingly benign en-counter: The officer is seen walking toward the driver's

window, requesting Scott's license and registration. Slager then returns to his cruiser. On the dash cam video, Slager never touches his gun during the stop. He also makes no unreasonable demands or threats.

The video also shows Scott beginning to get out of the car, his right hand raised above his head. He then quickly gets back into the car and closes the door. After Slager goes back to his patrol car, minutes later, Scott jumps from his car and runs. Slager chases him.

What's missing is what happens from the time the two men run out of the frame of dashboard video to the time picked up in a bystander's cellphone video a few hundred yards away. The cellphone footage starts with Scott getting to his feet and running away, then Slager firing eight shots at the man's back.

"It is possible for some-thing to happen in that gap to significantly raise the officer's perception of risk,"

Seth Stoughton, a former po-lice officer and criminal law professor at the University of South Carolina

Scott was almost $7,500 behind in child support and had been in jail three times over the issue, but no bench warrants had been issued directing officers to bring him in. His family has said that he might have run because he was behind on payments again and didn't want to go back to jail. He last paid child support in 2012, court records show.

Police and Slager's first lawyer initially said the officer fired in self-defense during a scuffle over his department-issued Taser. Within days of Saturday's encounter, the eyewitness video surfaced and immedi-ately changed perceptions of what had happened, lead-ing authorities to charge Slager with murder and fire him from the police force he'd worked on for five years.

On Friday, Slager's mother, Karen Sharpe, told ABC's "Good Morning America"

that she couldn't believe her son — who loved being an officer and had a baby on the way — would have been involved in the incident.

Gap remains in record of fatal S.C. police shooting

Page 4: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

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April 10, 2015 OpinionOpinionA4

Today in History

WICKCOMMUNICATIONS

Roberts Rules

Steve and Cokie Roberts

Today is Friday, April 10, the 100th day of 2015. There are 265 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History:

On April 10, 1925, the novel “The Great Gatsby,” F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Jazz Age evocation of empty materialism, shattered illusion and thwarted romance, was first pub-lished by Scribner’s of New York.

On this date:

In 1790, President George Washington signed the first United States Patent Act.

In 1815, the Mount Tambora volcano on the Indonesian island of Sumbawa exploded in one of the largest eruptions in recorded history, result-ing in tens of thousands of deaths.

In 1865, Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, a day after surrendering the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomat-tox Court House, said farewell to his men, praising them for their “unsurpassed courage and fortitude.”

In 1912, the RMS Titanic set sail from Southamp-ton, England, on its ill-fated maiden voyage.

In 1932, German Presi-dent Paul Von Hinden-burg was re-elected in a runoff, with Adolf Hitler coming in second.

In 1947, Brooklyn Dodg-ers President Branch Rickey purchased the con-tract of Jackie Robinson from the Montreal Royals.

In 1963, the fast-attack nuclear submarine USS Thresher (SSN-593) sank during deep-diving tests east of Cape Cod, Massa-chusetts, in a disaster that claimed 129 lives.

Syndicated column

What women won in the Civil War

Cartoon gallery

When the Civil War ended 150 years ago, Washington, D.C. celebrated with parades and pyrotechnics as Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and his wife arrived fresh from accepting Gen. Robert E. Lee’s surrender at Appomat-tox. Greeted by booming cannons fired from forts surrounding the capital, the trium-phal procession took them past buildings festooned in red, white and blue.

Only a few days later, the shocked city yanked down the colorful buntings, replac-ing them with black crepe. Abraham Lincoln had been murdered, adding his life to the more than 600,000 lost in the war.

Victory came at a horrible cost. But the United States, by definition, would not have become the powerful and purposeful na-tion it is today had that victory not been achieved. By insisting on holding together the Union and eventually abolishing slavery, Lincoln created a military and moral force. And though freeing the slaves was clearly the greatest good to come from the conflict, other advances also resulted from the more than four years of carnage. No longer these United States, as they had been before the war, the United States emerged as a more cohesive country, with a unifying railroad underway that would soon connect the east coast to the west.

And it was a country where the role of women had changed for the better.

The now-familiar image of “Rosie the Riveter,” head wrapped in a bandana and mouthing the motto “We Can Do It,” has educated the country about the assembly-line women who helped win World War II. And the “government girls” who poured into Washington to staff the bureaucra-cies running that war, plus other government programs burgeoning into being, have received some modicum of the credit due them. Their sisters from the Civil War have gone largely unrecognized, but they, too, were on the job, working for the cause -- as Cokie has learned in researching her new book “Capital Dames.”

Young women toiled in the arsenals around the North, taking on the dangerous task of making munitions. In Washington, a huge explosion killed more than 20 of the hoop-skirt-wearing arsenal workers, causing the whole city, led by the president and secretary of war, to turn out to honor them.

Women in Philadelphia making uniforms and other items for the soldiers sent a delegation to meet with Lincoln to protest a cut in fees. They organized a labor union-type as-sociation to push for higher pay for their essential endeav-ors. After hearing them out, the president instructed his military men to heed the women’s demands.

Soon after Congress authorized the printing of paper money to finance the war, the Treasurer of the United States, Gen. Francis Spinner, realized he could pay women a lot less than men for the finger-blistering job of cutting the big sheets of greenbacks that came off the press into individual bills. Eager to earn a living, female applicants deluged the Treasury; later in his life, Spinner judged his greatest achievement to be “introducing women to employ-ment in the offices of government.” By the end of the war, female workers could be found in every department, and they stayed there once peace was at hand.

Women who rushed into the hospitals and onto the battlefields to care for the sick and wounded served as the vanguard for a whole new field for females: nursing and medicine. Then there were those who staged the enormous fundraisers for the Sanitary Commission, which provided supplies and nurses for the troops. Many of those intrepid organizers went on to found social service agencies, settle-ment houses and lobbying organizations for the destitute and downtrodden, particularly the thousands of formerly enslaved elderly and infirm people who had no way to fend for themselves.

Lobbying efforts included a massive petition drive that has been credited with pushing Senate passage of the 13th Amendment outlawing slavery. The women who launched that undertaking then used their newly acquired political skills for the slow sludge toward equal rights. And some of the same women, plus many others, wrote about it -- some as journalists, like Jane Swisshelm, and others as propagandists, like Anna Ella Carroll. Female orators also attracted public attention; Anna Dickinson even addressed a Joint Meeting of Congress.

Though their history has gone unheralded, the women who lived it were well aware of the advances brought on by the Civil War. One of them, American Red Cross founder Clara Barton, claimed the conflict had propelled woman into a position 50 years ahead of where “continued peace would have assigned her.”

That’s something to celebrate during this complex com-memoration.

Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at [email protected].

Another view

Beware diplomats bear-ing fact sheets; they rarely reveal the whole truth.

The nuclear negotiations in Lausanne have already produced three separate fact sheets, issued by the United States, Iran and France, each highlighting different aspects of the emerging agreement.

But under all three ver-sions, Iran's oil exports are likely to rise in 2016.

The battle of the fact sheets confirms the first rule of analysis: never trust a summary produced by some-one else, always go back to the original documents.

In this instance, there is no final document setting out all the undertakings by the various parties because there are still significant areas of disagreement.

By reading the fact sheets side by side, however, the outlines of an eventual deal between Iran and the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany (P5+1) are now reasonably clear.

The basic bargain allows Iran to maintain and gradu-ally develop a complete fuel cycle in exchange for tough restrictions and inspections to ensure its activities have exclusively civilian uses.

It aims to ensure it would take a year or more for the country to produce enough fissionable material for a bomb in the event that the agreement breaks down at any point over the next 10 years.

While there are still many technical details to be ne-gotiated, the outlines of the political-level agreement are clear, with all sides making significant concessions com-pared with past negotiating positions.

BATTLE OF THE FACT SHEETSWithin minutes of the

announcement of a prelimi-nary framework between Iran and world powers on Thursday, the White House had issued a "fact sheet" pre-senting its interpretation of the emerging agreement.

The fact sheet succeeded

in control-ling the media and political narrative in the crucial 48 hours after the an-nouncement but reflected only some of the under-standings tentatively reached by diplomats.

The U.S. version devoted 31 paragraphs to new controls that would be established on Iran's nuclear activities but only eight to the issue of sanc-tions relief.

While the sections on nu-clear controls were highly specific, the parts on sanc-tions were notably vague about the timing and extent of relief ("Parameters for a Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action," April 2).

Iran would have had no reason to agree to the deal as presented by U.S. press of-ficers, so it was immediately clear the fact sheet did not reflect the whole package of understandings that had been reached.

Iran's Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif com-plained it was much too early to start publishing fact sheets.

Zarif told a television interviewer that "the Americans put what they wanted in the fact sheet ... I even protested this issue with (U.S. Secretary of State John) Kerry."

So Iran has now issued its own fact sheet, published by the Foreign Ministry in Far-si, and translated by various outside organizations.

Predictably, Iran's version devotes more space to the re-moval of sanctions and goes into much greater detail about the extent and timing ("Translation of Iranian fact sheet on the nuclear nego-tiations," April 3).

France, too, issued its own details, providing addi-tional information about the

framework, which has been summarized in the Wall Street Journal ("Nuclear deal allows Iran significant-ly to boost centrifuges after 10 years," April 4).

MORE OIL EXPORTS IN 2016The time frame for sanc-

tions relief, crucial to oil markets because it would al-low Iran to raise its exports by up to 1 million barrels per day, has also emerged into clearer focus.

The negotiating teams have until July 1 to finalize the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, which will then be approved by the Security Council.

There will then be a period of what Iran calls "preparatory work" for implementation and what the United States calls "the completion, by Iran, of nuclear-related actions addressing all key concerns (enrichment, Fordow, Arak, PMD, and transparency)." Then on a single date, U.N. sanctions will be lifted.

It is possible to construct a rough timeline for the lifting of sanctions on Iran's oil ex-ports. Nothing will happen for three months while the Joint Comprehensive Plan is finalized. Then it is likely to take an additional six to 18 months to finalize the "preparatory work," depend-ing on the intentions and goodwill among the parties.

The earliest that addi-tional oil could start flowing would be the first quarter of 2016, while the latest is probably the end of 2016. In theory, it could take more than 18 months to finish the preparatory work, pushing the date into 2017, but such a long delay would risk the entire deal unraveling.

The most likely outcome is that it takes about six to 12 months to implement the first phase of the framework agreement, which would see nuclear-related sanctions on Iran's oil exports lifted sometime between January and June 2016.

John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst.

Oil MarketReport

JohnKemp

Column

Iran’s oil exports likely to rise in 2016

Last year was a huge year politically in the United States. The race for power changed the entire atmosphere in America's top legislative branch.

Although it is early yet in the run for the presidency, a number of candidates have declared that they might run, or not run, depending upon the day and who benefits most by their answer.

At the forefront of "probably running" is Hillary Rodham Clinton, former Secretary of State. She is taking a "serious" look at running for office, but has not made a decision yet. As the Democratic forerunner, it seems a foregone con-clusion that Clinton will run for office. Her private email scandal aside, Clinton is a serious contender for the office of president of the United States. One of the more interest-ing opponents that could face Clinton, if she ever officially runs for higher office, would probably be Jeb Bush. He announced in December that he is exploring a Republican presidential run. Both Clinton and Bush have ties to the White House that many other potential candidates do not.

According to the New York Times, there is only one Republican candidate who has officially announced he is running for the office of president and that is U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz. This Republican race has a number of candidates who may or may not run, but the road to the White House is filled with a difficult, uphill climb.

Although the 2016 presidential race is barely getting started, some of the press on potential candidates will make this an unforgettable ride.

— The Daily News, Wahpeton

The race for president is becoming interesting

Page 5: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

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American Funds AmBalA m MA 47,846 24.97 +0.3 +9.0/B +11.4/A 5.75 250American Funds CapIncBuA m IH 70,620 60.49 +1.8 +6.2/A +8.9/A 5.75 250American Funds CpWldGrIA m WS 56,438 48.23 +2.3 +6.9/C +9.7/C 5.75 250American Funds FnInvA m LB 44,447 53.00 +0.6 +12.1/C +12.7/C 5.75 250American Funds GrthAmA m LG 74,731 44.85 +1.4 +14.0/D +13.2/D 5.75 250American Funds IncAmerA m MA 73,699 21.84 +0.9 +7.3/C +10.6/A 5.75 250American Funds InvCoAmA m LB 58,355 37.52 +1.5 +11.8/C +12.7/C 5.75 250American Funds WAMutInvA m LV 52,276 41.29 +0.3 +10.6/B +13.9/A 5.75 250Dodge & Cox Income CI 43,460 13.88 +0.9 +4.2/D +5.1/B NL 2,500Dodge & Cox IntlStk FB 69,060 45.50 +4.9 +3.7/B +8.4/A NL 2,500Dodge & Cox Stock LV 59,446 180.46 +0.8 +9.1/C +13.8/A NL 2,500Fidelity Contra LG 77,110 101.90 +0.7 +15.1/C +14.6/B NL 2,500Fidelity Advisor BalT m MA 1,025 19.87 +1.2 +10.9/A +10.4/A 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor EnergyB m EE 11 33.23 +6.1 -13.0/B +4.4/A 5.00 2,500Fidelity Advisor EqGrowT m LG 1,370 97.01 +1.2 +13.5/D +15.4/A 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor EqIncT m LV 922 33.56 +0.9 +7.2/E +11.0/D 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor FinclSerB m SF 4 15.58 +0.3 +10.9/B +5.9/E 5.00 2,500Fidelity Advisor GrowIncT m LB 206 27.04 +0.8 +11.3/D +13.5/B 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor GrowOppT m LG 1,495 65.96 +0.5 +14.7/C +16.5/A 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor HiIncAdvT m HY 486 11.08 +1.3 +5.7/A +9.0/A 4.00 2,500Fidelity Advisor HlthCrB m SH 13 36.88 +4.2 +38.3/B +25.7/B 5.00 2,500Fidelity Advisor LrgCapT m LB 180 29.19 +1.1 +10.4/D +14.4/A 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor OverseaT m FG 285 22.91 +4.5 +2.1/D +6.8/C 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor StkSelMdCpT m MG 799 34.15 +1.8 +12.7/D +13.1/D 3.50 2,500Fidelity Advisor TechC m ST 125 32.54 +1.8 +16.1/C +13.4/C 1.00 2,500Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg LB 49,391 74.08 +0.7 +13.9/B +14.2/A NL 10,000FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF C m ML 1,173 12.53 +0.7 +6.8/D +4.9/D 1.00 1,000FrankTemp-Franklin HY TF C m HM 1,099 10.86 +0.9 +8.8/D +5.6/E 1.00 1,000FrankTemp-Franklin HighIncC m HY 810 2.01 0.0 -1.8/E +7.2/D 1.00 1,000FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m CA 28,952 2.43 +0.8 +0.3/E +8.3/A 1.00 1,000FrankTemp-Franklin IncomeA m CA 53,634 2.41 +1.3 +1.2/E +8.9/A 4.25 1,000John Hancock BondB m CI 29 16.20 +1.2 +4.5/C +5.9/A 5.00 1,000John Hancock FinclIndB m SF 9 16.28 +0.4 +4.0/D +9.9/B 5.00 1,000John Hancock FocusedHiYldB m HY 31 3.65 +1.3 -1.5/E +5.7/E 5.00 1,000John Hancock IncomeB m MU 125 6.64 +0.8 +2.4/C +5.1/D 5.00 1,000John Hancock RegBankB m SF 14 17.79 +0.9 +4.6/D +9.4/C 5.00 1,000Oppenheimer GlobA m WS 7,679 83.26 +3.1 +10.9/A +11.0/B 5.75 1,000Oppenheimer StrIncB m MU 98 4.13 +0.8 +2.4/C +4.9/E 5.00 1,000PIMCO TotRetIs CI 68,941 10.87 +1.4 +5.3/B +5.0/B NL 1,000,000Pioneer CoreEqA m LB 1,573 17.47 +1.0 +11.3/D +13.0/C 5.75 1,000Pioneer PioneerA m LB 4,711 37.20 +0.6 +11.0/D +11.2/E 5.75 1,000Vanguard 500Adml LB 147,612 192.96 +0.7 +14.0/B +14.2/A NL 10,000Vanguard InstIdxI LB 105,378 191.07 +0.7 +14.0/B +14.2/A NL 5,000,000Vanguard InstPlus LB 88,432 191.08 +0.7 +14.0/B +14.2/A NL 200,000,000Vanguard TotBdAdml CI 57,618 10.97 +1.3 +5.2/B +4.4/D NL 10,000Vanguard TotIntl FB 54,643 16.73 +4.5 +1.2/C +5.1/D NL 3,000Vanguard TotStIAdm LB 122,327 52.85 +1.1 +13.7/B +14.5/A NL 10,000Vanguard TotStIIns LB 103,719 52.86 +1.1 +13.7/B +14.5/A NL 5,000,000Vanguard TotStIdx LB 123,333 52.84 +1.1 +13.6/B +14.3/A NL 3,000Vanguard WelltnAdm MA 66,742 68.48 +1.1 +9.0/B +10.7/A NL 50,000

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CA -Conservative Allocation, CI -Intermediate-Term Bond, ES -Europe Stock, FB -Foreign Large Blend, FG -ForeignLargeGrowth, FV -Foreign Large Value, IH -World Allocation, LB -Large Blend, LG -Large Growth, LV -Large Value,MA -Moderate Allocation, MB -Mid-Cap Blend, MV - Mid-Cap Value, SH -Specialty-heath, WS -World Stock, TotalReturn: Chng in NAV with dividends reinvested. Rank: How fund performed vs. others with same objective: A is intop 20%, E in bottom 20%. Min Init Invt: Minimum $ needed to invest in fund. Source: Morningstar.

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S&P 5002,091.18 +9.28

Name Vol (00) Last ChgZynga 1209121 2.38 -.52S&P500ETF798458208.90 +.93Petrobras 792745 7.54 +.62RiteAid 650856 8.49 -.38GenElec 596816 25.73 +.72

Losers ($2 or more)Name Last Chg %chgZynga 2.38 -.52 -17.9KingtoneW 5.37 -.82 -13.2Ceres rs 2.51 -.34 -11.9DrxChiBear 5.52 -.71 -11.4TriVascT n 8.98 -1.09 -10.8

Gainers ($2 or more)Name Last Chg %chgVoltari h 5.67 +1.55 +37.6Novogen h 5.52 +1.01 +22.4ChinaNepst 2.19 +.38 +21.0BioBlast n 7.18 +1.17 +19.5ChinaHGS 3.45 +.56 +19.4

Combined Stock Exchange Highlights

Stocks of Local InterestYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %chgYTD

Name Div Yld PE Last Chg %chgAT&T Inc 1.88 5.8 27 32.69 +.04 -2.7AbbVie 2.04 3.4 55 60.32 +1.51 -7.8AlcatelLuc ... ... ... 3.87 +.02 +9.0Alcoa .12 .9 21 13.21 -.46 -16.3Alibaba n ... ... ... 86.14 +.75 -17.1AlteraCp lf .72 1.7 33 43.33 +1.33 +17.3Ambev .24 3.8 ... 6.32 -.04 +2.4ARltCapPr ... ... ... 9.72 -.32 +7.4Apple Inc s 1.88 1.5 17 126.56 +.96 +14.7ApldMatl .40 1.8 23 22.51 +.13 -9.7BP PLC 2.40 5.8 34 41.35 +.58 +8.5BkofAm .20 1.3 45 15.71 +.10 -12.2B iPVixST ... ... ... 23.14 -.83 -26.6BarrickG .20 1.6 65 12.42 +.10 +15.5CampSp 1.25 2.7 19 46.21 +.29 +5.0Caterpillar 2.80 3.5 14 80.68 +.24 -11.9Cemex .52 ... ... 9.83 -.07 -3.5ChesEng .35 2.3 8 15.23 +.13 -22.2Cisco .84 3.0 17 27.63 +.08 0.0Citigroup .04 .1 24 52.13 +.24 -3.7CocaCola 1.32 3.2 26 41.05 +.16 -2.8CocaCE 1.12 2.4 17 46.14 +.42 +4.3ColgPalm 1.52 2.2 30 69.96 +.06 +1.1CSVLgNGs ... ... ... 1.99 -.20 -50.0CSVLgCrde ... ... ... 2.58 -.03 -47.2CSVixSht ... ... ... 1.40 -.10 -49.3Deere 2.40 2.7 11 88.45 +.60 0.0DBXEafeEq 1.37 4.4 ... 31.08 +.30 +15.1DxGldBull ... ... ... 10.37 -.26 -7.1DrxSCBear ... ... ... 9.94 +.09 -17.2EMC Cp .46 1.8 20 25.95 -.28 -12.7EnbrdgEPt 2.28 6.2 55 36.83 +.33 -7.7ExxonMbl 2.76 3.3 11 84.65 +.59 -8.4Facebook ... ... 75 82.17 -.11 +5.3FordM .60 3.8 20 15.95 -.03 +2.9FrontierCm .42 5.7 56 7.33 +.07 +9.9GenElec .92 3.6 17 25.73 +.72 +1.8GenMotors 1.20 3.3 22 36.29 +.18 +4.0Hallibrtn .72 1.6 11 46.04 +1.82 +17.1HewlettP .64 2.0 12 31.55 +.03 -21.4HomeDp 2.36 2.1 24 114.57 -1.02 +9.1HudsCity .16 1.6 30 9.71 -.01 -4.1iShBrazil 1.38 4.0 ... 34.19 -.08 -6.5iShJapan .15 1.2 ... 12.92 ... +14.9iShChinaLC 1.04 2.0 ... 51.12 +1.90 +22.8iShEMkts .88 2.1 ... 42.85 +.42 +9.1iS Eafe 2.26 3.4 ... 66.13 +.09 +8.7iShR2K 1.59 1.3 ... 125.02 -.45 +4.5Intel .96 3.1 13 31.24 -.07 -13.9IBM 4.40 2.7 14 162.34 +.49 +1.2Intuit 1.00 1.0 36 97.93 +.01 +6.2

ItauUnibH .41 3.4 ... 11.94 -.28 -8.2LeggPlat 1.24 2.7 67 45.60 -.37 +7.0MDU Res .73 3.3 14 22.39 -.01 -4.7MMT .38 6.0 ... 6.40 +.03 -1.5MGM Rsts ... ... ... 22.61 +1.02 +5.8MktVGold .12 .6 ... 18.91 -.18 +2.9MktVRus .64 3.3 ... 19.54 +.47 +33.6McDnlds 3.40 3.5 20 96.55 -.30 +3.0Medtrnic 1.22 1.6 25 77.13 +.74 +6.8MicronT ... ... 9 27.82 +.69 -20.6Microsoft 1.24 3.0 17 41.48 +.06 -10.7Mylan NV ... ... 30 70.10 +1.74 +24.3Nabors .24 1.6 12 14.60 +.39 +12.5NOilVarco 1.84 3.4 9 54.55 +1.81 -16.8NokiaCp .51 6.6 ... 7.73 -.01 -1.7Oracle .60 1.4 18 43.20 +.09 -3.9Penney ... ... ... 9.20 +.12 +42.0PepsiCo 2.62 2.7 23 96.35 +.32 +1.9PetrbrsA .85 11.3 ... 7.51 +.59 -.9Petrobras .46 6.1 ... 7.54 +.62 +3.3Pfizer 1.12 3.2 25 35.03 +.39 +12.5Pier 1 .28 2.0 17 13.79 +1.14 -10.5PwShs QQQ 1.49 1.0 ... 107.31 +.67 +3.9PUltVixST ... ... ... 12.32 -.87 -51.0PrUltCrude ... ... ... 7.68 -.05 -25.9Qualcom 1.92 2.8 15 68.81 +1.55 -7.4RegionsFn .20 2.1 12 9.67 +.04 -8.4RiteAid ... ... 4 8.49 -.38 +12.9S&P500ETF 3.94 1.9 ... 208.90 +.93 +1.6Schlmbrg 2.00 2.3 21 88.45 +2.33 +3.6SiriusXM ... ... 44 3.93 +.03 +12.3SpiritRltC .68 5.7 ... 12.01 -.10 +1.0Sprint ... ... ... 4.93 +.02 +18.8SP Engy 1.94 2.4 ... 79.79 +1.26 +.8SPDR Fncl .41 1.7 ... 24.25 +.04 -2.0TalismE g .45 ... 24 7.89 +.11 +.8Twitter ... ... ... 52.17 -.13 +45.4Unisys ... ... 30 23.68 -.15 -19.7US Bancrp .98 2.2 14 43.57 +.14 -3.1US OilFd ... ... ... 18.03 -.04 -11.4Vale SA .60 9.7 ... 6.17 +.07 -24.6VangEmg 1.13 2.6 ... 43.89 +.56 +9.7VangFTSE 1.16 2.8 ... 41.05 +.06 +8.4Voltari h ... ... ... 5.67 +1.55 +759.1WD 40 1.52 1.8 28 83.14 -4.00 -2.3WalMart 1.96 2.4 16 80.84 -.19 -5.9WellsFargo 1.40 2.6 13 54.19 +.19 -1.1Yahoo ... ... 6 45.63 +.46 -9.7Zynga ... ... ... 2.38 -.52 -10.5

uu uu uu

Mutual Funds

Stock Footnotes: g = Dividends and earnings in Canadian dollars. h = Does not meet continued-listing standards. lf= Late filing with SEC. n = New in past 52 weeks. pf = Preferred. rs = Stock has undergone a reverse stock split ofat least 50 percent within the past year. rt = Right to buy security at a specified price. s = Stock has split by at least20 percent within the last year. un = Units. vj = In bankruptcy or receivership. wd = When distributed. wi = Whenissued. wt = Warrants. Mutual Fund Footnotes: b = Fee covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d =Deferred sales charge, or redemption fee. f = front load (sales charges). m = Multiple fees are charged. NA = notavailable. p = previous day’s net asset value. s = fund split shares during the week. x = fund paid a distribution dur-ing the week. Gainers and Losers must be worth at least $2 to be listed in tables at left. Most Actives must be worthat least $1. Volume in hundreds of shares. Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

4,200

4,500

4,800

5,100

O AN D J F M

4,800

4,900

5,000Nasdaq compositeClose: 4,974.57Change: 23.75 (0.5%)

10 DAYS

STOCK REPORTWEATHER

NORTH DAKOTA WEATHERToday: Sunny. High of 66. Low of 39.Saturday: Mostly sunny. High of 75. Low of 44.Sunday: Cloudy and windy. High of 56. Low of 34.Monday: Partly cloudy. High of 64. Low of 40.Tuesday: Mostly sunny. High of 80. Low of 45.Wednesday: Partly cloudy. Windy. High of 56. Low of 36.

MONTANA WEATHERToday: Sunny. High of 66. Low of 39.Saturday: Mostly sunny. High of 75. Low of 44.Sunday: Cloudy and windy. High of 56. Low of 34.Monday: Partly cloudy. High of 64. Low of 40.Tuesday: Mostly sunny. High of 80. Low of 45.Wednesday: Partly cloudy. Windy. High of 56. Low of 36

Source: weather.comXNLV193479

Investment Centers of America, Inc. (ICA) member FINRA/SIPC and a registered investment advisor, is not affiliated with First International Bank and Trust or First International Investments. Securities, advisory services, and insurance products offered through ICA and affiliated insurance agencies are *not insured by the FDIC or any other Federal Government agency *not a deposit or other obligation of, or guaranteed by any bank or its affiliated *subject to risks including the possible loss of principal amount invested.

Every investor’s financial situation and retirement goals are different. Call me today to schedule a portfolio review.

Brian W. JohnsonInvestment [email protected]

LOCATED AT:First International Bank and Trust1331 9th Ave NW | Williston, ND701-572-3246

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ADVISOR.

We’ve Got the Best Buy in the MonDak Region If youʼre looking to buy or sell, we can get your classified ad into more than 20,000 homes

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Williston Herald

Data FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 WILLISTON HERALD A5

LOCAL STOCK REPORTGrain Markets

Horizon Resources (Fri. 8:10 a.m.)

Spring Wheat:11% Protein .......... $3.64 12% ............. $4.0413% Protein .......... $4.44 14% ............. $5.2515% ........................ $6.40 16% ............. $6.60

Winter Wheat..........................................$3.67Durum......................................................$9.50Feed Barley .............................................$2.00

Prices revised April 9N.D. Sour...........................................$29.00N.D. Sweet.........................................$35.00Difference.............................. Down $0.24

Crude Oil Prices

Call or visit today!

Retirement May Be Far OffBut the April 15 Deadline for IRA Contribution Isn’t.

To learn more about the advantages of an Edward Jones Individual Retirement Account (IRA).Investment Opportunity Place your ad by calling the Williston Herald572-2165

To advertise in our monthly oil magazineCall 701-572-216514 West 4th Street

Williston, ND

help raise funds for the 2014-2015 Competition Company. Trudy Keith of VIVI Jewelry (formerly Cookie Lee Jew-elry) will have lots of fun and beautiful jewelry displayed in the studio,ready to be taken that very day! Half of the proceeds will go to the 2014-2015 Competition Company. For more information contact Sarah Christianson at [email protected].

Jeffery Trones Vendor and Trade BenefitDate: April 11Location: The Grand Williston Time: 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. You should know: Browse items from over 30 vendors, and check out many

local businesses in the silent auction! all silent auction proceeds go to the Jeffery Trones family to support 10-year old Jeffery’s battle with a rare form of cancer called Ewings Sarcoma. For more information, contact Erin Mc-Cumsey at (218)851-3842 or Bobbi Knapper (701)572-8848.

Sportsmen’s Banquet 2015Date: April 11thLocation: Upper MIssouri Valley Fairgrounds, Multi

Purpose Building Time: 4:30 p.m.:Social Hour 7:00 p.m. BanquetYou should know:This event is presented by the Upper Missouri United

Sportsmen of North Dakota. Bring your trophy mounts after 4 p.m. for the People’s Choice Trophy Contest. Prizes will be awarded for birds, fish, big game heads, whitetail, antelope, and mule deer. Each mount entered qualifies participant for chances in special drawings. Tickets avail-able from members or at the door. $40 for 1 year member-ship and banquet. $15 for accompanying spouse, son, or daughter. For more information call Bruce (701)770-1810 or Corey at (701)570-8337.

WSC Superhero Day Date: April 12th Location: Williston State College Skadeland GymTime: 12:15-5:00 p.m. You should know:Have your children bring their superhero powers to

this fun class. Your children will use their imagination to catch villains. Three classes are available from noon to 5:00 p.m. For more information contact TrainND at (701)774-4235.

WSC The Purple School, SpanishDate: April 13- May 15Location: The ARC Time: 10:00 & 10:45You should know: The Purple School teaches children a

second language through chants, singing, and games. Our enthusiastic teachers use fun, child-centered curricu-lum to achieve concrete, quantifiable results. Children 3 months-6 years class time will be 10:00-10:45 a.m., chil-dren 1st-6th grade will be from 10:45-11:30 a.m.

For more information contact TrainND at (701)774-4235.

Second Sunday at the JamesDate: April 12Location: James Memorial Art CenterTime: 3 pmYou should know: Gallery I “Passionato Piano”An afternoon of Piano Music hosted by Thursday Musi-

cal. A Wonderful Dessert along with Coffee, Tea or Hot Chocolate for a $5 donation to the James.

Williston Shrine Circus

REE: Common Sense Parenting Date: Wednesdays, March 25- April 29Location: Broadway CommonsTime: 7:00-9:00 p.m.You should know:Workshop designed for parents of children ages 6 to

16. It is practical, skill-based parenting program that addresses issues of communication, discipline, decision making, relationships, and school sources. Parents learn, practice, and demonstrates new parenting skills. For more information, contact Kendra Loomis, Parent Educa-tion Coordinator, at (701) 713-0663.

WSC Yoga Date: April 1-29Location: WSC Western Star buildingTime: 5:30-6:30 p.m.You should know:A 1-hour yoga class mixing hatha, vinyasa & adapted

yoga pose to build strength, stability, endurance & bal-ance. The class will focus on increasing flexibility in a safe, intelligent way. You can come to as few or as many classes as you’d like. It’s a wonderful all-levels class expe-rience for the beginner to the advanced. Must bring your own yoga mat.

“Based Couture” by Shane Brinster Date: April 1-30Location: The James Memorial Art CenterTime: Monday-Thursday 9:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. and Friday /

Sunday 1:00-5:00 p.m.You should know:The James Memorial Art Center is proud to present

“Based Couture” by Shane Brinster. The exhibition is-sponsored by theNorth DakotaArt Gallery Association with support from the North Dakota Council on the Arts. Shane Brinster is a multi-media artist from North Dako-ta. His current work consist of spray painting on canvas, applied via a combination of freehand and stencils. The James Memorial Art Center is located at the 621 First Avenue Westin Williston. For more information, please contact the James at (701)774-3601.

Spring Chamber Pickers SaleDate: April 10thLocation: New Armory GymTime: 9:00 a.m.- 4:00 p.m.You should know:We are moving soon and are downsizing, Come check

out what we are selling. For more information contact (701)577-6000.

Jewelry Party FundraiserDate: April 11thLocation: 11th First Avenue East Time: 9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m.You should know:Kay Michael Lee Studio is hosting a jewelry party to

UPCOMING EVENTS

To have your community event publicized, contact Katherine Moore at 701-572-2165 or by

email at [email protected]

COMMUNITY HAPPENINGS

Date: April 14th & 15Location: Raymond Family Community CenterTime: 4:00 & 7:00 p.m. each nightYou should know:Tickets are available at Cash WIse.

WSC What Am I Eating?Date: April 14thLocation: WSC Stevens HallTime: 5:45-6:45 p.m.You should know:Understanding food labels is an essential part of mak-

ing sure your’e providing the healthiest finds for you & your family. However, decoding the language on your food labels can be difficult and misleading. QW will focus on how to read food labels and the pitfalls of food marketing. This class will help you become a better consumer and ensure that you are making informed and healthy deci-sions. With the current health conditions that American’s are currently facing, you and your children’s health can’t afford to miss this discussion. For more information contact TrainND at (701)774-4235,

Baby BasicsDate: April 14thLocation: McAuley Education Center, 1301 15th Ave WTime: 6:00-8:30 p.m.You should know:Newborn baby basics will answer questions about car-

ing for a newborn. Topics will include feeding, bathing, umbilical cord care, sleeping habits, and the parents’ changing world. Classes will be instructed by a Regis-tered Nurse. For more information contact Jodi McCann at (701)774-7009.

WSC Swing Dance 1Date: April 14-28Location: Williston State CollegeTime; Tuesday & Thursday 7:00-8:00 p.m.You should know:You will learn an appreciation of dance styles created

during the big band era including the Lindy Hop, Charles-ton, andEast Coast, Participants will learn the secrets of the lead-follow partnership, dance etiquette, musicality, and some history of each dance.

At the end of the course, participants will be asked memorize a routine in order to combine all of the skills learned.

No partner needed; must bring dance shoes. For more information contact TrainND at (701)774-4235.

WILLISTON BASIN RESOURCE COALITIONDate: Thursday, April 16, 2015Time: NoonLocation: Fellowship Hall, First Lutheran ChurchYou Should Know: Featured topic is Supportive Housing

group, including presenter, Suzanne Blessum.Area agencies are encouraged to bring information to

share in the round-table session to follow. The Coalition will be meeting monthly on Third Thursdays to promote communication and coordination between entities provid-ing human services. A light lunch will be available with donations welcome.

Page 6: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

Dear Annie: Eight months ago, I met the love of my life online. Everything started off great. “Jay” and I chatted every day.

However, at one point, a past lover of his intervened and warned me about some of his “issues.” I became a little bit paranoid and asked Jay to explain his side of things. He didn’t want to at first, but he finally relented, and we con-tinued on. I told him I loved him.

Three months ago, Jay decided there was no way we could be anything more than friends. I struggled with just being friends, but eventu-ally, I accepted it. Now, Jay seems to be making more and more friends and is phasing me out. One of my dearest friends died last week, and Jay hasn’t bothered to pro-vide any comfort. I would cease all communication, but it would be difficult because the Internet community we belong to includes many mu-tual friends and chat forums.

Should I remain so-called friends or just let him go? — Confused Web Reader

Dear Confused: Please let him go. Jay is not the love of your life. You have confused the excitement of your initial contact with love, but now you have seen Jay’s true character. He isn’t inter-ested in having a romantic relationship with you. If you think you can remain part of the same Internet com-

munity and not pine over him, fine. Try to ignore him as best you can. Other-wise, please expand your online pres-ence so you aren’t as dependent on this particu-lar communi-ty of people.

Dear Annie: I dread go-ing to my niece’s first baby shower. At the last one I went to that included our family, there were older mothers who proceeded to tell horror stories about labor and deliv-ery. No one needs to hear the in-depth details of their birth process, and especially not a first-time mother.

Some people speak before they think. How can I po-litely get them to shut up? — Dreading Showers

Dear Showers: If someone should start replaying the details of their birth experi-ence, it’s perfectly OK to say, in mock horror, “Heavens! Please don’t discuss that in front of all of us! A baby is a wonderful gift, and we all want ‘Suzie’ to look forward to the experience. I know you don’t mean to be so negative about it.”

They may insist they are only being informative, but new mothers are nervous enough without adding to

their worries by relaying stories about what could pos-sibly go wrong. Of course, some stories are funny or uplifting, and those should be encouraged.

Dear Annie: Thanks for printing the letter from Magi Linscott, encouraging kids not to smoke. I quit smoking more than eight years ago, and I am so glad. I now know what my late father used to experience after he quit and then smelled cigarette smoke: He got sick. I do, too. I cannot believe this is what I used to smell like.

My wife told me I stopped wheezing in my sleep within two weeks of quitting. And my VA health care providers are very happy with me. If you’re still smoking, STOP! Don’t say it’s impossible. I smoked two packs a day for 40 years.

Thanks for letting me vent, Annie. — Grateful Ex-Smok-er in Campbellsville, Ky.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please email your questions to [email protected], or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 737 3rd Street, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254. To find out more about Annie’s Mailbox and read fea-tures by other Creators Syndi-cate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.

ARIES (March 21-April 19) -- A joint venture will work in your favor. Proper-ty investments look prom-ising. Do your homework and discuss your plans with the people who can of-fer you relevant advice.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Trim your expenses and keep an eye on your as-sets. A thorough scrutiny of your personal docu-ments can reveal ways to improve your financial sta-tus. A family member will try your patience.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) -- Look for ways to meet new people. Your desire to travel will stretch your fi-

nances. Find venues closer to home that are cost-efficient and could inspire your ambition.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) -- Business meetings or seminars will introduce you to like-minded indi-viduals. Mixing business with pleasure will lead to a social opportunity. Co-workers will be impressed by your humor and friend-liness.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -- Get your work out of the way so you can spend more time with friends and fam-ily. Children and elders will appreciate any effort you make to include them in your plans.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) -- A new partnership will entice you, but don’t move too fast. Take the time to get to know each other before you decide to dive head-first into a joint venture.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) -- Boredom or stress will surface. Get out and do things you enjoy. The peo-ple you usually hang out with will not be interested in joining you, but don’t let that hold you back.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.

22) -- Physical activity will help keep your mind off of your personal struggles. Be mindful of your budget. Working out at home can have just as many benefits as a high-priced gym.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) -- Don’t be tempted to gamble or lend money. Be wary of anyone who tries to involve you in a dubious venture. Any fi-nancial decisions should be made with caution.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) -- Work on your own personal issues before offering advice to others. Remaining neutral and keeping your opinions to yourself will be the best course of action.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) -- Do whatever it takes to improve your self-con-fidence. You have a lot to offer, so don’t sell yourself short. Focus on your attri-butes, and avoid comparing yourself to other people.

PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) -- Be assertive if some-one tries to entangle you in something that goes against your principles. If you damage your reputa-tion, it will be difficult to repair.

Horoscope

PEANUTS

BORN LOSER

BEETLE BAILEY

FRANK & ERNEST

ARLO & JANIS

GARFIELD

TAKE IT FROM THE TINKERSONS

SOUP TO NUTS

ALLEY OOP

THATABABY

It’s pretty clear ‘Jay’ is not the right one

Annie’s Mailbox

Ogden Nash said, “A family is a unit composed not only of children but of men, women, an occasional animal and the common cold.”

A bridge contract is a unit composed not only of tricks but also bidding, declarer play, defense, winners and losers. In today’s deal, South is in four spades. What hap-pens after West leads the spade king?

Note that North might raise one heart to two hearts with only three-card support. If he has a minimum opening with 1-3-5-4 distribution, a rebid of two hearts is preferable to two clubs. So South’s jump to four hearts promises at least a five-card suit. With only four hearts, he should make a different rebid, perhaps three no-trump with stoppers in the unbid suits, or in one of the other three suits.

South must first count his losers. Here, he has four: two spades, one heart and one club. Then, if he can do it in a reasonable length of time -- five or 10 minutes! -- he should also count winners. He can see 11: one spade, four hearts, four diamonds and two clubs. So, declarer can make his contract as long as he does not lose those four tricks first. Since he cannot avoid losing tricks to the rounded-suit aces, he must eliminate a spade loser.

Before leading a trump, South must play a diamond to his queen, overtake the diamond jack with dummy’s king, and discard a spade on the diamond ace. Now, with his loser count down to three, he should draw trumps as quickly as possible.

Have you worked out the peculiar theme to this week’s deals? All will be revealed tomorrow.

Bridge

A6 WILLISTON HERALD FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 Comics

XNLV196823

WILLISTON, ND

MOOSELODGE#239

101 West 2nd StreetWilliston, ND

572-2342

Page 7: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

friday, april 10, 2015 Williston herald A7

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ALEXANDER CHURCH OF NAZARENE, Pastor Larry J Duffy SUN Worship Service, 9 am; SS, 10 am;

ALEXANDER TRINITY LUTHERAN ; 828-3589 SUN Worship, 9 am

ALLIANCE CHAPEL, WILDROSE, Pastor Greg Knopp; 539-2367 SUN Worship, 11 am; Bible study, 9:45 am WED Bible study/Prayer service, 7 pm

APOSTOLIC LIGHTHOUSE UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH, 523 1st AVE W, WILLISTON, Rev. DD Puckett; 774-8631 SUN SS, 2 pm; Worship, 3:30 pm WED Bible study, 7:30 pm

ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH, 206 N HANSON, TIOGA, Pastor Jeremy Weflen; Youth Pastor Jordan Gunderson 664-2604, 664-2750 SUN SS, 9:00 am; Worship, 11 am WED Children & Youth, 6:30pm

BAKKEN BAPTIST, Sons of Norway Hall, 720 4th Ave W. SUN Sunday School, 10am; Worship, 11am

BEAVER CREEK LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pastor Jon Wellumson; 572-0853 SUN Worship Service, 9:00 am;

BETHEL FREE LUTHERAN CHURCH, CULBERTSON, MONT.; 406-787- 9930 SUN SS, 9:45 am; Worship, 11 am WED Bible study, 7 pm

BIG SKY CHURCH: AMER BAPTIST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN, FROID, MONT., Neil & Mary Kaye Knudsen, Pastoral Team; 406-766- 2472 SUN Worship, 8:30 am; SS, 10:15 am; Food Bank Collection (2nd Sunday) WED FW Friends’ After School Program, 4 pm

CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH, 521 13TH AVE W; 572-7839, KJV/ Independent, Pastor Michael Calhoun, www.calvarybaptistwil - liston.com SUN SS, 10 am; Worship, 11 am; Evening Service, 5 pm WED Bible Study & Prayer, 7 pm

CALVARY LUTHERAN CHURCH in Alamo; Pastor Zacharias Shipman & Pastor Emily Shipman SUN 9:00am, Worship; 10:00am, Sunday School

CHURCH OF CHRIST, 508 26TH ST W; 572-2368 SUN SS, 10 am; Worship, 11 am; Eve Worship, 6 pm

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS, 1805 26TH ST W, Williston 1st Ward, Bishop Packer, 572-6880; Williston 1st Ward Sunday Meetings Sacrament Meeting 9am Sunday School 10:20am, YM/YW/RS/Priesthood 11:10am Activity Night Tuesdays 7pm 2nd Ward, Bishop Matt Azure, 572-6887; Williston 2nd Ward Sunday Meetings Sacrament Meeting 1pm, Sunday School 2:20pm, YM/YW/RS/Priesthood 3:10pm Activity Night Wednesday 7pm

CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, 1601 1ST AVE W, Rev. Nathan Porthen; 572-9018, 572-7445 Sunday: Sunday School for children, teens and adults -9:30-10:15 am Worship Service; Tuesday Prayer from 6:30 am Wednesday: Men’s Prayer Breakfast-6:30 am Prayer Service- 7:00-7:30pm : Worship Team Practice- 7:30-8:00pm Third Saturday of every month-Ladies Prayer Breakfast, 9:00 am-Third Sunday of every month- Mission Service

COMMUNITY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, FAIRVIEW, MONT. SUN Worship/SS, 11 am (MST)

CONCORDIA LUTHERAN CHURCH, MISSOURI SYNOD Rev John Frahm III, 18th & MAIN,; 572-9021 www.concordiawilliston.com SUN 9:30a.m. Worship; 11:00a.m. Sunday School for all ages

CORNERSTONE FBC, 1320 19th Ave. W. ; 572-2724; www.cornerstonefbc.us SUN SS & Connect Groups, 9:30 am; Worship Service, 10:45 am WED 7 p.m. Prayer Time THURS Worship, 7:17pm

EMMANUEL FREE LUTHERAN CHURCH, AFLC, 1213 3RD AVE W, Rev. Jon Wellumson; 572-0138 SUN : Sunday School, 9:30am; Worship at 11 a.m; WED Youth Bible Study, 6:30 p.m.

EPIPHANY CATHOLIC CHURCH, 112 6TH AVE NE, WATFORD CITY, Father Brian Gross; 842-3791 SAT Mass, 5:30 pm SUN Mass, 10:45 am

am, 12:10 pm, 7 pm

ST. MICHAEL and ALL ANGELS EPISCOPAL CHURCH, CARTWRIGHT; (701) 744-5310 or call (701) 570-4949 The Rev. Randy Keehn SUN Sunday worship at 10:30am

ST MICHAEL CATHOLIC CHURCH, RAY, Father Benny; 664-2445, 664-3531 SUN Mass, 9 am WED Mass, 9 am

ST OLAF LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA), GRENORA, 694-3411; Rev. Al Beyer, Interim Pastor SUN Sunday School, 10:00am Worship 9:00am

ST PETER’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 111 E 14TH ST, 572-9278; Rev. Michael K. Paul SUN 11:00 a.m. Worship Service

ST THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH, 213 N GILBERTSON, TIOGA, Father Benny; 664-2445, 664- 3531 SUN Mass, 9 am TUE -FRI Mass, 9:15 am SAT Mass, 7 pm

SALVATION ARMY, 15 MAIN, Captains Joshua & Rhegan Stansbury; 572-2921 SUN SS-9:30a, Holiness Meeting- 11a,TUE: Bible Study - 7p, Women’s Ministries - 8p WED: Youth Activities - 5p

TRINITY LUTHERAN (ELCA), 7 MILES SOUTH OF TIOGA, Pastor Sandy Anderson; 664-2580 SUN Worship, 11 am

TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH, 214 S. LINCOLN, SIDNEY, MT, Rev. David Warner SUN Worship, 11 am

TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH, RURAL WILLISTON; 572-2992 SUN Worship, 9 am

UNITED LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA), ZAHL, 694-3411; Rev. Al Beyer, Inerim Pastor SUN Sunday School, 10 a.m.; Worship, 11:00 a.m.

WATFORD CITY AREA LUTHERAN PARISH; Pastor Rob Favorite & Pastor Mark Honstein; 842-3244 SUN 10 a.m. Sunday School @ Banks Lutheran; 11 a.m. Worship @ Banks Lutheran; (first 2 Sundays of the month); 10 a.m. Sunday School @ Garden Lutheran; 11 a.m. Garden Lutheran Church (last 2 Sundays of the month); 9 a.m. First Lutheran Traditional Worship; 10 a.m. First Lutheran Sunday School; 11 a.m. First Lutheran Family Worship WED 6:15 p.m., First Lutheran Church

WATFORD CITY ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH, S. OF CITY, Pastor Sheldon McGorman, Nick Ybarra, Shannon Combs; Church 842-3353 SUN SS, 9:45 am; Worship, 10:45 am WED Bible quiz/Youth/Mpact/Adult Bible Study, 7-8 pm

WATFORD CITY SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH, 315 6TH ST NW, Pastor Peter J Simpson, 701- 580-1676 SAT Sabbath School for everyone, 10:00 am; Worship, 11:15 am, Potluck, 12:30pm WED Bible Study & Prayer, 7:00pm

WATFORD CITY WESLEYAN CHURCH, 304 2ND AVE NE, Pastor Jeff Ruggles; 842-2355 SUN SS, 10 am; Worship, 11 am WED Wed. Night Youth, 7 pm

WILLISTON BASIN FELLOWSHIP, 2419 9th Ave. W., Williston, 701- 770-0039 - Worshipping in TCS, Non-Denominational SUN 10 a.m. Coffee and Donuts; 10:30 a.m. Sunday Morning Service

WEST PRAIRIE LUTHERAN, 15 MILES WEST ON HWY 2, THEN NORTH 7 MILES ON WMS CTY #5 (GRENORA ROAD), Pastor Muriel J. Lippert; 774-8919 SUN Sunday School, 10:00 am, Coffee, 10:30am; Worship, 11:00 am

WILLISTON SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH FELLOWSHIP, 701 2ND AVE. W, WILLISTON ; Pastor Peter J Simpson, 701-850-5731 www.willistonadventist22.adve ntistchurchconnect.org SAT Sabbath School for everyone, 10 am; Worship, 11 am; Potluck, 12:30 TUES Prayer Meeting, 6:00pm (Attention) Pastor Larry J Duffy was never the pastor of the Harvest Seventh- Adventist Church. He attended and runs ‘Just in Him’ ministries to help people on the streets of Williston. We apologize for any misunderstand - ing regarding this matter.

WILMINGTON LUTHERAN CHURCH, ARNEGARD, Pastor Dan Paulson SUN Worship, 10:00 am

ZION LUTHERAN (AFLC), TIOGA, Pastor Richard Carr SUN Family Sunday School 9:00; Traditional Worship 10:30

SUN Worship 9am, 11am and 6 pm .WED Children & Youth activities 6:30pm

LIGHT OF CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH (AALC), 512 17th St. W., ; 774-3827 SUN Family Worship and Praise Service, 9:30 A.M; Family Fellowship Hour 10:30 am; Children’s Sunday School, 10:50am; Adult Bible Study, 11:10am THURS Women’s Bible Study 2 p.m.; FRI Men’s Friday Morning Bible Study @ Gramma Sharon’s 7 a.m.

LIGHT OF THE WORLD FELLOWSHIP, 22 2ND ST W, Pastoral Care; 774-1374 SAT Children’s church and prayer, 5 pm; Worship service, 6 pm

LIVING FAITH, PO BOX 992, 212 2nd AVE NW, WATFORD CITY, ND 58854 SUN 8:34 am WED Confirmation, 6 pm; Wednesday School, 7 pm; Bible Study, 7 pm

LUTHERAN BRETHREN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH, 213 26th St. E.; Pastor Ron Erickson, Pastor John Juhl; 572-6256 SUN Sunday School Bible Hour, 8:45am; Worship Service 10:00am; Guys, Guns, and Game Night, 5:30pm TUES Prayer Time, 1:30am WED Men’s Prayer Breakfast @ Dakota Farms, 6:30 a.m.; Kids Club, 6:30pm; Discovery Class, 6:50pm; Youth Group, 7:45pm FRI Bible Study @ Bethel Home 10 a.m.

MISSION LUTHERAN CHURCH, LCMC, Worshipping in the Chapel at Bethel Home, 1515 2nd Ave. W..; Pastor Kevin R. Beard, 701-580-7030 SUN Coffee 10:30 am, Worship Service at 11:00 am WED Bible Study, 7:00pm

NEW BEGINNINGS CHURCH OF GOD Meeting at, 6330 2nd Ave W, Frontier Museum, Pastor Wayne Sharbono, 352-895-4702 SUN Worship 10:30 a.m.

NEW HOPE WESLEYAN CHURCH, 721 W. 26TH ST.; 572-HOPE SUN Worship, 9:30am, 11:15am; WED Kids Quest,Youth Worship Middle School,High School, 7:30 pm

OUR LADY OF CONSOLATION CATHOLIC CHURCH Father Brian Gross, Alexander, ND SUN: 8:30 a.m. Mass

OUR REDEEMER’S LUTHERAN CHURCH (AALC), 1024 6TH ST W, ; 572-3724 SUN: 9:00am, Worship Service; 10:00am, Coffee Hour; 10:10am, Sunday School; 10:25am, Bible Study; 11:15am, Worship Service MON: TOPS 4:30pm; Bell Choir, 7:00pm; WED 5:00pm, Choir; Confirmation, 5:30pm; THUR TOPS, 6:00pm SAT 9:00am, Men’s Breakfast @ ORLC

OUR SAVIOR’S LUTHERAN CHURCH, RURAL WILLISTON; 572- 6363 SUN 11 AM Worship Service

RAY LUTHERAN CHURCH, 216 SCORE ST, Pastor Steve Anderson; 568-3371 SUN 9:30 a.m. Worship; 10:30am, Sunday School

SAVING GRACE COMMUNITY CHURCH 1701 4TH STREET WEST, WILLISTON 701-570-7169 SUN - Worship Service 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.

ST BONIFACE CATHOLIC CHURCH, GRENORA; 694-3743 SUN Mass, 9 am; HOLY DAY Masses, 8:30 am

ST JOHN THE BAPTIST CHURCH, TRENTON, Rev. Russell Kovash, 572-0236, 774-7967 SUN Mass, 11 am Holy Day Masses 7 am, 12:10 pm & 7 pm

ST JOHN’S LUTHERAN CHURCH, 300 2ND ST. S., FAIRVIEW, MT, 742-5332, Rev. David Warner SUN Adult Bible Study, 7:30 am; Worship, 8:30 am; SS, 9:45 am

ST JOSEPH’S CATHOLIC CHURCH, 106 6TH ST W, Rev. Russell Kovash, 572-0236 SUN Mass 9 am; MON-FRI Mass, 7 am SAT Confessions, 3:30-4:30 pm; Mass, 5 pm HOLY DAY MASSES, 7

EPPING LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pastor Steve Anderson; 568- 3376 SUN Worship, 10:00 a.m.; Sunday School, 11:00a.m.

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA), HWY 85, 15 MILES NORTH OF WILLISTON, Pastor Kay Reed, Pastor Jim Reeb; 572- 2667 SUN Worship, 10am Sanctuary; 9:30 am Chapel; Banquet West Supper, 5:30pm WED Evening Worship 6:30pm in the Chapel

FAITH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH, 219 1ST AVE W, Pastor Mark Britton; 572-7694 SUN 9:15am Sunday School; 9:45am, Coffee Fellowship; 10:45am, Worship Service; WED 6pm Youth Group grades 4-12; 7pm Choir THUR Quilting Group, 1pm; 7:00pm Scouts at the cabin SAT: 6:03 pm, GIFT Worship w/ free meal provided; 6:30 Worship begins

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, 302 NE 4TH ST, TIOGA, Pastor James Booth; 664-3573 SUN SS, 9:30 am; Worship w/Lord’s Supper, 10:45 am FRI Joint Service - New Hope, 12 Noon

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, 400 7TH AVE NW, WATFORD CITY, Rev. John R. Lane; 842-6978 SUN SS, 10 am; Worship, 11 am; KMHA Radio 91.3 FM, 11 am; Evening Worship (oilfield workers and others), 7 pm WED Fellowship Meal & Bible Study - Church Fellowship Hall, 7 pm SAT Oil Field Workers’ Breakfast - Church Fellowship Hall, 5:30-7 am

FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH, 916 MAIN, Pastor Martin Mock, Pastor Benjamin Loven; 572- 6363 SUN 8:30 a.m. Worship-Sanctuary; 9:30 a.m. Worship-Chapel; 11:00 a.m., Worship-sanctuary; 5:30 pm, Banquet West Supper WED 6:30 p.m. Worship

FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA), 313 S TORNING, TIOGA, Pastor Sandy Anderson; 664-2824 SUN SS, 9:30 am; Adult SS, 9:45 am; Worship, 11 am; Chapel @TMC-LTC, 4 pm; Annual Bake Sale, Sat, Dec 13 @ 2pm. Pie & Coffee Served.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, 315 4TH AVE E, WATFORD CITY, Rev. Sharon Norstog; 842-3408 SUN Worship, 10:30 am

FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH, WILLISTON COMMUNITY LIBRARY, Pastor Paul Licciardi (701) 818-7707 1302 Davidson Drive, Independent, K.J.B SUN: Worship, 11:00am Where the fundamentals are Preached

GLORIA DEI LUTHERAN CHURCH (ELCA), 1821 9TH AVE W, Pastor Jim & Kay Reeb; 572-2667 SUN Traditional Worship, 8:30 a.m..; Coffee Fellowship, 9:30 a.m. Contemporary Worship, 10:45 a.m. WED Fellowship Meal, 6:00pm; Worship, 7:00pm; Glory Band 8:00 p.m. SAT 8:00 a.m.,Breakfast Bible Study; 5:00 p.m. Worship

GOOD SHEPHERD LUTHERAN, CORNER OF 26TH ST and 9TH AVE W, Pastor Muriel J. Lippert; 774-8919, www.willistongoodshepherd.com SUN Worship, 9:00 a.m. Coffee, 10:00 am; Sunday School; 10:15 a.m

GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH, Wildrose; Pastor Zacharias Shipman & Pastor Emily Shipman SUN 10:00am, Worship; WED 7:00am, Men’s Breakfast

KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES, 572-8609 SUN Bible Discourse and Watchtower Study, 10am TUE Book study, 7:30pm

LIBERTY EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH, 506 W 14TH ST, 572-8767 Pastor Brian Martin SUN Prayer 9:30 a.m.; Nursery & Children’s Ministry 10 a.m.; Worship Service 10:15 a.m; Coffee Connection 11:30 a.m

LIFE CHURCH ASSEMBLY OF GOD, 1905 26TH ST W, Lead Pastor Chris Walstad, Youth Pastor Jordan Gunderson, Children’s Pastor Dan D angerfield; 572- 5042; www.lifechurchwilliston.com

CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH, 521 13TH AVE W; 572-7839

The Williston Herald would

like area churches to

send in updated

information on their church

services. Send the

information to the Williston

Herald, PO Box 1447, Williston, ND

58802 or Fax to

701-572-9563 or

advertising@ willistonherald.com

701-572-2487

2502 4th Ave W Williston, ND

www.petroleumservicesandtools.com

P.O. Box 1447 14 West 4th Street Williston, ND 58802

701-572-2165 1-800-950-2165 [email protected]

[email protected] [email protected]

The Williston Herald would

like area churches to

send in updated information on their church

services. Send the

information to the Williston

Herald, PO Box 1447, Williston, ND

58802

2503 4th Ave. West

701-572-7741 800-319-7741

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P.O. Box 1447 14 West 4th Street Williston, ND 58802

701-572-2165 1-800-950-2165 [email protected]

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Page 8: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

Jerry Burnes Managing Editor

701-572-2165Williston Herald

[email protected]

April 10, 2015 Religion/LifeReligion/LifeA8

XN

LV20

5943

WILLISTON COUNCIL FOR THE AGING INC.

18 Main StWilliston, ND 58801

Please feel free to continue to bring donations to our

location, or to the Williston Herald.

THANK YOU SO MUCH!!

Williston Council For � e AgingWould like to send out a heartfelt thank you to everyone in Williston for all the food donations, dry goods, and paper goods for the seniors. This has made a big impact on all of us here and saved us a lot for the past year. We are now back on our feet and moving forward and would like everyone to come down and see what all of your donations have done for the seniors. We have made many improvements down here at the center and are now going to add more activities to the schedule for the seniors to keep busy. With all the donations, we were able to

keep the meals on wheels program and our congregate meals going for another year. This makes sure that each senior gets one good nutritious meal a day.

The book of Aaron

AaronHanson

There is a lot you can learn about names used in the Gospels and Acts. What is fascinating is that Tal Ilan, a Jewish historian, cre-ated a database of around three thousand names used in Palestine around the lifetime of Jesus. She gath-ered them from documents, tombs, ossuaries. You name it she documented it. Then, a British New Testament scholar, Richard Bauckham, compared the names used in the time era to what is used in the Gospels and Acts.

Now, it’s widely believed that the four gospels were not written in the Palestin-ian area but hundreds of miles away from there.

Imagine, if you will, being put to the task of writing the history of an area hard-ly anyone you personally know has been there. Let’s say Poland. Would you know the names of the people who lived there fifty years ago? And, could you get the proportion right? Would you use the more popular names more often than the less popular names? That would be a difficult task to pull off.

This database gives us a good guide to see how well the gospels compare to this task. The finding is quite remark-able. The top six names in the area of Palestine around the time of Jesus are in order: Si-mon, Joseph, Lazarus, Judas, John and Jesus.

Take the name Simon. It is the most popular name in the New Testament, the most popular name in the works of Josephus, the top name on bone boxes, and the second most popular name in the Dead Sea Scrolls.

If we take the top two names in Israel at the time, Simon and Josephus, it com-prises 15.6% of all the males in Israel. If we take those two names, it is 18.2% of the names used in the Gospels and Acts. If you expand

that to the top 9 men’s names, it’s 41.5% in Israel, and 40.3% of all the names in the Gospels and Acts. That is either pure luck by the author, clever deceit or genuine knowledge of the area of the time. You can hardly call it luck, and there is no way someone would have knowledge of this to make a forgery.

Not only is a database cre-ated for Jewish names in Is-rael, but also for other areas. We can compare the list of popular names from region to region and the top names vary from different areas. This shows that the Gospel and Acts authors must have had intimate knowledge of the area in which they were writing about.

Going back to writing the history about Poland fifty years ago. Would you get this sort of detail right? It’s a long shot. You would have to be writing about what is true in order to ensure accuracy.

But wait, it gets better. We can compare these popular names which are used in the false gospels, such as the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Judas. What do we find? They get the frequency of names all wrong.

Then this is what is really cool. In Matthew 10:2-4 we get a list of the twelve dis-ciples. For popular names in the area at the time, people would have to disambiguate the name so people would know who was being talked about. I’m sure you’ve seen this demonstrated before. Say you are with a group of people and two people are named Tim. What is

commonly done? We pick out a feature about them to distinguish which Tim we are talking about. “The tall Tim,” for example. We call this a qualifier. In the list of the disciples several of the names have a qualifier, and some of them do not.

Here is a the verse along with the rank the name appears, compiled by Dr. Peter Williams. “Simon (1) called Peter, and Andrew his brother, and James (11) the son of Zebedee, and John (5) his brother; Philip (61) and Bartholomew (50); Thomas and Matthew (9) the tax col-lector; James (11) the son of Alphaeus, and Thaddaeus (39); Simon (1) the Canan-aean, and Judas (4) Iscariot, who also betrayed him.”

Notice, that if it is a popu-lar name, there is a qualifier so that people know which person is being talked about. And the less popular names like Thomas and Andrew, which didn’t even rank, and Thaddaus do not have qualifiers and it happens to be those names are not as popular. So, the author of Matthew knew which names to put a qualifier and what other names to not even bother. Only someone with intimate knowledge of the place would know a thing like that.

Why is all this important? Because this increases greatly the authenticity of the New Testament. This shows that the authors knew what they were writing about. They got the tough detail of getting the names right. Someone making up the story would have had results similar to the false gospels that arose around one hundred years later.

If you have a question about God, Christianity or the Bible, send an email to [email protected] and I will consider writing a column about it.

What can we learn from names?

Guest Columnist

Kathryn Lopez

David Mdzinarishvili/Reuters

An Orthodox Christian worshipper holds a lit candle during the Holy Week Good Friday service at Holy Trinity cathedral in Tbilisi, April 10.

Every presidential candi-date should meet persecuted Christians.

As a political firestorm broke lose just before Easter in and around Indiana, it quickly became clear that our society has lost the abil-ity to talk about religious liberty. Some see it as code for bigotry. Meanwhile, the word “tolerance” is bandied about by people insisting on an adherence to a form of secular intolerance.

A presidential candidate who truly wants to lead could help change that.

Pope Francis has said that there are at least as many martyrs today as during the times of the early Church. This isn’t an academic debate. And even as we’ve been touched by the testimonies of relatives of Christian martyrs in the Middle East and Africa, it still may seem a world away. A visit to that area from a American presidential candidate could lead the way in bringing the tragic and inspiring stories home.

The effort would serve multiple purposes. A trip to Iraq or Africa would mean actually meeting the people, getting to know and under-stand their lives and needs better, forging relationships. That can be of benefit for both security and humanitar-ian reasons.

Andrew Doran, co-founder of the advocacy group In Defense of Christians, says: “America ought to stand with those who share its val-ues. America invariably goes wrong by placing too much trust in faux allies, such as

the Morsi regime or the Maliki government or “moder-ate” Syrian rebels or the Gulf Arabs.”

Robert A. Destro, professor of law at the Catholic Uni-versity of America and founder of an interdisciplinary program in law and religion, adds: “Such a visit would also highlight the important role the Kurds and Jordanians are playing in the region. The sad truth is that the United States has no strategy: Everything we do over there ... is a reflection of domestic politics, not strategic think-ing about what’s in the best interests of the United States and of the long-suffering people of the region.”

“Religious freedom is a sacred space that must be protected in the name of civi-lization,” Nebraska Rep. Jeff Fortenberry, co-chair of the Caucus for Religious Minori-ties in the Middle East, tells me. “Middle Eastern Christi-anity ... has provided mul-tiple civil society benefits to Muslims -- including schools and hospitals. He adds: “Mili-tary might cannot ultimately win, but the demand for hu-man dignity can.”

The Christians today who know they may die simply for being Christian can teach us a thing or two about integrity, and they can show

us why it’s crucial that they remain where they are, in the birthplace of Christianity. As Destro points out, “Ameri-cans don’t know much about their Christian brothers and sisters over there.”

He adds a visit to the area by an American presidential candidate would be a “bo-nanza for the humanitarian agencies like Catholic Relief Services and World Vision.” For anyone seeking to be president, it would not only demonstrate some mature leadership, it would also be the decent thing to do.

Everyone benefits from protecting human dignity.

Speaking during a “reli-gious freedom summit” put on by New York Archbishop Cardinal Timothy Dolan just before Easter, an imam suggested that Muslims take a lead from Catholics and others who have worked to integrate their faith into a pluralistic society. Truth be told, Christians in the West have miles to go yet in terms of emulating Christ, but in walking that humble walk, by seeing God in others, they do make a difference.

When, not all that far from where Christ was crucified, modern-day martyrs are fac-ing similar fates for following Him, we can all learn a thing or two about just how precious religious freedom is to life, communities and civilization.

Kathryn Jean Lopez is senior fellow at the National Review Institute, editor-at-large of National Review Online and founding director of Catholic Voices USA.

Persecuted Christians abroad can provide lessons for us all

Page 9: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

Mark JonesSports Editor

[email protected]

FridayApril 10, 2015

B1

• UpNext

• Shorts

SportsSports

DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Tigers set a modern-day American League record Thursday by extending their season-starting shutout streak to 24 innings before Minne-sota scored.

After blanking new Twins manager Paul Molitor’s team in the first two games of the season — started by David Price and Anibal Sanchez — Shane Greene shut out Minnesota for the first six innings to break the record held by the 1947 Chicago White Sox.

The Tigers topped the previous mark when Greene got through the fifth.

According to STATS, the longest such streak in the majors since 1912 is 32 in-nings by the 1963 St. Louis Cardinals.

TigerssetALrecordforshutoutstreaktoopenseason

COLLEGE HOCKEY

WPRDisacceptingsoftballregistration

The Williston Parks and Recreation District is now accepting softball registra-tion.

The registration dead-line is April 24. Your roster, payment and alcohol (if you want one) must be turned in before this date.

The league will cost $824 for doubleheaders and $669.50 for single games.

Anything turned in after the registration deadline will be charged $50.

Registration is available online at www.williston-parks.com or in person at the Williston Area Recre-ation Center.

The season will start May 4 and games will be played at Western Star Softball Complex, weather permitting.

There will be a manda-tory managers meeting on April 22 at the ARC at 6 p.m.

For more information, contact Jake at 774-9773.

GlowintheParkFunRun/WalkisMay8

The Williston State Col-lege athletic department has announced its Glow in the Park Fun Run/Walk will be held May 8 at the Upper Missouri Valley Fairgrounds.

The route will be through Spring Lake Park. Participants will receive a T-shirt that glows int he dark plus glow in the dark bands. Check-in will begin at 8 p.m. The race will begin at 9 p.m. The regis-tration deadline is April 30 and the fee is $30.

For more information, call 774-4546.

Fundraisingeffortsfor2016BRWShasbegun

The 2016 Babe Ruth World Series Commit-tee is continuing on with fundraising efforts for the 2016 13- to 15-year-old Babe Ruth Series that will be held Aug. 13-20 at Ardean Aafedt Stadium.

The committee has a goal of raising $400,000 that will be used toward stadium improvements and Series operating costs.

The week-long event will feature eight regional champions as well as two teams from North Dakota.

For more information, call Larry at 770-7897.

Editor’s note: Schedules are subject to change.

Today Boys Baseball

Williston High Schoolat Bismarck Century, 4:30 p.m.

Girls TennisWilliston State College

at Minot Invitational

Saturday College BaseballWilliston State College

vs. Lake Region State College (2), 1 p.m.

College SoftballWilliston State College

vs. Lake Region State College (2), 1 p.m.

Girls TennisWilliston State College

at Minot InvitationalBoys Baseball

Williston High Schoolat Bismarck St. Mary’s

BU holds off North Dakota 5-3

CHARLES KRUPA | ASSOCIATED PRESS

Boston University forward Chase Phelps, right, tries to keep North Dakota forwrd Connor Gaarder off the puck during the first period of a semifinal at the NCAA Frozen Four hockey tournament Thursday in Boston.

Boston to play Providence for national championship

BOSTON (AP) — Jack Eichel scored two goals and Boston University held off North Dakota 5-3 on Thurs-day night in the Frozen Four to advance to the champion-ship game.

The Terriers (28-7-5) will face Hockey East rival Providence (25-13-2) in the title game Saturday night at TD Garden. The Friars beat Nebraska-Omaha 4-1 in the first semifinal.

Eichel opened the scoring on a power play in the first period, Brandon Hickey also had a power-play score and A.J. Greer and Doyle Somerby had second-period goals.

Matt O’Connor made 36 saves for the Terriers, seeking their sixth NCAA title. Providence, making its second trip to the champion-ship, is trying to win for the first time in school history.

Luke Johnson, Troy Stecher and Connor Gaarder scored for North Dakota (29-10-3). Zane McIntyre stopped 22 shots.

The Terriers reached the title game for the first time since capturing the crown in 2009. BU is playing about 2 miles from its campus and where it won the Beanpot and league tournaments this year.

BU led 4-1 entering the final period, but Gaarder’s power-play goal cut it to 4-3 with 3:43 to play.

North Dakota pulled McIntyre with 1:33 left, and Eichel sealed it with an empty-netter.

BU used its power play to take a 2-0 lead in the first. The Terriers have 33 power-play goals in their last 25 games.

The Terriers opened the scoring 5 minutes into the game when Eichel, a finalist for the Hobey Baker Award as college hockey’s top player, shoveled in a back-hander from the bottom of the left circle.

They made it 2-0 when Hickey fired a slap shot as he was falling to one knee that slipped behind McIntyre.

WILLISTON STATE COLLEGE

2 WSC athletes earn Player of Week honors

MARK JONES | WILLISTON HERALD

Williston State College’s McKayla Haugeberg takes a lead off of first during Thursday’s Mon-Dak Confer-ence game against Dawson Community College at Dakota Parkway.

Haugeberg honored in softball, Phelts is earns baseball awardBY MARK JONESWILLISTON HERALD

WILLISTON — Over the years, Williston State College athletes have been recognized repeatedly for their success in a competing setting.

The latest pair of Teton athletes to be hon-ored came Thursday.

McKayla Hauge-berg was named as the Mon-Dak

Conference Player of the Week in softball.

Corbin Phelts was tabbed as the Player of the Week in baseball.

Haugeberg, a sophomore from Watford City, was honored for her efforts in a four-game sweep of Dakota College at Bottineau last weekend.

She finished the weekend 8-for-10 at the plate with two triples, a double and knocked in nine runs.

The shortstop also scored seven runs.

On Thursday, the Lady Tetons split a doubleheader with Dawson Community College, winning 12-4 in the opener and losing 8-6 in the nightcap.

In baseball, Phelts, a fresh-man from San Antonio, went 8-for-11 at the plate in four games last weekend.

He had a triple, a double, three RBIs, four runs scored and three stolen bases.

The Williston State College baseball team will host Lake Region State College on Saturday.

ND hunter satisfaction is on the reboundOne of the primary

benchmarks that North Dakota Game

and Fish Department biologists use to assess deer populations and hunter sat-isfaction is the success rate by gun hunters.

Over time, a success rate of around 70 percent means hunters are generally satis-fied with deer numbers and hunting op-portunities.

Last year, the Game and Fish Depart-ment made available 48,000 deer gun licenses, and all licenses were issued. About 43,500 of those who were is-sued deer gun licenses actu-ally hunted, taking ap-proximately 26,300 deer, for a success rate of about 60 percent. Each hunter spent an average of 4.4 days in the field.

While 60 percent success is somewhat below the 70 percent benchmark, it is a bit higher than the 55 percent overall hunter success in 2013.

Among the various license types, hunter success for antlered white-tailed deer was 60 percent, and antler-less whitetail was 56 percent.

Mule deer buck success was 82 percent. Game and Fish did not issue any mule deer doe licenses in 2014.

Hunters with any-antlered or any-antlerless licenses generally harvest white-tailed deer, as these licenses are predominantly in units with mostly whitetails. Buck hunters had a success rate of 65 percent, while doe hunters had a success rate of 63 percent.

Game and Fish issued 932 muzzleloader licenses in 2014, and 814 muzzleloader hunters harvested 356 white-tailed deer (171 antlered, 185 antlerless). Hunter success was 44 percent, with each hunter spending an average of 5.4 days in the field.

In addition, a record 23,450 people purchased archery li-censes (21,500 resident, 1,950 nonresident) in 2014. Of those archery license hold-ers, 19,918 actually hunted and harvested 6,046 deer (5,593 whitetails, 453 mule deer), for a success rate of 30 percent. Bucks accounted for 78 percent of the harvest.

Leier is a biologist for the North Dakota Game and Fish.

ND Outdoors

Doug Leier

Spieth has 64 for best opening round at Masters in 19 yearsGOLF

AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) — Jordan Spieth had everything go his way Thursday in the Masters, so he should have known how the shot would turn out without even asking.

In the lead and in the trees, he slashed a 7-iron toward the green and started barking instructions at the golf ball until he saw it bound onto the 14th green. He never saw it smack into the pin and settle a few feet away. He only heard one of the loudest cheers of the afternoon.

“What happened?” Spieth said to his caddie.

Something special.With six birdies in a seven-hole

stretch, Spieth flirted with a major championship record he didn’t know existed and atoned for his lone mistake with one last birdie putt for an 8-under

64. It was the best opening round at Augusta National in 19 years, gave him a three-shot lead and stole plenty of buzz from the Grand Slam bid of Rory McIlroy and the return of Tiger Woods.

“It’s one of the better rounds I’ve ever played,” he said.

That wasn’t the case for McIlroy, though his round wasn’t awful. The world’s No. 1 player saved par four times on the front nine and scratched out a 71. Woods had three birdies in his round of 73, and while it was the first time since 2007 that he shot over par in the first round of the Masters, it was looked upon as progress. Most peculiar about his first round in two months was that his short game saved him.

But the day belonged to Spieth, a 21-year-old Texan who at least got into the Masters record book as the young-

est to lead after the first round.An even more significant record was

within his reach, and he didn’t even know it.

Spieth went to 8 under with that birdie on the 14th hole, and then he blistered a driver down the fairway on the par-5 15th hole, just 228 yards to the hole. That’s when he started thinking about a 62 because he had never shot 10-under par as a pro.

But he hit hybrid over the green and wound up making bogey. Only later did Spieth realize that 63 was the best score in any major, and only two players had done at the Masters — Greg Norman in the first round of 1996 and Nick Price in the third round of 1986.

“So that’s a little frustrating,” he said before he paused with a wry smile. “But I’m certainly OK with the day.”

Page 10: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

B2 FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 Sports

Scooby-DooMidcontinent® presents

at Kids Day Out in Williston!

TM & © 2015 Cartoon Network and/or Hanna-Barbera and/or Warner Bros. All Rights Reserved.

Saturday, April 1810am - 3pm

Raymond FamilyCommunity Center

Join the Kids Day Out funand come meet Scooby Dooas seen on Cartoon Network

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Please email photos [email protected] or mail them to

PO Box 1447 • Williston, ND 58802.

The cost is only $32 and payment can be mailed in with the photo or by calling 701-572-2165 to pay with a credit card.

Please remember to include the fi rst and last name of the student, as well as the parent’s names.

BABY PHOTO!

by featuring them in a special page we are putting together showing their cutest shots!

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Kurt Bjorgen • 701.774.0348Technology Advisor

WA N T T O S AV E U P T O 3 0 %

ON YOUR PRINT COSTS?Ask me about Marco’s Managed Print Services.

Record 7 Kentucky players off to 2015 NBA draft

LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) — A record seven players are leaving a mighty Kentucky team after a season that fell two wins short of a championship. They can look forward to a possible reunion in a couple of months at the NBA draft.

The soon-to-be-former Wildcats gathered at their practice gym and said they will turn pro: 7-footers Willie Cauley-Stein and Dakari Johnson, twin guards Andrew and Aaron Harrison, freshman forwards Karl-Anthony Towns and Trey Lyles and freshman backup guard Devin Booker.

The exodus, which featured Kentucky’s top seven scorers, could have been even greater.

“If Alex Poythress doesn’t get hurt, it would’ve been eight,” coach John Calipari said, referring to the junior forward who sustained a season-ending torn knee ligament in December.

Such exits have become the norm in Lexington, a one-and-done environment where players and the program thrive despite single-sea-son stays. Calipari has developed 19 NBA draft picks, including 15 first-round selections and two No. 1 overall picks.

The 6-11 Towns could be the first player chosen overall on June 25. Cauley-Stein and Lyles could soon follow, with both projected as possible lottery selections. Booker is also a potential first-rounder, with the rest projected to go in the second.

That draft forecast persuaded them to take the next step in moves that had been long expected since their campus arrivals.

“It was a tough decision for all of us, but we wanted to chase our dreams,” Aaron Har-rison said.

Seated before a backdrop of blown-up trading cards of recent Wildcats standouts now in the NBA, Kentucky’s largest group of would-be pros explained their decisions. Calipari joined them after saying this week that five to seven players could enter.

Confirmation was more visual than verbal, with Calipari asking those who were leaving to stand. After they all looked at each other and hesitated, they stood up to applause before answering questions on the podium and then separately.

This year’s team made a determined run at history with a school-record 38-game win-ning streak that kept them ranked No. 1 all season. They were the prohibitive favorites to win title No. 9 and become the first un-beaten champions since Indiana in 1976.

Then came Saturday night’s 71-64 loss to Wisconsin in the Final Four. That imme-diately raised the question of how many Wildcats would be leaving. After all, many of them surprised Calipari and others last spring by deciding to return for second and even third seasons in an effort to win a championship and improve their draft stock.

“Now, it’s about each individual making the decision,” Calipari said, “not based on what’s right for this uni-versity, not based on what’s right for me and our staff, but what’s right for them and their families.”

The gamble appears to have worked out for players such as Cauley-Stein, who chose to return for his junior season after missing last year’s title game with an ankle injury in the NCAA Tournament. The quick, agile shot-blocking threat was among the country’s best and now stands to make millions as a possible lottery pick along with Towns.

“Basketball happened to be the last thing I played, but now I get a chance to be in the league,” he said. “I get a chance to take a step forward and do something I’ve been dreaming about since I was 7 years old and pretending that I’m playing against Tim Duncan. You grow up dreaming and you get a chance to do it. It’s a wonderful feeling.”

Though Calipari now has to hit the re-cruiting trail to replenish half his roster, the outlook seems bright with the return of 5-9 guard Tyler Ulis, 6-9 forward Marcus Lee and possibly the 6-8 Poythress, who the coach said will talk with his family about his future. Kentucky also has three top recruits coming in.

That means Kentucky could be right back in the mix next spring, though it will indeed be hard to top what these Wildcats built.

“I’m so happy with this moment,” Towns said, “not just for myself, but for the other ones that they get to chase their dreams also.”

Hurley to take over at Arizona StateTEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Bobby Hurley grew

up around basketball, playing for a coach-ing great who just happened to be his father. He was a feisty point guard who led Duke to consecutive national championships and proved his coaching chops by leading Buf-falo to the NCAA Tournament during his second season.

With a background like that, he proved to be the perfect choice to take over Arizona State’s up-and-down program.

Arizona State hired Hurley to replace Herb Sendek on Thursday, hoping the cerebral-yet-passionate former point guard can lead the Sun Devils to consistent success.

“Bobby is energetic, passionate and tough, and his contagious competitive fire will bring unmatched vigor to our men’s bas-ketball program,” Arizona State athletic director Ray Anderson said in a statement. “A teacher, first and foremost, he is a proven winner as both a player and a coach, and understands the steps it takes to be a cham-pion.”

Arizona State’s program could use a lift.Though universally respected for his intel-

lect and forthright ways, Sendek could not turn the Sun Devils into consistent winners. Arizona State reached the NCAA Tourna-ment twice during his nine seasons, most recently in 2014, and struggled to gain a

foothold in the deep Pac-12.The Sun Devils labored this season after

losing key players from the NCAA Tourna-ment team and Sendek was fired on March 24 after going 155-133 in the desert.

Arizona State had been in serious talks with Duke assistant coach Jeff Capel, but he took his name out of the running earlier this week.

The Sun Devils quickly turned their atten-tion toward Buffalo, where the 43-year-old Hurley turned the Bulls into a winner in a short time.

Buffalo won 19 games in Hurley’s first season and had a breakthrough in 2014, winning the program’s first Mid-American Conference title while leading the Bulls to their first NCAA Tournament berth.

Buffalo lost to West Virginia in the Round of 64, and Hurley reached an agreement on a contract extension after he became the first coach in school history to win more than 40 games (42) his first two seasons.

“Our purpose is to mold championship-caliber young men on the court, in the classroom and around the community,” Hurley said in a statement. “We are here to set a new standard, to make regular trips to the NCAA Tournament and regularly compete for conference and national titles.”

American LeagueAll Times EDTEast Division W L Pct GBBaltimore 2 1 .667 —Boston 2 1 .667 —Toronto 2 1 .667 —New York 1 2 .333 1Tampa Bay 1 2 .333 1Central Division W L Pct GBDetroit 3 0 1.000 —Kansas City 3 0 1.000 —Cleveland 2 1 .667 1Chicago 0 3 .000 3Minnesota 0 3 .000 3West Division W L Pct GBLos Angeles 2 1 .667 —Oakland 2 2 .500 ½Texas 2 2 .500 ½Houston 1 2 .333 1Seattle 1 2 .333 1___

Wednesday’s GamesDetroit 11, Minnesota 0Philadelphia 4, Boston 2N.Y. Yankees 4, Toronto 3Tampa Bay 2, Baltimore 0Kansas City 7, Chicago White Sox 5Cleveland 2, Houston 0Oakland 10, Texas 0L.A. Angels 5, Seattle 3

Thursday’s GamesDetroit 7, Minnesota 1Kansas City 4, Chicago White Sox 1Cleveland 5, Houston 1Texas 10, Oakland 1Boston 6, Philadelphia 2Toronto 6, N.Y. Yankees 3

Friday’s GamesToronto (Buehrle 0-0) at Baltimore (B.Norris 0-0), 3:05 p.m.Houston (McHugh 0-0) at Texas (D.Holland 0-0), 4:05 p.m.Detroit (Simon 0-0) at Cleveland (McAllister 0-0), 4:10 p.m.Minnesota (Milone 0-0) at Chicago White Sox (Noesi 0-0), 4:10 p.m.Boston (Miley 0-0) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 0-0), 7:05 p.m.Tampa Bay (Andriese 0-0) at Miami (Haren 0-0), 7:10 p.m.Kansas City (J.Vargas 0-0) at L.A. Angels (Santiago 0-0), 10:05 p.m.Seattle (T.Walker 0-0) at Oakland (Pomeranz 0-0), 10:05 p.m.

Saturday’s GamesBoston at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.Seattle at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Detroit at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Miami, 4:10 p.m.Toronto at Baltimore, 7:05 p.m.Houston at Texas, 8:05 p.m.Kansas City at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesDetroit at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Miami, 1:10 p.m.Toronto at Baltimore, 1:35 p.m.Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m.Houston at Texas, 3:05 p.m.Kansas City at L.A. Angels, 3:35 p.m.Seattle at Oakland, 4:05 p.m.Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 8:05 p.m.

National League All Times EDTEast Division W L Pct GBAtlanta 3 0 1.000 —New York 2 1 .667 1Philadelphia 1 2 .333 2Washington 1 2 .333 2Miami 0 3 .000 3

Central Division W L Pct GBCincinnati 3 0 1.000 —Chicago 1 1 .500 1½St. Louis 1 1 .500 1½Milwaukee 0 3 .000 3Pittsburgh 0 3 .000 3West Division W L Pct GBColorado 3 0 1.000 —San Francisco 3 1 .750 ½Los Angeles 2 1 .667 1Arizona 1 2 .333 2San Diego 1 3 .250 2½___

Wednesday’s GamesChicago Cubs 2, St. Louis 0Philadelphia 4, Boston 2Washington 2, N.Y. Mets 1Atlanta 2, Miami 0Cincinnati 5, Pittsburgh 4, 11 inningsColorado 5, Milwaukee 4, 10 inningsSan Francisco 5, Arizona 2L.A. Dodgers 7, San Diego 4

Thursday’s GamesCincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 2N.Y. Mets 6, Washington 3San Francisco 1, San Diego 0, 12 inningsBoston 6, Philadelphia 2

Friday’s GamesChicago Cubs (T.Wood 0-0) at Colorado (Matzek 0-0), 4:10 p.m.Washington (G.Gonzalez 0-0) at Philadelphia (Williams 0-0), 7:05 p.m.St. Louis (Lackey 0-0) at Cincinnati (Marquis 0-0), 7:10 p.m.Tampa Bay (Andriese 0-0) at Miami (Haren 0-0), 7:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets (Niese 0-0) at Atlanta (Stults 0-0), 7:35 p.m.Pittsburgh (Locke 0-0) at Milwaukee (Fiers 0-0), 8:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers (Anderson 0-0) at Arizona (Anderson 0-0), 9:40 p.m.San Francisco (Lincecum 0-0) at San Diego (Morrow 0-0), 10:10 p.m.

Saturday’s GamesSt. Louis at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Miami, 4:10 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 7:05 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m.Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 7:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Colorado, 8:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 8:10 p.m.San Francisco at San Diego, 8:40 p.m.

Sunday’s GamesSt. Louis at Cincinnati, 1:10 p.m.Tampa Bay at Miami, 1:10 p.m.N.Y. Mets at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m.Washington at Philadelphia, 1:35 p.m.Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 2:10 p.m.Chicago Cubs at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 4:10 p.m.San Francisco at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.

All Times EDTEASTERN CONFERENCEAtlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAx-Montreal 81 49 22 10 108 217 186x-Tampa Bay 81 49 24 8 106 259 209x-Detroit 81 42 25 14 98 233 221Ottawa 81 42 26 13 97 235 214Boston 81 41 27 13 95 211 208Florida 81 37 29 15 89 203 221Toronto 81 30 44 7 67 208 258Buffalo 80 23 49 8 54 159 268Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAN.Y. Rangers 81 52 22 7 111 248 190x-Washington 81 45 25 11 101 240 199x-N.Y. Islanders 80 46 28 6 98 245 224Pittsburgh 80 42 26 12 96 218 207Columbus 80 40 35 5 85 227 244

Philadelphia 81 33 30 18 84 214 231New Jersey 81 32 35 14 78 179 213Carolina 81 30 40 11 71 188 224

WESTERN CONFERENCECentral Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAy-St. Louis 81 50 24 7 107 244 199x-Nashville 81 47 24 10 104 231 204x-Chicago 81 48 27 6 102 227 186x-Minnesota 81 46 27 8 100 229 197Winnipeg 80 42 26 12 96 225 208Dallas 81 40 31 10 90 257 259Colorado 80 37 31 12 86 215 225Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GAy-Anaheim 81 50 24 7 107 234 225x-Vancouver 80 46 29 5 97 231 217Calgary 80 44 29 7 95 237 210Los Angeles 80 39 26 15 93 215 201San Jose 80 39 32 9 87 224 227Edmonton 80 24 43 13 61 192 274Arizona 80 24 48 8 56 169 265

NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss.

x-clinched playoff spot

y-clinched division

Wednesday’s GamesColumbus 5, Toronto 0Washington 3, Boston 0Dallas 4, Anaheim 0

Thursday’s GamesOttawa 3, N.Y. Rangers 0Carolina 3, Philadelphia 1Montreal 4, Detroit 3, OTTampa Bay 4, New Jersey 3, OTFlorida 4, Boston 2St. Louis 2, Chicago 1Minnesota 4, Nashville 2Winnipeg at Colorado, 9 p.m.Los Angeles at Calgary, 9 p.m.San Jose at Edmonton, 9:30 p.m.Arizona at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

Friday’s GamesN.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 7 p.m.Buffalo at Columbus, 7 p.m.

Saturday’s GamesOttawa at Philadelphia, 12:30 p.m.N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 12:30 p.m.Calgary at Winnipeg, 3 p.m.San Jose at Los Angeles, 3 p.m.Minnesota at St. Louis, 3 p.m.Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 7 p.m.Montreal at Toronto, 7 p.m.New Jersey at Florida, 7 p.m.Columbus at N.Y. Islanders, 7 p.m.Detroit at Carolina, 7 p.m.Boston at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m.Nashville at Dallas, 8 p.m.Chicago at Colorado, 9 p.m.Anaheim at Arizona, 9 p.m.Edmonton at Vancouver, 10 p.m.

All Times EDTWednesday’s Games

Washington 119, Philadelphia 90Orlando 105, Chicago 103Boston 113, Detroit 103Toronto 92, Charlotte 74Atlanta 114, Brooklyn 111Indiana 102, New York 86Memphis 110, New Orleans 74Cleveland 104, Milwaukee 99San Antonio 110, Houston 98Denver 119, L.A. Lakers 101Utah 103, Sacramento 91Dallas 107, Phoenix 104Portland 116, Minnesota 91

Thursday’s GamesChicago 89, Miami 78Portland at Golden State, late

Friday’s GamesToronto at Orlando, 7 p.m.Charlotte at Atlanta, 7:30 p.m.Indiana at Detroit, 7:30 p.m.Boston at Cleveland, 7:30 p.m.Washington at Brooklyn, 7:30 p.m.Milwaukee at New York, 7:30 p.m.Phoenix at New Orleans, 8 p.m.Sacramento at Oklahoma City, 8 p.m.San Antonio at Houston, 8 p.m.Dallas at Denver, 9 p.m.Memphis at Utah, 9 p.m.Minnesota at L.A. Lakers, 10:30 p.m.

Saturday’s GamesNew York at Orlando, 7 p.m.Toronto at Miami, 7:30 p.m.Philadelphia at Chicago, 8 p.m.Memphis at L.A. Clippers, 10 p.m.Utah at Portland, 10 p.m.

Pro Hockey

Pro Hockey Pro Basketball

Page 11: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

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300. For Rent

OFFICE SUITE FORLease

Approximately 1450sq. ft., may be

subdivided. Receptionarea and private

offices. Close to Cityand County offices,

Courthouse, andDowntown Williston.Ideal for client basedbusinesses, landmen,etc. Parking available.Call (410) 200-1751

290. For Lease

55 PLUS WANTPart time work? Not

day labor, seniors onlycall Williston Office701-774-9675 or

877-314-7627

250. Help Wanted

NOW HIRINGSAFETY

Coordinator/Directorfor Industrial

Equipment sales andservice. 2 years ofexperience. Send

resume tobkarlstrom@iessinc.

comFor Inquiries call701-572-2393

NEED HELP? LETthe Williston Herald dothe work for you!Place your help want-ed ad in the WillistonHerald classified ads.Call (701)572-2165 forhelp to set up an adthat will get results-FAST!

MAINTENANCETECH 2ND

Shift!Starting pay $20.00

per hour2 years training or

experience inmaintenance.Experience in

electro/mechanicalequipment preferred.

An AA degree inmechanical, electrical,

or industrialmaintenance a plus.

Raises available at 90days, 6 mos and 1

year based onperformance.JB Group is a

STRONG companywith STRONG pay

and STRONGbenefits.

Come experience theJ&B Way!To apply:

Visit our website:www.jbgroup.com

Click companyinformation,Employment

Opportunities.

Help Wanted- Family owned

company- Derrick Hand for a

workover rig- Experience preferred

but not required- CDL not required butis encouraged to get

one after hired- Medical, Dental andVision after 2 months

- Paid vacation- Would work

5-6 days a week- Pre-employment andrandom drug testingContact Coltson orTammi Warren at(701) 744-9007

FULL TIME HVACTechnician opening.

Minimum 2yrexperience desiredand must hold validdrivers license and

pass pre employmentdrug test. Download

application atwww.cllinfootco.com

and fax to701-775-2194.

FULL TIMECOMMERCIAL

Sheet Metal Installerneeded. Minimum 2

yearsexperience desiredand must pass preemployment drug

screen. Full benefitsoffered. Download

application atwww.cllinfootco.com

and fax to701-775-2194

250. Help Wanted

FT CUSTOMERSERVICE

REPRESENTATIVENEEDED

The Williston Heraldis now seeking a fulltime customer serv-

icerepresentative.

Candidate will handlephone and walk-in

customers and assistthe circulation man-ager as needed.Thiscandidate must also

possess strongcomputer skills in

microsoft office suitesoftware, must be

able to pass a back-ground check, have

reliable transportationand a valid driverslicense and vehicleinsurance.We offer ateam-oriented work

environment, anexcellent benefitspackage for all fulltime employees.

including medical ,dental, vision and

401K. Please applyin person to TammyBritt at 14 4th StreetW, Williston, ND orcall 701-572-1965

EOE

EARN EXTRAINCOME

Delivering TheWilliston Herald

Newspaper Carriersare independent

contractors and areresponsible for

delivering the WillistonHerald to subscribersMon- Fri 6:00 pm andSunday mornings by9:00am. Prospectsmust have a validdriverʼs license &current vehicle

insurance. Newspapercarriers are also re-

sponsible formaintaining and usingtheir own vehicle fordeliveries, hiring and

training substitutedrivers and increasing

sales on route.Current availableroutes are in the

Williston area. Apply inperson at The

Williston HeraldCirculation Dept. 144th ST. W Williston ,

ND 58801.701-572-2165. Ask for

Heather Taylor orTammy Britt.

BLATTNERENERGY,

INC. is seeking thefollowing safety

conscious,experienced

personnel for ourprojects

nationwide:Mechanics (CDL

required) Oilers (CDLwith Hazmatand Tanker

endorsementsrequired) All job

offers are contingentupon receiving a

negative drug/alcoholtest result and a

satisfactoryphysical examination

designed solely todetermine your

physical ability toperform the duties of

the position beingoffered to you. Field

employees aresubject to random

drugtesting. Must have

transportation to andfrom the jobsite. If

interestedplease send aresume to Meg

Johnson,Human Resources,

392 County Road 50,Avon, MN 56310;

complete anapplicationon-line at

HYPERLINK"http://www.

blattnerenergy.com"www. blattnerenergy

com; or call1-888-356-2307 to

request anapplication EEO

Minori- ties/ Women/Disabled/Veterans

250. Help Wanted

AVI ROCKYMOUNTAIN

is a looking for aSelf-Motivated,

Technical OutsideSalesman to cover

the Bakken. AVI is aManufacturers Rep

Company thatspecializes in

Automation, Valvesand Instrumentation

including BurnerManagement

Systems, Fire andGas Detection, Flow& Moisture Meters,Pressure Switches,Chemical Injection

Pumps, ESD Valves,Pigging Valves &

Pipeline Ball, Checkand Gate Valves.

The qualified candi-date will have

Technical Salesexperience in the

Bakken Oil and GasProduction and

Processing Marketsand a Technicalbackground or

exposure to thesetypes of products.

AVI offers a competi-tive salary with

excellent commissionplan to office out of

your house within thegreater Bakken area.In addition AVI offers

a Company Truck,Computer, Phone,

Benefits andExpenses. Qualified

and interestedapplicants shouldsubmit resume to

[email protected]

250. Help Wanted

FOR SALE: 2010Royal International 5thwheel Model 36Max1,custom made, 3 slide

outs, dual ac, fire-place, washer, dryer,and dishwasher, 5500

watt built in Onangenerator, fiberglass

roof, automaticawnings, top of the

line model. Original listprice $147,000.

Currently being pulledby 2011 Chevy

Silverado 1 ton duallyextended cab 6.6

diesel duramax enginewith tow package andexhaust brake. Truckis $27,000 5th wheelis $59,000. Can buy

5th wheel or as apackage.

586-201-9210

FOR SALE: 2010Royal International 5thwheel Model 36Max1,custom made, 3 slide

outs, dual ac, fire-place, washer, dryer,and dishwasher, 5500

watt bulit in Onangenerator, fiberglass

roof, automaticawnings, top of the

line model. Original listprice $147,000.

Currently being pulledby 2011 Chevy

Siverado 1 ton duallyextended cab 6.6

diesel duramax enginewith tow package andexhaust break. Truckis $27,000 5th wheelis $59,000. Can buy

5th wheel or as apackage.

586-201-9210

230. Recreation

2009 FRIENDSHIPMOBILE

Home (To Be Moved)3BR/2BA all

appliances andstorage shed$49,500Call

701-770-2137

220. Mobile Homes

ONLINEall theTime

www.willistonherald

.com

190. Misc. for Sale

STEEL BUILDINGENERGY Star

qualifiedDepreciation

& other savingsCall for dealCan Erect

701.214.4671

CHECK OUT THE ex-citing selection of newSchult and Bonnavillamanufactured andmodular homes.Liechty Homes, Inc.Hwy. 83 South of Mi-not. Custom orderswelcome. 1-800-872-4120.

190. Misc. for Sale

1997 FORD F250New tires, High miles,5 speed. Runs well.

1965 Chevell Malibu2 door,hard top,

excellent parts/car.2004 Z350 Nissan,

Excellentcondition.Have truckand goose kneck flatbed trailer will haul for

you. For moreinformation call701-334-1650

120. Used Cars& Trucks

SEED FOR SALEBarley- Tradition

CelebrationInnovation

Durum- Alkabo Di-vide Grenora, TiogaHal Hickel • Ray, ND

701-568-3927 or701-570-3469

80. Farm Section

THE WILLISTON Her-ald is committed tohelping you sell yourreal estate. Call (701)-572-2165 to placeyour ad. You wonʼt bedisappointed.

Stop payingoutrageous Rent!Own your home andland Bring your familyto Williston in FAMILYfriendly Subdivision1500-1700 FT, 3-4bed/2bath, 3.5 mi NWof Walmart in Willis-ton. You own Thehome AND the lotStarting at $1400/MO.Call 701-369-0266

LOOKING FOR AHOUSE?www.basinbrokers.com

FOR SALE BY BID:HOUSE BUILT BYBPS CAREER &

TECH ED STUDENTS- 28'x46' (1,288sqft)single story, three

bedrooms, two baths.Ready to be moved,

meets all buildingcodes. Bid minimum of$66,000 accompaniedby a certified check or

money order in theamount of $1,000 is

due by 2:00 pmTuesday, May 5, 2015

at the office ofBusiness and

Operations Manager,806 N Washington

Street, Bismarck, ND58501. Purchaser is

responsible for local &state sales tax. House

must be moved by8/17/15. Contact Dave

Peterson, carpentryinstructor, at

323-4340, Ext 3054,for further info.

40. Real Estate

EQUAL HOUSINGOPPORTUNITY

All real estate adver-tising in this newspa-per is subject to theFederal Fair HousingAct, which makes it il-legal to advertise anypreference, limitation,or discrimination bas-ed on race, color, re-ligion, sex, handicap,familial status or na-tional origin, in thesale, rental or financ-ing of housing or anintention to make anysuch preference, limi-tation or discrimina-tion. Familial status in-cludes children underthe age of 18 livingwith parents or legalguardians; pregnantwomen and people se-curing custody of chil-dren under the age of18.

In addition, the NorthDakota Human RightsAct prohibits discrimi-nation based on age,marital status and re-ceipt of public assis-tance.

This paper will notknowingly accept anyadvertising for real es-tate which is in viola-tion of the law. All per-sons are hereby in-formed that all dwell-ings advertised areavailable on an equalopportunity basis. Ifyou believe you havebeen discriminatedagainst in connectionwith the sale, rental orfinancing of housing:North Dakota FairHousing Council at701-221-2530 or toll-free 1-888-265-0907or call HUD toll-free at1-800-669-9777. Thetoll-free phone numberfor the hearing im-paired is 1-800-927-9275.

40. Real Estate

THE SCORIOTOWNSHIP

Tax EqualizationMeeting will be heldMon Apr 13, 2015from 1-3pm at the

HorizonResources Elevator.

StrandahlTownship

Tax EqualizationMeeting

will be held at 7 pmat the

Dean Carlson Farm

ST. LUKESCEMETERYAssociation

memorials anddonations for

cemetery up keepmay be sent to:Rodney Miller328 E 20th StWilliston,ND58801-3533

ST. LUKESCEMETERY

Association, will holdits annual meeting onSunday, April 12,2015

at 1:00 PM at WestPrairie Lutheran

church. Rodney Miller(Secretary Treasurer)

10. Notices

SpringbrookTownship

Tax EqualizationMeeting

will be held on April13th at 7 pmat the homeof Lori Able

SpringbrookTownship

Annual Meetingwill be held

immediately after,at 8 pm.

EllisvilleTownship

Tax EqualizationMeeting

will be heldMonday,

April 13th, 2015at 7:00 pm

at the home ofJoan Hokanson,

Clerk.

Bull ButteTownship

Tax EqualizationMeeting

will be heldon April 13th, 2015

at 7:00 pmat the

Ron Miller Farm15224 61st St NWWilliston ND 58801

10. Notices

XNLV

2055

24

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Williston’s Fine Detailing & Hands On Wash

willistons� [email protected] Twitter: WillistonFineDetailTwitter: WillistonFineDetailTwitter: WillistonFineDetail

Special for April 11th and 12th

Wash $20, Wash with Vacuum $35

LOYALTY CARDSBuy 10 Washes, Get 11th FREE

5 Bays

2407 2nd

701-577-2739

willistons� [email protected]

5 Bays

(Limited space and sizing)

Classifieds Work

Classifieds Work

Classifieds Work

OrthellTownship

Tax EqualizationMeeting

will be held on April13th at 7:30 pmat the home ofLinda Hanson,Clerk/Treasurer

Page 12: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

B4 WILLISTON HERALD FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 Classified

215 02/24/15; 70175 Clm 673 CLERK OFDISTRICT COURT 375.00 215 02/24/15;70176 Clm 673 CLERK OF DISTRICTCOURT 375.00 215 02/24/15; 70177 Clm999999 DWIGHT MAPLES 150.00 21502/24/15; 70178 Pay AFLAC AMERICANFAMILY LIFE ASS 2124.95 215 02/25/15;70179 Pay AMERICAN NATION AMERICANNATIONAL LIFE I 63.56 215 02/25/15; 70180Pay LINCOLN REPUBL LINCOLN REPUB-LIC INSURAN 1723.38 215 02/25/15; 70181Clm 999998 JOHN L. KAUTZMAN 207.36215 02/25/15; 70182 Pay APARTMENTSWSCF DAKOTA COMMERCIAL - WSC7759.23 215 02/25/15; 70183 Pay APART-MENT BH8 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H6060.00 215 02/25/15; 70184 Pay APART-MENT BH2 & VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H6240.00 215 02/25/15; 70185 Pay APART-MENT BH9 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H27000.00 215 02/25/15; 70186 Pay APART-MENT BH5 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H2940.00 215 02/25/15; 70187 Pay APART-MENT BH6 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H19380.00 215 02/25/15; 70188 Pay APART-MENT BH7 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H27000.00 215 02/25/15; 70189 Pay APART-MENT BH10 VALLEY RENTAL - BAKKEN H38280.00 215 02/25/15; 70190 Pay APART-MENT DAKOT VALLEY RENTAL - DAKOTA98300.00 215 02/25/15; 70191 Clm 533 WIL-LIAMS COUNTY TREASURER/RECORDE36225.58 215 02/26/15; 70192 Clm 2347Glen and Jennie Granrud 14285.72 21502/26/15; 70193 Clm 2359 SONNY HANSON6000.00 215 02/26/15; 70194 Clm 1713 NEL-SON INTERNATIONAL OF BISMARCK108250.00 215 02/26/15; 70195 Clm 1713NELSON INTERNATIONAL OF BISMARCK144115.00 215 02/26/15; 70196 Clm 2059Andrew Sailer 3545.10 215 02/26/15; 70197Clm 2406 Jason Lewis 99.15 215 02/26/15;70198 Clm 2407 Josh Mahlum 1496.67 21502/26/15; 70199 Clm 624 HAMERS AUTO-MOTIVE 5452.81 215 02/26/15; 70200 Clm901 PAGE, WOLFBERG & WIRTH, LLC1560.00 215 02/26/15; 70201 Clm 2280James Woody Ball 426.43 215 02/26/15;70202 Clm 2408 ACCENT 580.04 21502/27/15; 70203 Clm 79 CITY OF WILLIS-TON 963.33 215 02/27/15; 70204 Clm 1261CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 1000.00 21502/27/15; 70205 Clm 79 CITY OF WILLIS-TON 997.75 215 02/27/15; 70206 Clm 390RICHARD A. JOHNSON 3529.80 21502/27/15; 70207 Clm 484 VERIZON WIRE-LESS 173.97 215 02/27/15; 70208 Clm 531WILLIAMS COUNTY AUDITOR 4596.38 21502/27/15; 70209 Clm 470 US POSTALSERVICE 1442.58 215 02/27/15; 70210 PayUSABLE USABLE 227.04 215 02/27/15;70211 Clm 999998 STEVEN C. KJER-GAARD 4076.54 215 02/27/15; 70212Clm 531 WILLIAMS COUNTY AUDITOR4603.50 315 03/02/15; 70213 Clm 1339BOBCAT OF WILLISTON 58079.00 31503/02/15; 70214 Clm 1674 NDSU WillistonResearch Extension 75.00 315 03/02/15;70215 Clm 2378 ALL ABOUT FLOORING1475.00 315 03/02/15; 70216 Clm 317NDWPCC 240.00 315 03/02/15; 70217 Clm999999 CLAYTON DEGREENIA 400.00 31503/02/15; 70218 Clm 999999 FRANCISCOGONZALES 400.00 315 03/02/15; 70219 Clm999999 ROBERT GORMLEY 400.00 31503/02/15; 70220 Clm 2410 CACTUS DEVEL-OPMENT, LLC 5641.33 315 03/03/15; 70221Clm 2412 On A Mission LLC 2314.22 31503/03/15; 70222 Clm 182 JAMES MEMO-RIAL PRESERV SOCIETY IN 5000.00 31503/04/15; 70223 Clm 2409 Ray Park District5000.00 315 03/04/15; 70224 Clm 1997 TheCreative Treatment 8161.49 315 03/04/15;70225 Clm 1382 Lutheran Social Services324.34 315 03/04/15; 70226 Clm 2118 VISA1018.18 315 03/04/15; 70227 Clm 999999TAYLOR KERR 30.00 315 03/04/15; 70228Clm 999999 DAVID BROMLEY 150.00 31503/04/15; 70229 Clm 999999 JON KELLY735.00 315 03/04/15; 70230 Clm 999999PHILLIP DEAN 750.00 315 03/04/15; 70231Clm 673 CLERK OF DISTRICT COURT750.00 315 03/04/15; 70232 Clm 673 CLERKOF DISTRICT COURT 750.00 315 03/04/15;70233 Clm 673 CLERK OF DISTRICTCOURT 1500.00 315 03/04/15; 70234 Clm673 CLERK OF DISTRICT COURT 400.00315 03/04/15; 70235 Clm 2413 Eleven Res-taurant and Lounge 297.50 315 03/04/15;70236 Clm 483 VECTOR CONTROL DIST#1 48777.41 315 03/05/15; 70237 Clm 521WILLISTON PARK DISTRICT 6000.00 31503/05/15; 70238 Clm Check not processed inthis period 0.00 0 //; 70239 Clm Check notprocessed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70240 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70241 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70242 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70243 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70244 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70245 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70246 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70247 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70248 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70249 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70250 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70251 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70252 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70253 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70254 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70255 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70256 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70257 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70258 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70259 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70260 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70261 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70262 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70263 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70264 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70265 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70266 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70267 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70268 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70269 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70270 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70271 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70272 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70273 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70274 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70275 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70276 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70277 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70278 Clm Check not proc-essed in this period 0.00 0 //; 70279 ClmCheck not processed in this period 0.00 0 //;70280 Clm Check not processed in this pe-riod 0.00 0 //; 70281 Clm 2414 FAO-USAEDOMAHA DISTRICT 12180.00 315 03/05/15;70282 Clm 2340 ADVANCE IMAGING SUP-PLY, INC. 199.00 315 03/05/15; 70283 Clm1230 AFFORDABLE TOWING 500.00 315

999. Public Notices

-69522 Pay 56407 Tyson Burkle 96.97 21502/20/15; -69521 Pay 56025 Michael S. Con-lin 32.32 215 02/20/15; -69520 Pay 56371Alan Mapes 0.00 215 02/20/15; -69519 Pay56011 Kelly Moody 220.96 215 02/20/15;-69518 Pay 56013 Josh S. Mosbrucker364.31 215 02/20/15; -69517 Pay 56058Brenden L. Stevens 420.19 215 02/20/15;-69516 Pay IAFF LOCAL 3743 IAFF LOCAL3743 250.00 215 02/20/15; -69515 Pay DE-FER COMP ROTH NATIONWIDE RETIRE-MENT SO 15515.62 215 02/20/15; -69514Pay ND CHILD SUPPOR ND CHILD SUP-PORT ENFORCE 1164.50 215 02/20/15;-69513 Pay FIT U.S. TREASURY 165351.63215 02/20/15; 69907 Pay 12026 KAREN P.LARSON 1427.78 215 02/20/15; 69908 Pay14021 BRAD D. BEKKEDAHL 118.11 21502/20/15; 69909 Pay 56070 TATE A. CYM-BALUK 34.92 215 02/20/15; 69910 Pay56458 CLINTON BATES 0.00 215 02/20/15;69911 Pay 19095 WALTER H. HALL 1754.55215 02/20/15; 69912 Pay 56206 DANIELLEHENDRICKS 1507.32 215 02/20/15; 69913Pay 13027 CRYSTAL A. SCHAUBEL1064.85 215 02/20/15; 69914 Pay 26039 DI-ANE K. ALBRIGHTSON 1027.57 21502/20/15; 69915 Pay 56490 RICHARD KIM-BALL II 1230.13 215 02/20/15; 69916 Pay56406 RICHARD RADEMACHER 1884.49215 02/20/15; 69917 Pay 22022 KATELYNCHRISTENSEN 1340.27 215 02/20/15;69918 Pay 21041 ROBERT E HANSON2691.04 215 02/20/15; 69919 Pay 56428THOMAS SCOTT 1270.09 215 02/20/15;69920 Pay 22021 LES CHRISTENSEN2092.62 215 02/20/15; 69921 Pay 22014GARY L. GLOVATSKY 1926.08 21502/20/15; 69922 Pay 56474 JASON AN-DREASON 2163.02 215 02/20/15; 69923 Pay56402 CHRISTOPHER BARONSSON1875.21 215 02/20/15; 69924 Pay 23136JAMES B. ENGEN 3319.57 215 02/20/15;69925 Pay 56480 TYLER GLADYS 1415.46215 02/20/15; 69926 Pay 23126 BRENT E.HANSON 2499.17 215 02/20/15; 69927 Pay23039 BRUCE A. JOHNSON 1367.12 21502/20/15; 69928 Pay 56497 ALEXANDERPALMER 984.93 215 02/20/15; 69929 Pay56482 GARY SKABO 751.39 215 02/20/15;69930 Pay 56478 KYLE FLEMING 739.31215 02/20/15; 69931 Pay 27058 DAVID LEEBELL 2570.90 215 02/20/15; 69932 Pay25106 RICHARD S. ODEGARD 1793.08 21502/20/15; 69933 Pay 56164 JACOB TBLOODGOOD 1386.85 215 02/20/15; 69934Pay 56355 TIMOTHY JEWELL 1554.68 21502/20/15; 69935 Pay 27096 RUSSELL E.MOMBERG 1421.26 215 02/20/15; 69936Pay 27091 JOSEPH G. MONSON 1126.48215 02/20/15; 69937 Pay 56414 TREVORWAGSTAFF 1326.66 215 02/20/15; 69938Pay 31051 GORDON L. SMESTAD 1680.02215 02/20/15; 69939 Pay 56488 MARK BRU-INEKOOL 982.04 215 02/20/15; 69940 Pay56367 TONY SCOTT 724.96 215 02/20/15;69941 Pay 32006 WILLIAM M. MCQUISTON1505.31 215 02/20/15; 69942 Pay 56253STEPHEN OLEGARIO 795.75 215 02/20/15;69943 Pay 34105 GLENN A. BOYEFF 83.11215 02/20/15; 69944 Pay 56401 KEVINCHRISTENSEN 83.11 215 02/20/15; 69945Pay 34106 GERALD L. FLECK 83.11 21502/20/15; 69946 Pay 56117 NICK J.HAUGEN 41.56 215 02/20/15; 69947 Pay56298 SAWYER ZENT 271.48 215 02/20/15;69948 Pay 56066 ZACHARY G. CORCO-RAN 1557.97 215 02/20/15; 69949 Pay56434 CHARLES DENHAM 1020.75 21502/20/15; 69950 Pay 54065 PATRICIA K. FI-ORENZA 2353.54 215 02/20/15; 69951 Pay56479 TRISTA HENRIE 1510.56 21502/20/15; 69952 Pay 56001 David W. Arnson161.61 215 02/20/15; 69953 Pay 56116 TylerD. Carlstad 477.90 215 02/20/15; 69954 Pay56023 Mathew P. Ekblad 367.79 21502/20/15; 69955 Pay 56405 Matthew Flaten278.60 215 02/20/15; 69956 Pay 56005 CoryJ. Hanson 726.38 215 02/20/15; 69957 Pay56030 Martin J. Haug 95.27 215 02/20/15;69958 Pay 56205 Brandon Hoffman 152.79215 02/20/15; 69959 Pay 56034 Blaine C.Jeanotte 581.10 215 02/20/15; 69960 Pay56219 Jeremy V Knapkewicz 161.61 21502/20/15; 69961 Pay 56291 James Laqua581.80 215 02/20/15; 69962 Pay 56238 RyanLee 549.48 215 02/20/15; 69963 Pay 56447Paul Riely 420.19 215 02/20/15; 69964 Pay56016 Kyle J. Rossland 813.83 215 02/20/15;69965 Pay 56019 Garvin D. Semenko 258.58215 02/20/15; 69966 Pay 56338 Steve Si-mard 484.84 215 02/20/15; 69967 Pay 56020Darwin J. Stevens 749.68 215 02/20/15;69968 Pay 56022 Scott S. Tanner 161.61215 02/20/15; 69969 Pay 56027 Michael W.Walters 208.60 215 02/20/15; 70138 Pay56377 DAVID MOLITOR 44.78 202/20/15; 70139 Pay A.R. AUDIT SERV A.R.AUDIT SERVICES INC 261.00 215 02/20/15;70140 Pay UT CHILD SUPPOR CHILD SUP-PORT SERVICES 141.00 215 02/20/15;70141 Pay CHILD SUPRT CT CONNECTI-CUT - CCSPC 297.65 215 02/20/15; 70142Pay DCI CREDIT DCI CREDIT SERVICESINC 279.45 215 02/20/15; 70143 Pay DELCHILD SUPPO DCSE 135.00 215 02/20/15;70144 Pay MEDICAL SPENDIN DISCOV-ERY BENEFITS 5346.84 215 02/20/15;70145 Pay MI CHILD SUPPOR MICHIGANSTATE DISBURSEM 104.75 215 02/20/15;70146 Pay MIDLAND FUNDING MIDLANDFUNDING LLC 150.00 215 02/20/15; 70147Pay MN CHILD SUPPOR MINNESOTACHILD SUPPORT 491.80 215 02/20/15;70148 Pay NC CHILD SUPPOR NC CHILDSUPPORT 205.00 215 02/20/15; 70149 PayND PEA NDPEA 81.70 215 02/20/15; 70150Pay 56458 CLINTON BATES 2507.69 21502/20/15; 70151 Clm 19 AMERICAN STATEBANK 1546553.97 215 02/23/15; 70152 Clm521 WILLISTON PARK DISTRICT1521875.96 215 02/23/15; 70153 Clm 19AMERICAN STATE BANK 367470.96 21502/23/15; 70154 Clm 317 NDWPCC 25.00215 02/23/15; 70155 Clm 1716 WilliamsScotsman, Inc. 694.60 215 02/23/15; 70156Clm 1716 Williams Scotsman, Inc. 694.60215 02/23/15; 70157 Clm 317NDWPCC 40.00 215 02/23/15; 70158 Clm32 ATSSA 250.00 215 02/23/15; 70159 Clm131 FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK 892.16215 02/23/15; 70160 Clm 252 MIDCONTI-NENT COMMUNICATIONS 396.23 21502/24/15; 70161 Clm 1591 AMERICAN AS-SOCIATION OF AIRPORT E 1710.00 21502/24/15; 70162 Clm 1716 Williams Scots-man, Inc. 2250.50 215 02/24/15; 70163 Clm74 CITY AUDITOR'S FUND 428.26 21502/24/15; 70164 Clm 649 WAL-MART SU-PERCENTER 9.00 215 02/24/15; 70165 Clm999999 ZEBULIN ZIESEMER 750.00 21502/24/15; 70166 Clm 999999 ROBERT LEKO25.00 215 02/24/15; 70167 Clm 999999HENRY MARTINEZ 400.00 215 02/24/15;70168 Clm 489 VISA 3658.91 215 02/24/15;70169 Clm 999999 MELISSA CROSSLAND750.00 215 02/24/15; 70170 Clm 999999CHRISTY LAIL 100.00 215 02/24/15; 70171Clm 673 CLERK OF DISTRICT COURT750.00 215 02/24/15; 70172 Clm 999999BRETT CAMPBELL 391.00 215 02/24/15;70173 Clm 673 CLERK OF DISTRICTCOURT 750.00 215 02/24/15; 70174 Clm673 CLERK OF DISTRICT COURT 750.00

999. Public Notices

56385 JUSTIN PELZL 992.12 215 02/20/15;-69633 Pay 19098 DAVID A. PETERSON2046.50 215 02/20/15; -69632 Pay 56418TRAVIS PETERSON 1250.49 215 02/20/15;-69631 Pay 56148 JONATHAN D. ROG-GENKAMP 857.36 215 02/20/15; -69630 Pay56486 DARLENE STENBERG 1178.08 21502/20/15; -69629 Pay 19077 MICHAEL S.WILSON 2192.86 215 02/20/15; -69628 Pay56157 BENJAMIN W. ABBEY 1701.49 21502/20/15; -69627 Pay 20047 KELLY M. AB-ERLE 1644.72 215 02/20/15; -69626 Pay56209 MARTIN L. COLGAN 1702.42 21502/20/15; -69625 Pay 56432 RICHARD DE-BRUNNER 1332.48 215 02/20/15; -69624Pay 56360 NYDEL DEHLBOM 406.46 21502/20/15; -69623 Pay 56296 JOE DOSS1280.94 215 02/20/15; -69622 Pay 56308JAMES LEAHY 1214.95 215 02/20/15;-69621 Pay 56467 MARGARET RICHARDS939.65 215 02/20/15; -69620 Pay 56441DAVID SASSER 1752.85 215 02/20/15;-69619 Pay 56270 WILLIAM TRACY III2062.47 215 02/20/15; -69618 Pay 56302ANTON LEUTY 968.38 215 02/20/15; -69617Pay 56417 DEAN RENNINGER 1666.55 21502/20/15; -69616 Pay 21054 WAYNE A WIE-DRICH 2552.07 215 02/20/15; -69615 Pay22020 ROBERT D. KNAPPER 2447.59 21502/20/15; -69614 Pay 56315 EARL KILL-INGSWORTH 1392.84 215 02/20/15; -69613Pay 56244 ROY LONG 1786.22 21502/20/15; -69612 Pay 56288 CHRISTOPHERMALONE 1418.56 215 02/20/15; -69611 Pay56448 EMIL NEHRING 1814.48 21502/20/15; -69610 Pay 56167 MATTHEWTUTAS 1558.04 215 02/20/15; -69609 Pay56451 DAVID WITTMAN 1403.22 21502/20/15; -69608 Pay 56320 PHILIP AR-ENDS 1560.68 215 02/20/15; -69607 Pay56409 KENDELL BROWN 1620.42 21502/20/15; -69606 Pay 56370 JEFFREY BRY-SON 2165.99 215 02/20/15; -69605 Pay24019 ROBERT D. COUGHLIN 680.27 21502/20/15; -69604 Pay 56381 MORKATAADHINAA 2263.07 215 02/20/15; -69603 Pay24017 STEVEN W. JENSEN 1539.65 21502/20/15; -69602 Pay 56189 AMANDA M.KAISER - LEE 1688.99 215 02/20/15; -69601Pay 56356 MITCHELL KERSTING 1562.35215 02/20/15; -69600 Pay 56391 THOMASMOTTL 2624.90 215 02/20/15; -69599 Pay56415 WILLIAM SCHWENDEMAN 1573.04215 02/20/15; -69598 Pay 56284 SABRINASIMS 1518.81 215 02/20/15; -69597 Pay56454 MARCIA THOMAS 565.68 21502/20/15; -69596 Pay 56104 DANIEL W.TUPA 1198.28 215 02/20/15; -69595 Pay56496 JAMES ANDERSON 1800.25 21502/20/15; -69594 Pay 25110 KENNETH W.BERGSTROM 2312.39 215 02/20/15; -69593Pay 56472 CURTIS CLARYS 1964.53 21502/20/15; -69592 Pay 56361 JUSTIN ED-WARDS 1193.76 215 02/20/15; -69591 Pay25111 JASON W. HOULE 1232.07 21502/20/15; -69590 Pay 56187 STEPHENKOHLER 1159.79 215 02/20/15; -69589 Pay56389 THOMAS ATOR 1602.31 21502/20/15; -69588 Pay 56368 ERICA KELASH1523.44 215 02/20/15; -69587 Pay 56349LILLIAN MCGUIRE 915.36 215 02/20/15;-69586 Pay 27076 DANNY R. GERGEN1695.97 215 02/20/15; -69585 Pay 56091JAMES A HAGA JR 1724.53 215 02/20/15;-69584 Pay 56128 VERNON L. HENDRICK-SON 1746.41 215 02/20/15; -69583 Pay56477 ROBERT LADUCER 1958.02 21502/20/15; -69582 Pay 56423 GREGORYMACE 881.23 215 02/20/15; -69581 Pay56433 RENA MATLOCK 1032.10 21502/20/15; -69580 Pay 56303 TROY OSTER1153.54 215 02/20/15; -69579 Pay 56489JERRY PALMER 1462.11 215 02/20/15;-69578 Pay 56435 KEVIN POWERS 987.54215 02/20/15; -69577 Pay 56379 WILLIAMREED 1455.29 215 02/20/15; -69576 Pay56258 BRYAN THOMPSON 1126.56 21502/20/15; -69575 Pay 56443 JOAN WITT-MAN 1414.85 215 02/20/15; -69574 Pay56084 KENNETH R. BOYKIN 1643.08 21502/20/15; -69573 Pay 56313 WILLIAMBRENNY 903.99 215 02/20/15; -69572 Pay56114 ANTHONY D. DUDAS 1816.45 21502/20/15; -69571 Pay 56396 EMILY GATHJE1604.34 215 02/20/15; -69570 Pay 56086STEVEN C. KJERGAARD 2631.34 21502/20/15; -69569 Pay 12029 LORI A.LARSEN 844.49 215 02/20/15; -69568 Pay56358 RYAN O'REAR 1192.55 215 02/20/15;-69567 Pay 56422 MICHAEL SHEARER1020.71 215 02/20/15; -69566 Pay 56340 MI-CHAEL SIMPSON 1833.15 215 02/20/15;-69565 Pay 56200 GINA MOTTL 2780.15215 02/20/15; -69564 Pay 56352 BRIANYOUNG 755.16 215 02/20/15; -69563 Pay56473 ANGELA DECKER 89.21 21502/20/15; -69562 Pay 56347 CHRISTINE ED-WARDS 1152.47 215 02/20/15; -69561 Pay34017 KENT A. JARCIK 2813.74 21502/20/15; -69560 Pay 56223 DONALDKRESS 1421.12 215 02/20/15; -69559 Pay56075 DEEANN M. LONG 471.56 21502/20/15; -69558 Pay 56057 JON D. MARIS-TUEN 41.56 215 02/20/15; -69557 Pay56416 SAMANTHA NEILL 781.99 21502/20/15; -69556 Pay 56239 RACHEL K.RESSLER 1643.42 215 02/20/15; -69555Pay 56438 KELSEY VLAMIS 1250.72 21502/20/15; -69554 Pay 35025 JOSILYN FBEAN 1171.81 215 02/20/15; -69553 Pay56301 TRAVIS MIZZELL 950.91 21502/20/15; -69552 Pay 56079 BRENDASEPTKA 1251.98 215 02/20/15; -69551 Pay56293 DAVID TUAN 2624.89 215 02/20/15;-69550 Pay 56375 KRISTIN WENDT 900.94215 02/20/15; -69549 Pay 36006 NEIL W.BAKKEN 1828.80 215 02/20/15; -69548 Pay56366 KENT SKABO 987.75 215 02/20/15;-69547 Pay 37008 LAVERN GOHL 1660.30215 02/20/15; -69546 Pay 56180 DIANE C.HAGEN 419.65 215 02/20/15; -69545 Pay56413 LEXI CASTRO 131.95 215 02/20/15;-69544 Pay 48102 KAYLA J. HELL 746.75215 02/20/15; -69543 Pay 56333 STEVENMCGAUGHEY 586.63 215 02/20/15; -69542Pay 56111 ANDREA L. MITCHELL 283.19215 02/20/15; -69541 Pay 56484 AMANDANEWPORT 56.87 215 02/20/15; -69540 Pay56364 JASON SAGE 313.93 215 02/20/15;-69539 Pay 48013 DEBORAH A. SLAIS1388.58 215 02/20/15; -69538 Pay 48034YVONNE A. TOPP 652.99 215 02/20/15;-69537 Pay 56411 LISA WEBB 864.67 21502/20/15; -69536 Pay 52011 ANN M.KVANDE 1744.71 215 02/20/15; -69535 Pay56306 MARGARET LUNSFORD 1349.89215 02/20/15; -69534 Pay 56041 BARBARAJ. PETERSON 1264.30 215 02/20/15; -69533Pay 52020 SHAWN WENKO 2141.33 21502/20/15; -69532 Pay 56399 JENNIFERFLECK 1025.82 215 02/20/15; -69531 Pay56222 VIVIAN KALMIK 148.97 215 02/20/15;-69530 Pay 53002 AMY A. KRUEGER2012.13 215 02/20/15; -69529 Pay 56271SABRINA A RAMEY 1271.22 215 02/20/15;-69528 Pay 56310 JENNIFER STRIETZEL1002.15 215 02/20/15; -69527 Pay 56390DENICE SUESS 1108.68 215 02/20/15;-69526 Pay 56144 CRYSTAL M. BONNER426.52 215 02/20/15; -69525 Pay 56213ROBERT JASON HILLARD 1228.94 21502/20/15; -69524 Pay 56080 BRAD E.SEPTKA 2397.06 215 02/20/15; -69523 Pay56028 David Benth 32.32 215 02/20/15;

999. Public Notices

OFFICIAL PROCEEDINGSBoard of City CommissionersMarch 10, 2015 - 6:00 pm

City Hall - Williston, North DakotaRoll Call of Commissioners

COMMISSIONERS PRESENT: DeanettePiesik, Tate Cymbaluk, Brad Bekkedahl andHoward KlugCOMMISSIONERS ABSENT: Chris BrostuenOTHERS PRESENT: John Kautzman, ChiefLokken, Donald Kress, Rachael Ressler,Anthony Dudas, Kent Jarcik, Bill Tracy, BobHanson, Taylor Olson, David Tuan, JasonCatrambone and Shawn WenkoMayor Klug presented a quorum.CHANGES TO THE AGENDA:MOVE:11F- Discussion of Well Pad Policy to AfterConsent AgendaMOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve amendment to theagendaUNANIMOUS BY VOICE VOTE2. Consent AgendaA. Reading and Approval of Minutes for:(1) Regular Meeting Dated: 02/24/2015(2) Special Meeting Dated: 03/03/2015B. Auditor(1) Accounts, Claims and BillsFor checks between: 02/20/15 - 03/05/15-69723 Pay 56297 BRENDA D'ANGELO891.72 215 02/20/15; -69722 Pay 12020RANDY M DONNELLY 1498.86 21502/20/15; -69721 Pay 56348 TYLER EMER-SON 620.34 215 02/20/15; -69720 Pay56444 SUSAN GISLASON 1552.75 21502/20/15; -69719 Pay 12017 JOHN L.KAUTZMAN 2987.43 215 02/20/15; -69718Pay 56461 HEATHER PARKER 1037.63 21502/20/15; -69717 Pay 56487 BRITTANYALBY 946.95 215 02/20/15; -69716 Pay56462 BONNIE COLEOTE 714.34 21502/20/15; -69715 Pay 13026 KEVIN W.CRAFT 1173.61 215 02/20/15; -69714 Pay56475 ROBIN DESCHAMP 1250.75 21502/20/15; -69713 Pay 56255 CHELSEA SFOSSEN 635.61 215 02/20/15; -69712 Pay56323 LINDSEY HATCH 811.48 21502/20/15; -69711 Pay 56397 MEGAN PE-TERSON 757.96 215 02/20/15; -69710 Pay56436 SHELBY PIZZIE 744.10 215 02/20/15;-69709 Pay 13025 JOLEEN S. TINKER1340.55 215 02/20/15; -69708 Pay 56378LAURA WOLTJER 691.08 215 02/20/15;-69707 Pay 56344 CARRIE ZELLMER472.69 215 02/20/15; -69706 Pay 34103CHRISTOPHER J. BROSTUEN 727.65 21502/20/15; -69705 Pay 14025 HOWARD D.KLUG 490.16 215 02/20/15; -69704 Pay56476 DEANETTE PIESIK 736.05 21502/20/15; -69703 Pay 56169 KATHERINE E.BERWICK 1874.90 215 02/20/15; -69702Pay 56491 KATHLEEN STAHOWIAK1415.58 215 02/20/15; -69701 Pay 56252 DI-ANE THOMPSON 1175.71 215 02/20/15;-69700 Pay 15004 JANET B. ZANDER2158.69 215 02/20/15; -69699 Pay 56225SUSAN E. SCHNEIDER 1323.01 21502/20/15; -69698 Pay 56460 JAMES BALL1547.01 215 02/20/15; -69697 Pay 56469MEGAN BROWN 1015.97 215 02/20/15;-69696 Pay 56501 RAUL BROWN 1461.51215 02/20/15; -69695 Pay 56419 JASON CA-TRAMBONE 1989.43 215 02/20/15; -69694Pay 56500 CHRISTOPHER GILLIES 1426.45215 02/20/15; -69693 Pay 56465 CARLOSGOMEZ LUNA 1219.71 215 02/20/15; -69692Pay 56325 DAVID GORDON 1166.53 21502/20/15; -69691 Pay 56499 ANDREWISAACS 1405.43 215 02/20/15; -69690 Pay56382 ETHAN JOHNSON 1559.60 21502/20/15; -69689 Pay 18027 STEVEN D.KERZMANN 3107.22 215 02/20/15; -69688Pay 18096 TRACY C. KERZMANN 1359.49215 02/20/15; -69687 Pay 56332 ANDREWKINDLE 668.27 215 02/20/15; -69686 Pay56107 VICTORIA L. KREGER 187.00 21502/20/15; -69685 Pay 56495 JAMES T.LEWIS 1473.52 215 02/20/15; -69684 Pay56498 JASON LEWIS 1256.99 215 02/20/15;-69683 Pay 56483 JOSHUA MAHLUM1483.39 215 02/20/15; -69682 Pay 56463ANTHONY MCNEIL 605.98 215 02/20/15;-69681 Pay 56377 DAVID MOLITOR 662.09215 02/20/15; -69680 Pay 56464 SPENCERMUSCELLI 1219.44 215 02/20/15; -69679Pay 18099 ERICA J. MYERS 961.06 21502/20/15; -69678 Pay 18070 JEANNE M. SA-GASER RASSIER 203.99 215 02/20/15;-69677 Pay 56130 ANDREW A. SAILER2788.78 215 02/20/15; -69676 Pay 18046GARVIN SEMENKO 64.18 215 02/20/15;-69675 Pay 56453 TIMOTHY SWANSON1381.16 215 02/20/15; -69674 Pay 56494JEFFREY VANDYKE 1767.14 215 02/20/15;-69673 Pay 56408 SAMANTHA VENDITTO2467.66 215 02/20/15; -69672 Pay 18097DUANE S. WINTER 1703.76 215 02/20/15;-69671 Pay 56174 SAM M. AIDE 1260.77215 02/20/15; -69670 Pay 56273 JASONBARTEN 1708.45 215 02/20/15; -69669 Pay56456 BROC BARTYLLA 1004.15 21502/20/15; -69668 Pay 56457 JACOB BEITO1229.85 215 02/20/15; -69667 Pay 19024DAVID L. BELISLE 1732.11 215 02/20/15;-69666 Pay 56246 HUGH E BENZEN1144.86 215 02/20/15; -69665 Pay 19092DUSTIN J. BERTSCH 1722.02 215 02/20/15;-69664 Pay 19028 MARK R. BITZ 2004.39215 02/20/15; -69663 Pay 56097 ALAN C.BRATT 1389.63 215 02/20/15; -69662 Pay56121 DUSTIN R. CELANDER 836.18 21502/20/15; -69661 Pay 56278 DANIEL DERY1094.58 215 02/20/15; -69660 Pay 56183AMBER M. DICKERSON 1691.84 21502/20/15; -69659 Pay 56173 RODNEY H.DICKERSON 1517.36 215 02/20/15; -69658Pay 56485 JAMES DIXON 1523.79 21502/20/15; -69657 Pay 56455 JESSY DOLS1074.34 215 02/20/15; -69656 Pay 56354RYAN EGERMAN 1477.65 215 02/20/15;-69655 Pay 56289 STACEY EISSINGER1005.40 215 02/20/15; -69654 Pay 19009LINDA R. GRANBOIS 1253.28 215 02/20/15;-69653 Pay 56147 JACOB J. GREGORY1329.08 215 02/20/15; -69652 Pay 56403KRISTIINA HANNUS 1309.45 215 02/20/15;-69651 Pay 56343 ZACHARY HANSEN1098.66 215 02/20/15; -69650 Pay 56195JACKIE L. HATCH 755.29 215 02/20/15;-69649 Pay 19082 RANDY M. HAUGENOE2144.40 215 02/20/15; -69648 Pay 56243 JA-COB R. HENDRICKS 1046.09 215 02/20/15;-69647 Pay 56466 JOSHUA HILGART1055.93 215 02/20/15; -69646 Pay 56285TYLER HOFF 1016.30 215 02/20/15; -69645Pay 56210 WILLIAM E. HOLLER 553.32 21502/20/15; -69644 Pay 56353 JONATHANHOLTER 1264.77 215 02/20/15; -69643 Pay56102 MICHAEL A. ISENHOWER JR1667.89 215 02/20/15; -69642 Pay 56387AARON KURTENBACH 1025.08 21502/20/15; -69641 Pay 19011 JAMES L LOK-KEN 2876.29 215 02/20/15; -69640 Pay56082 TRAVIS J. MARTINSON 1181.47 21502/20/15; -69639 Pay 56493 BENJAMIN ME-LENDEZ 1445.14 215 02/20/15; -69638 Pay56492 HEATHER MONTGOMERY 1568.88215 02/20/15; -69637 Pay 56449 NICHOLASNELSON 1107.21 215 02/20/15; -69636 Pay56061 AMY D. NICKOLOFF 1346.35 21502/20/15; -69635 Pay 19014 KENNETH B.OWENS 2184.09 215 02/20/15; -69634 Pay

999. Public Notices

SUMMONSCivil No. 53-2015-CV-00317STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

IN DISTRICT COURTCOUNTY OF WILLIAMS

NORTHWEST JUDICIAL DISTRICTAdapt, Inc.,

Plaintiff,v.

Robert L. Dunlap,Defendant.

THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THEABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT:YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED andrequired to appear and defent against theComplaint in this action, which is herewithserved upon you by serving upon theundersigned an Answer or other properresponse within twenty-on (21) days after theservice of this Summons upon you, exclusiveof the day of service. If you fail to do so,judgment by default will be taken against youfor the relief demanded in the Complaint.Dated this 2nd day of February, 2015.

By: -s- MARNELL W. RINGSAKMarnell W. Ringsak, #03609

Attorney for Plaintiff411 North 4th Street

Bismarck, ND 58502-2155(701) 255-1344

[email protected](April 3, 10, 17, 2015)

SUMMONSCivil No. 53-2015-CV-00383STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

IN DISTRICT COURTCOUNTY OF WILLIAMS

NORTHWEST JUDICIAL DISTRICTAdapt, Inc.,

Plaintiff,v.

Andrew Lipford,Defendant.

THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO THEABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT:YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED andrequired to appear and defent against theComplaint in this action, which is herewithserved upon you by serving upon theundersigned an Answer or other properresponse within twenty-on (21) days after theservice of this Summons upon you, exclusiveof the day of service. If you fail to do so,judgment by default will be taken against youfor the relief demanded in the Complaint.Dated this 2nd day of February, 2015.

By: -s- MARNELL W. RINGSAKMarnell W. Ringsak, #03609

Attorney for Plaintiff411 North 4th Street

Bismarck, ND 58502-2155(701) 255-1344

[email protected](April 3, 10, 17, 2015)

999. Public Notices 999. Public Notices

(April 10, 2015)

Page 13: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

Classified FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 WILLISTON HERALD B5

of Williston. It was discovered as construc-tion progressed at the WTP, that the originaleasement with the railroad does notencompass the area that is currentlyoccupied by the raw water intake building.Therefore, rather than purchasing theeasement from BNSF for this building, anagreement was made to exchange theneeded easement from the railroad with theneeded easement from the City. The land isroughly equivalent. This has been before Mr.Furuseth for review and also the CityEngineers.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to approve the land swapeasement agreement with BNSFAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Award of Landfill Expansion ProjectThis item went out for proposal about amonth ago. Four proposals were received;Interstate Engineering, Alliance, HDR/AE2S,Burns and MacDonnel/AET. Proposals werereviewed based on project team experience,project manager experience, scope ofservices provided, proposed schedule,proposed fee and hourly billing rates. It isrecommended to award the contract toAlliance Consulting in the amount of$329,510.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to award the project to AllianceConsulting and request authorization toinitiate a contract in the amount of $329,510for design of the Landfill expansion projectAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(4) City Improvement Projects - Request forFundinga. LED Street Light ProjectThis is the first year of phased street lightreplacement including switching out theheads of the existing street lights with LEDheads. $175,000 was in this yearʼs budgetand PW would like to expand and incorporateother areas of town on 11th and 26th St. PWis requesting an additional $200,000 toexpand the project. Commissioner asked ifPW would do this themselves or contract itout. Mr. Tuan stated this would likely becontracted out do to the size of it.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to authorize $175,000 to beallocated to expand the project past theoriginal requestAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0RESCIND MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDEDBY CYMBALUK, to authorize $175,000 to beallocated to expand the project past theoriginal requestAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to expand the LED street lightproject up to $375,000AYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0b. Street Striping ProjectThis project was initiated last year. PWconducted permanent striping on multipleintersections and streets in town. The mark-ings are permanent thermoplastic and epoxypaint. It has a higher degree of reflectivityand lasts longer. The effort is to expand thisto include more crosswalks and intersections.PW is requesting $300,000 be allocated tocontinue the project. This is the sameallotment as last year.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request up to$300,000 for the street striping project aspresentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0c. Forestry ProjectThis project includes irrigation and landscap-ing for multiple public right of way areas intown that are currently not being maintained.The intent is to install an irrigation systemalong Pheasant Run Pkwy south of 26th Stand also near 18th St. underpass, as well ascomplete landscaping in these areas. PW isrequesting $450,000 be allocated to initiatethis project. Commissioner Bekkedahl askedit is possible to incorporate the north side of26th and east side of Pheasant Run Pkwy.Mr. Tuan stated it would be incorporated.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to approve $450,000 to beallocated to the forestry project as presentedby Mr. TuanAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Bob Hanson, City Engineer presented thefollowing:D. City Engineer(1) Resolutions Creating Water, Sewer &Street Improvement District 15-3This is the improvements the City has agreedto install around the new high school site,west of Pheasant Run. This is an assess-ment project and the City will pay for a lot ofthe assessments through deferments andassessing some of the private developmentgrounds to the south owned by Granite Peak.The project includes water and sewer lines,street improvements along 26th, PrairieCommons, 32nd and 37th streets along 44thAve W. 44th Ave W would be built with theintention that it would eventually serve as amajor north south road. Developers areproposing to construct single family homes inBlock 1 and Block 4 of the National GuardSubdivision with driveway access and parkingalong 44th Ave. The proposed project wouldinclude an 8 foot wide bike trail along thenorth side of 26th St between Harvest HillsAve and 44th. Ave. The estimated cost isapproximately $13 million. This is a petitionproject so no protest hearing is required. Thebid opening is scheduled for April 8th.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to adopt resolutions 15-039 Creatingthe water, sewer and street improvementdistrict, 15-040 Directing the engineer toprepare a report, 15-041, Approving theengineers report, 15-042 Declaring thenecessity of the district, 15-043 Directing theengineer to prepare plans and specificationsfor construction, 15-044 Approving the plansand specifications, 15-045 Orderingadvertisement for bid, For District 15-3 aspresented from Mr. Bob HansonAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(2) Resolutions Creating Water & SewerImprovement District 15-7

999. Public Notices

Williston at about 20,000 and WilliamsCounty at about 29,000. The censusestimates the “normal” resident population.The study area is a three tiered study areawith Williston, Williston with the six surround-ing townships and Williston, the six surround-ing townships and the remainder of WilliamsCounty not including other incorporatedareas. An inventory of housing, bothtraditional and non-traditional housing wastaken and new housing constructed since2010; using the inventory and occupancyrates to estimate the service population in thestudy. Commissioner Cymbaluk asked if Ms.Hodur knew how many hotel rooms and crewcamps there are in the community. Ms.Hodur stated she did, although it is not in thispresentation and would be in the final report.The 2014 service population for the City ofWilliston is just over 31,000. This wasdetermined by using the 2010 censuspopulation as the baseline and adding thehousing constructed since 2010 and therevised estimate of people using non-traditional housing for work forceaccommodations. Adding the six surroundingtownships to the City of Williston populationof 31,000 plus the census population and theRV camps, hotels and conditional usepermits, the population estimate is now justover 42,000. Adding the 42,000, the censuspopulation and non-traditional housing andthe rest of Williams County the population isnow just about 53,000. This number does notinclude other incorporated areas in WilliamsCounty. Since 2012, Williston servicepopulation has increased by 20% from25,915 to 31,143. Williston and the sixsurrounding townships service population hasincreased 17.1% from 36,182 to 42,363 andWilliams County with the City of Williston andthe six surrounding townships servicepopulation has increased 19.1% from 44,308to 52,778. Results are consideredpreliminary as they have not been throughdepartmental review, however significantchanges are not expected.8. Report of CommissionersTate Cymbaluk, City Commission presentedthe following:A. President of the Board(1) Recognition of Dwight Richter (20), BillyLynn (25) and Troy Heupel (20) Retirementfrom Williston Volunteer FD - CombinedService 65 yearsThree fire fighters in the last month haveretired with a combined service of 65 years.The Commission thanks these men for theiryears of service to the City of Williston, theirintegrity and their heart. Mayor Klugreiterated on behalf of all the commissionersa job well done.B. Vice-President; Finance CommissionerC. Street and Improvement, Sanitation,Cemetery and Public Works CommissionerDeanette Piesik, City Commission presentedthe following:Program Management Task Order #5 UpdateThe 2015 capital improvement plans and thelegislative session are still being worked on.The utility rate RFP has been distributed.The IT study is being conducted. Again BobMoberg with AE2S is the main contactbetween the City and the County. Elert &Associates will be in town March 23 toconduct interview and workshop sessions.Commissioner Piesik has asked all depart-ment heads make themselves available forthis.D. Fire, Police, and AmbulanceCommissionerE. Water Works, Sewer, Airport, Buildingand Planning Commissioner9. Report of Department HeadsJohn Kautzman, City Auditor presented thefollowing:A. City Auditor(1) Authorize Deputy Auditor, Karen Larson,to access Safety Deposit Box and performAuditor Related Duties in Auditorʼs AbsenceThis item is for clarification purposes.Requesting a motion to have the DeputyAuditor, Karen Larson, to be able to accessthe safety deposit box and perform relatedduties in the Auditorʼs absence, for the City ofWilliston.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request as submittedfrom John Kautzman, current city auditorAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0AttorneyTaylor Olson, City Attorney presented thefollowing:(1) Request to Accept a Gravity SanitarySewer, Utility, Storm Sewer and SurfaceStorm Water Drainage EasementAttorney Evert has worked on this, but isunable to attend the meeting. It is an agree-ment that was already in place, but not shownon the plat. Bob Hanson, City Engineer,stated this is a clarification of the original plat.This document actually claims the easement.The original is at the attorneyʼs office and thegrantee has requested its approval and that itbe signed to be recorded.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to authorize the mayor to sign onbehalf of the City for this easement aspresentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Resolution 15-038 - Establishing Fire CodeInspection FeesThis resolution is establishing some fire codeinspection fees. The Ordinance was passedpreviously. This was put together by ChiefCatrambone and Chief Inspector Ball, due tothe amount of time these inspections aretaking. This also gives a uniform way ofcharging.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve Resolution 15-038,establishing fire code inspection fees aspresentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0David Tuan, Director of Public Workspresented the following:C. Director of Public Works(1) MDU Easement (Landfill)This is a proposed easement from MDU for atransmission main on the east side of thelandfill. It is approximately 300ʼ long by 50ʼwide. It will not impact the landfill or itsexpansion area.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request as presentedfrom David TuanAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0BNSF Land Swap (WTP)BNSF is in the process of expanding theirrailway to the south of the WTP and in orderto properly grade the banks of their new twintrack, they require an easement from the City

999. Public Notices

for public comment.Mayor Klug closed the public hearing.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the first reading of theproposed Ordinance 1016 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Donald Kress, Planning and Zoningpresented the following:D. Public Hearing for the Planned UnitDevelopment of 10.97 acres to be known asTrinity Plaza School, commercial andresidential Mixed use, Lot R1, Block 1 of theLewison Rearrangement of Block 2 and 3 ofthe Amended Lewison Addition, Section 14,T154N, R101W, (213 26th St W) City ofWilliston - Trinity Christian School/HunterLight - ND, LLCThe applicant has requested this item betabled. The applicantʼs project proposes torezone a portion of the 10.97 acre property toC-3: Restricted commercial, plot the area intofour lots and also have a Planned UnitDevelopment Overlay to restrict the uses onthis C-3 zone so only very specific uses canbe developed. There are covenants on thisproperty which apply to the Lewison additionand its rearrangements, which include thisproperty. They indicate that commercialdevelopment is not permitted on the subjectproperty. The City attorney office reviewedthe covenants. The opinion of the CityAttorney is that the existing covenants on lot1R, the subject property, allow the property tobe developed as only with single familyresidences, church or school. The covenantprohibits commercial development. It wouldbe inappropriate for the City Commission toapprove land uses and/or zone changescontrary to an already agreed upon covenantagreement. The attorney recommends notapproving a land use and/or zone changethat runs contrary to any written recordedagreement. The applicant has been advisedand is consulting with his attorney. Commis-sioner Cymbaluk asked what percentage ofproperty owners would have to sign off toallow for the changes of the covenants. Mr.Kress stated that he was not sure and thatwould be more of an attorney question.Mayor Klug opened the public hearing andcalled for public comment.Cory Hanson, a neighbor to the project askedif the hearing is open tonight will the nexthearing be considered a first or secondreading. Mayor Klug stated the next time itcomes before the commission, it would beaddressed. Mr. Hanson asked with theattorneyʼs recommendation, why the item willnot be addressed at this meeting. PhyllisOwen representing Good Shepherd LutheranChurch stated they have consulted with anattorney regarding the agreement they hadwith Trinity Christian when they sold the landto Trinity for their football field, and wasagreed it would be kept as a football field.Good Shepherds attorney stated the agree-ment was not recorded with the warrantydeed and does not necessarily prohibitcommercial development based on the state-ments made in the “therefore” section of theagreement. In the “whereas” section it statedfor use of school grounds. The land was soldto Trinity Christian School for the purposes ofestablishing a football field. Of the sevencouncil members of the Good Shepherdchurch, two feel quite comfortable withcommercial development on the property andfive would prefer it to remain a football field,green space or some use specifically by thestudents and staff of the school and notcommercial development. The concern forthe development is drainage issues. The NWside of the property collects water that comesfrom the west of the property, which is thearea to develop and with raising the ground, itwill become a larger issue. Mr. Kressclarified this agreement is separate from thecovenants that Mr. Kress has discussed withthe Commission. Mayor Klug referred backto Mr. Hansonʼs question as to why the itemwill not be addressed at this meeting, andstated it is because the Commission wants tohave everything right before proceeding.Michael Nigh, representing Trinity School onthis development stated there are 51 total lotsinvolved in the original Lewison subdivisionand also in the rearrangement although 6-8 ofthose lots have been combined into a singlelot which is now lot 1R. Mr. Nigh stated in re-sponse to Mr. Hansonʼs question, the schoolis aware of the covenants and stated therehave been several amendments to thoserestrictions over the years. Legal counselhas been sought and that is why they haveasked to table the item, so that the issues canbe worked through and be able to present aviable answer to the Commission. LonnyGabbert, a neighbor to the property stated heis perplexed wondering what happens ifTrinity Christian School goes away and theland is now developed commercial. All lotowners were under the assumption based onthe covenants that the property would alwaysbe residential and/or school property. Withthe airport moving and leaving that land to bedeveloped why is this land being looked at todevelop when the covenants are in place?Mayor Klug called for a second and third timefor public comment.Mayor Klug closed the public hearing.Commissioner Cymbaluk asked if theapplicant withdraws and reapplies, willnotices be sent out or not. Mr. Kress statedyes a new public hearing will be re-advertisedwhen a new date is provided from theapplicant.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to withdraw this planning anddevelopment at this time from the agendaAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-05. Accounts, Claims and Bills Not Approvedin the Consent Agenda6. OrdinancesA. Ordinance 1014 - Updating FireDepartment Related Code - Second ReadingMOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the second reading ofOrdinance 1014 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-07. Petitions, Communications andRemonstranceʼsNancy Hodur, Assistant Research Professorin the Department of Ag Business andApplied Economics NDSU presented thefollowing:Service Population NumbersMs. Hodur presented a power point to theCommissioners. Williston continues to seerapid expansion of the population growth andcontinued strain on the infrastructure.Census population numbers for the years ofthe census are good, but do not necessarilymeet the needs of Williston in terms of identi-fying how many people are in the City. Theprevious census numbers from 2013, show

999. Public Notices

MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYBEKKEDAHL, to approve consent agenda forthe March 10th, 2015 City CommissionUNANIMOUS BY VOICE VOTEThis item will be dealt with as a one on onesituation with each individual company ratherthan a blanket policy for all companies, ashas been done in the past.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to remove from the agendaAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Bid OpeningsJohn Kautzman, City Auditor presented thefollowing:4. Public HearingsA. Loveʼs Travel Stop #494 -Alcoholic Beverage LicenseA memo has been provided in thecommission packet. Loveʼs Travel Stop hasobtained an off-sale beer license. The liquorcommittee has met and recommendsapproving subject to building and fire depart-ment review and approving the final build andlay out.Mayor Klug opened the public hearing andcalled for public input.Mayor Klug called for a second and third timefor public input.Mayor Klug closed the public hearing.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the general on-sale beerlicense for Loveʼs subject to the building codeand fire code signing off they meet all require-ments.AYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0AMMENDED MOTION BY CYMBALUK,SECONDED BY PIESIK, to approve thegeneral off-sale beer license for Loveʼssubject to the building code and fire codesigning off they meet all requirementsAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Rachel Ressler, Planning and Zoningpresented the following:B. Public Hearing on Proposed Ordinance1015 Amending and adding language toSections 11.A.14 and 14.A.3.C of Ordinance574, otherwise known as the SubdivisionOrdinance of the City of Williston, in order tocreate standards for sidewalks adjacent toroads in association with the trails plan withinthe City - StaffThis is an ordinance that amends a subdivi-sion ordinance in order to create standardsfor sidewalks adjacent to roads in associationwith the trails plan for the City. In January theCity Commission and Park Board bothapproved a trails map for the City, whichoutlines a future network of trails andpedestrian/bike paths throughout the City.The majority of these follow rights of way. Inthe case of undeveloped property along oneof those rights of way, the property would,under current development standards, berequired to install a 5 foot sidewalk. Thisordinance proposes change that requires for8 foot sidewalks where there is a trailindicated on the approved trails map that wasadopted by Resolution 15-002. It furtheramends Section 14.A.3.C. to state sidewalksshould be installed at the time of subdivisioninfrastructure improvements and streetinstallation, or at the time of development ofthe property, in cases where subdivisioninfrastructure improvements were made priorto this ordinance. A second part was addedbased on comments from the City Engineerand also the Planning and Zoning Commis-sion, stating where such road in associationwith the trails plan has been installed, orwhere right of way for a road in associationwith the trails plan has been dedicated priorto the adoption of this ordinance, the associ-ated sidewalk shall be built to a standard asrecommended by the City Engineer, CityPlanner and Parks Department in order toaccommodate the necessary trails within theavailable right of way at time of development.Commissioner Piesik asked who wouldmaintain these new sidewalks. It wasdetermined the Park Department wouldmaintain them.Mayor Klug opened the public hearing andasked for public input.Mayor Klug asked for a second and third timefor public comment.Mayor Klug closed the public hearing.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the first reading ofOrdinance 1015 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0C. Public Hearing on Proposed Ordinance1016 modifying required districts size intransition area, modifying Section 20(b),Minimum Dimensional Requirements for theC-2: General Commercial District, ofOrdinance 613, otherwise known as theZoning Ordinance of the City of Williston, toallow smaller district sizes wheretransition areas are indicated by the City ofWilliston Comprehensive Plan - StaffThis is along HWY 2&85 between 26th St and58th ST. A map was presented in thecommission packet. The comprehensive planmarked this area as a future commercial areaand much of the area has been designatedas a transition from industrial to commercialand the area left over has been designatedas commercial. Right now the corridor has amix of industrial and commercial businesses.Research from 2013 indicated about 17% ofthe properties in this area would be conform-ing in a C-2 zoning, 34% were vacant and54% would be permitted in a M-1 zoning.Most of the properties indicated they wouldnot be interested in rezoning to C-2, GeneralCommercial. Requests have been made torezone property along this corridor to C-2 forspecific purposes. While this is in keepingwith the comprehensive plan goals and futureland use plan, it is not allowed in the zoningordinance, since the minimum district size fora C-2 is two acres and a majority of the prop-erties in this area are smaller than two acres.This amendment would allow propertiessmaller than two acres within the outlinedarea on the presented map to rezone to C-2,in order to accomplish the comprehensiveplan goal. The amendment specifically statesthe minimum for this district shall be twoacres, except for areas as defined in theattached exhibit, located along HWY 2&85between 26th and 58th St, which are markedon the future land use map as “commercial”or “future industrial to commercial transitionarea” Areas which are defined by the futureland use map as “commercial or “futureindustrial to commercial transition area” whichare delineated on this map may be re-zonedto C-2, with no minimal district size.Mayor Klug opened the public hearing andasked for public input.Mayor Klug asked for a second and third time

999. Public Notices

1654.18 315 03/05/15; 70393 Clm 1310MED-TECH RESOURCE, INC. 486.45 31503/05/15; 70394 Clm 999998 MEGAN PE-TERSON 39.98 315 03/05/15; 70395 Clm250 MICROMARKETING ASSOCIATES202.43 315 03/05/15; 70396 Clm 252 MID-CONTINENT COMMUNICATIONS 74.55 31503/05/15; 70397 Clm 254 MIKE'S WINDOWCLEANING SERVICE 80.00 315 03/05/15;70398 Clm 255 MILLY'S ALTERATIONS159.00 315 03/05/15; 70399 Clm 260 MOD-ERN MACHINE WORKS 275.00 31503/05/15; 70400 Clm 261 MON-DAK HTG &PLG, INC. 324.00 315 03/05/15; 70401 Clm243 MONTANA DAKOTA UTILITIES46293.53 315 03/05/15; 70402 Clm 1632MORRISON MAIERLE INC 4546.24 31503/05/15; 70403 Clm 265 MOTOROLA11194.42 315 03/05/15; 70404 Clm 267MOUNTRAIL-WILLIAMS REC 4289.59 31503/05/15; 70405 Clm 2291 Municipal Emer-gency Services, Inc 1279.77 315 03/05/15;70406 Clm 2021 MURPHY AND SONSTOWING AND RECOVE 120.00 31503/05/15; 70407 Clm 270 MURPHY MO-TORS, INC. 2772.08 315 03/05/15; 70408Clm 1772 MYGOV,LLC 600.00 315 03/05/15;70409 Clm 275 NAPA AUTO PARTS2413.26 315 03/05/15; 70410 Clm 2216 Na-tasha Yavorivska 800.00 315 03/05/15;70411 Clm 291 ND DEPARTMENT OFHEALTH 20.00 315 03/05/15; 70412 Clm 290ND DEPT OF TRANSPORTATION 7679.10315 03/05/15; 70413 Clm 999998 NEIL W.BAKKEN 91.00 315 03/05/15; 70414 Clm 320NEMONT 354.25 315 03/05/15; 70415 Clm2205 NEWMAN DIGITAL 2989.00 31503/05/15; 70416 Clm 584 NMN, INC. 445.00315 03/05/15; 70417 Clm 1239 NorthernControls Inc. 353.42 315 03/05/15; 70418Clm 333 NORTHWEST SUPPLY CO. 549.00315 03/05/15; 70419 Clm 1803 ODNEY6420.00 315 03/05/15; 70420 Clm 2339 Of-fice Depot 16.44 315 03/05/15; 70421 Clm340 OHNSTAD TWICHELL PC 5882.50 31503/05/15; 70422 Clm 343 OLYMPIC SALES,INC. 7055.01 315 03/05/15; 70423 Clm 344ONE FULFILLMENT 402.50 315 03/05/15;70424 Clm 1757 PDR Network 77.90 31503/05/15; 70425 Clm 351 PENWORTHY709.63 315 03/05/15; 70426 Clm 1051 POETETHANOL PRODUCTS, LLC 4092.40 31503/05/15; 70427 Clm 359 PRAXAIR DISTRI-BUTION INC 28.79 315 03/05/15; 70428 Clm364 PURCHASE POWER 1378.29 31503/05/15; 70429 Clm 367 QUILL CORPORA-TION 805.18 315 03/05/15; 70430 Clm 1882RAM SPV II, LLC 2300.00 315 03/05/15;70431 Clm 1800 RAMADA BISMARCK HO-TEL 448.20 315 03/05/15; 70432 Clm 1898RDG Planning & Design 2660.00 31503/05/15; 70433 Clm 1870 Red River OilfieldServices, Inc. 172.00 315 03/05/15; 70434Clm 387 RESPOND SYSTEMS 44.43 31503/05/15; 70435 Clm 999999 ROCKWATERENERGY SOLUTIONS ND INC 14.06 31503/05/15; 70436 Clm 999999 ROLLIE DALIN19.54 315 03/05/15; 70437 Clm 2203 RRI1013.04 315 03/05/15; 70438 Clm 1437 S JLOUIS CONSTRUCTION INC 43646.84 31503/05/15; 70439 Clm 999998 SAM M. AIDE17.50 315 03/05/15; 70440 Clm 1133SANDERSON STEWART 29050.68 31503/05/15; 70441 Clm 2012 SANI-STAR200.00 315 03/05/15; 70442 Clm 415 SE-LECT FORD 2468.27 315 03/05/15; 70443Clm 417 SENSUS METERING SYSTEMS1784.47 315 03/05/15; 70444 Clm 999999SIMPLY DAKOTA LLC 726.00 315 03/05/15;70445 Clm 426 SOURIS RIVER TELECOM-MUNICATIONS 262.81 315 03/05/15; 70446Clm 999999 SPURLOCK SCRAP 1144.76315 03/05/15; 70447 Clm 427 SRF CON-SULTING GROUP, INC 63149.75 31503/05/15; 70448 Clm 999998 STACEYEISSINGER 70.00 315 03/05/15; 70449 Clm2009 STAPLES ADVANTAGE 589.40 31503/05/15; 70450 Clm 438 STREICHER'S1923.94 315 03/05/15; 70451 Clm 999999TABITHA GARDINIER 39.99 315 03/05/15;70452 Clm 1686 TALKIN THE BAKKEN18.00 315 03/05/15; 70453 Clm 999999TERESA OLSON 52.27 315 03/05/15; 70454Clm 999999 TETRA TECHNOLOGIES 36.08315 03/05/15; 70455 Clm 999999 TETRATECHNOLOGIES 31.57 315 03/05/15; 70456Clm 999999 THERESA KELLY 36.34 31503/05/15; 70457 Clm 460 TRACTOR &EQUIPMENT CO. 3004.35 315 03/05/15;70458 Clm 461 TRACTOR SUPPLY CREDITPLAN 60.15 315 03/05/15; 70459 Clm 2361TRAILER & TRUCK EQUIPMENT 1452.03315 03/05/15; 70460 Clm 2195 TRANSUN-ION RISK & ALTERNATIVE 12.75 31503/05/15; 70461 Clm 811 TREASURE BAY,INC 91.83 315 03/05/15; 70462 Clm 463 TRI-ANGLE ELECTRIC 6296.93 315 03/05/15;70463 Clm 1610 ULTEIG 61701.89 31503/05/15; 70464 Clm 750 UPS 186.53 31503/05/15; 70465 Clm 470 US POSTALSERVICE 278.00 315 03/05/15; 70466 Clm485 VESSCO, INC. 2870.27 315 03/05/15;70467 Clm 487 VISA 8416.61 315 03/05/15;70468 Clm 2118 VISA 271.77 315 03/05/15;70469 Clm 1866 Vivid Ink and Toner 4473.97315 03/05/15; 70470 Clm 999999 WELL PRO25.00 315 03/05/15; 70471 Clm 999998 WIL-LIAM M. MCQUISTON 31.80 315 03/05/15;70472 Clm 532 WILLIAMS COUNTY HIGH-WAY DEPT. 259.77 315 03/05/15; 70473Clm 533 WILLIAMS COUNTY TREASURER/RECORDE 336.00 315 03/05/15; 70474 Clm564 WILLIAMS RURAL WATER DISTRICT89.10 315 03/05/15; 70475 Clm 2040 Willis-ton Area Chamber of Commerce 1000.00 31503/05/15; 70476Clm 514 WILLISTON COM-MUNITY LIBRARY 126.00 315 03/05/15;70477 Clm 517 WILLISTON FIRE & SAFETY397.60 315 03/05/15; 70478 Clm 518 WIL-LISTON HERALD 7207.09 315 03/05/15;70479 Clm 519 WILLISTON HOME & LUM-BER 32.58 315 03/05/15; 70480 Clm 525WILLISTON TIRE CENTER 719.98 31503/05/15; 70481 Clm 526 WILLISTON TRUEVALUE 583.72 315 03/05/15;# of Checks -618Claims - $4936043.85Payroll - $761985.66Total - $5698029.51(2) Application for a Local Permit or CharityLocal Permita. Cancer Crushers - Relay for Life - RafflePermitb. Williston Downtownerʼs Assoc - RafflePermitc. Williston Korner Lions - Raffle Permit(3) Special Permit to Sell AlcoholicBeverages(4) Taxi LicenseC. Building Official(1) Master Mechanicala. Randall Boone - Booneʼs Mechanical(2) Master Plumbera. Bradley Lanphear - BL Plumbing(3) Sign Hangera. Michael Hardin - Hardin Signsb. Randall Boone - Booneʼs Mechanicalc. Kringen ConstructionD. City PlannerE. Assessor(1) Abatementa. Application for Abatement -Sande Subdivision L10, B6 - Blank(2) Exemptions

999. Public Notices

03/05/15; 70284 Clm 999999 ALEX KALIL11.03 315 03/05/15; 70285 Clm 8 ALL SEA-SONS SPORT ABOUT 657.12 315 03/05/15;70286 Clm 1768 ALLIANC CONSULTING LC30157.50 315 03/05/15; 70287 Clm 999998AMANDA M. KAISER - LEE 14.00 31503/05/15; 70288 Clm 999999 AMERICANSTATE BANK 2.78 315 03/05/15; 70289 Clm718 AMERIPRIDE LINEN AND APPARELSERV 734.41 315 03/05/15; 70290 Clm999998 AMY A. KRUEGER 187.50 31503/05/15; 70291 Clm 999998 AMY D. NICK-OLOFF 437.50 315 03/05/15; 70292 Clm 25APCO INTERNATIONAL 75.00 315 03/05/15;70293 Clm 2209 APPLIED INDUSTRIALTECHNOLOGIES 1355.77 315 03/05/15;70294 Clm 999999 ARCH ELLWEIN 1000.00315 03/05/15; 70295 Clm 30 ASTRO-CHEMLAB, INC. 274.00 315 03/05/15; 70296 Clm708 AT&T 103.06 315 03/05/15; 70297 Clm723 BADLANDS STEEL, INC 1104.63 31503/05/15; 70298 Clm 33 BAKER & TAYLORCO. 624.27 315 03/05/15; 70299 Clm 34BALCO UNIFORM CO., INC. 6179.22 31503/05/15; 70300 Clm 38 BASIN PRINTERS,INC. 681.00 315 03/05/15; 70301 Clm 1190BASIN TOWING AND RECOVERY 350.00315 03/05/15; 70302 Clm 1223 BEST WEST-ERN PLUS/RAMKOTA HOTEL 448.20 31503/05/15; 70303 Clm 999999 BICE INVEST-MENTS LLC 36.65 315 03/05/15; 70304 Clm1764 BLACK HILLS RAPTOR CENTER1700.00 315 03/05/15; 70305 Clm 1357BLAINS AUTO BODY & SALES, iNC.1950.00 315 03/05/15; 70306 Clm 52 BOR-DER STATES ELECTRIC 7253.64 31503/05/15; 70307 Clm 599 BRAATEN PLUMB-ING, INC 1578.47 315 03/05/15; 70308 Clm999999 BRUCE & MICHELE WOOD 22.00315 03/05/15; 70309 Clm 1054 C & D WA-TER SERVICES 49.50 315 03/05/15; 70310Clm 67 CAR TUNZ 2875.00 315 03/05/15;70311 Clm 999999 CAROLINE PETERSON18.55 315 03/05/15; 70312 Clm 69 CAR-QUEST AUTO PARTS STORES 65.18 31503/05/15; 70313 Clm 549 CASH WISEFOODS 44.19 315 03/05/15; 70314 Clm1755 CDW Government 1210.18 31503/05/15; 70315 Clm 2356 CENTURYLINK121164.44 315 03/05/15; 70316 Clm 1623CHEMSEARCH 4324.00 315 03/05/15;70317 Clm 999999 CHIP LEER 2000.00 31503/05/15; 70318 Clm 77 CITY OF WILLIS-TON 2496.74 315 03/05/15; 70319 Clm 79CITY OF WILLISTON 43875.67 31503/05/15; 70320 Clm 80 CITY OF WILLIS-TON 38.84 315 03/05/15; 70321 Clm 1666CIVIL SCIENCE 2875.50 315 03/05/15;70322 Clm 81 CLAUSEN WELDING 4796.38315 03/05/15; 70323 Clm 567 CRAIG'SSMALL ENGINE REPAIR 754.14 31503/05/15; 70324 Clm 2351 Credit Bureau ofBismarck 36.36 315 03/05/15; 70325 Clm2070 CRYOTECH DEICING TECHNOLOGY23573.52 315 03/05/15; 70326 Clm 2015 Da-kota Fire Extinguishers 168546.00 31503/05/15; 70327 Clm 93 DAKOTA SUPPLYGROUP 18795.88 315 03/05/15; 70328 Clm2161 Dan's Tire Service 225.00 31503/05/15; 70329 Clm 999998 DAVID A. PE-TERSON 400.00 315 03/05/15; 70330 Clm999999 DAVID LAMBORN 2.51 31503/05/15; 70331 Clm 100 DAWA SOLU-TIONS GROUP 2000.00 315 03/05/15;70332 Clm 1705 DEGENSTEIN'S AUTOPLUS 4375.00 315 03/05/15; 70333 Clm2167 DETECTION INSTRUMENTS CORPO-RATION 57.80 315 03/05/15; 70334 Clm 694DIAMOND LAKE BOOK CO 101.70 31503/05/15; 70335 Clm 999999 DL TAYLORINC 73.05 315 03/05/15; 70336 Clm 999999DMAND 250.00 315 03/05/15; 70337 Clm2353 EAPC 497.23 315 03/05/15; 70338 Clm1665 EAST & WEST EXCAVATING LLC16767.50 315 03/05/15; 70339 Clm 125ELECTRO WATCHMAN, INC. 359.40 31503/05/15; 70340 Clm 126 EMRY'S LOCK-SMITHING 87.25 315 03/05/15; 70341 Clm999999 ERIC WILLIAMS 50.00 315 03/05/15;70342 Clm 650 ETHANOL PRODUCTS, LLC1676.17 315 03/05/15; 70343 Clm 2315EVCO HOUSE OF HOSE 21.70 31503/05/15; 70344 Clm 1962 EXECUTIVECLEANING SERVICE, LLC 5275.00 31503/05/15; 70345 Clm 905 FALCON PUMP &SUPPLY 544.23 315 03/05/15; 70346 Clm1083 FLEET SAFETY EQUIPMENT, INC1626.44 315 03/05/15; 70347 Clm 134 FORTUNION SUPPLY & TRADE 943.36 31503/05/15; 70348 Clm 999999 FRED HURT2000.00 315 03/05/15; 70349 Clm 139 GAF-FANEY'S 1152.50 315 03/05/15; 70350 Clm785 GALE/CENGAGE Learning 322.29 31503/05/15; 70351 Clm 846 GRAND FORKSFIRE 6735.30 315 03/05/15; 70352 Clm 1830Grand Williston Hotel & Conferenc 243.00315 03/05/15; 70353 Clm 144 GRAYMONTWESTERN CANADA 12512.57 315 03/05/15;70354 Clm 539 HACH 4701.57 315 03/05/15;70355 Clm 151 HAWKINS, INC. 11048.07315 03/05/15; 70356 Clm 550 HEDAHLSPARTS PLUS 165.78 315 03/05/15; 70357Clm 153 HEIMAN FIRE EQUIPMENT, INC.3653.05 315 03/05/15; 70358 Clm 2415Home Depot 803.00 315 03/05/15; 70359Clm 161 HOME OF ECONOMY 1299.01 31503/05/15; 70360 Clm 162 HORIZON RE-SOURCES 41612.72 315 03/05/15; 70361Clm 1646 I. KEATING Inc 699.50 31503/05/15; 70362 Clm 1503 iDSS GLOBALLLC 250.00 315 03/05/15; 70363 Clm 2039 Inthe Potter's Hand, Inc. 178.27 315 03/05/15;70364 Clm 999999 INDIGO SIGNWORKS,INC 1560.00 315 03/05/15; 70365 Clm 175INTERSTATE ENGINEERING 1357.50 31503/05/15; 70366 Clm 176 INTERSTATEPOWER SYSTEMS 272.64 315 03/05/15;70367 Clm 999999 JACK SUTHERLAND41.10 315 03/05/15; 70368 Clm 2113 JAMEO's TIRES 3195.00 315 03/05/15; 70369 Clm2280 James Woody Ball 244.93 31503/05/15; 70370 Clm 999998 JASON BAR-TEN 25.00 315 03/05/15; 70371 Clm 999999JEFFREY AMES 44.86 315 03/05/15; 70372Clm 999998 JENNIFER FLECK 287.50 31503/05/15; 70373 Clm 999999 JERAMY RICE37.29 315 03/05/15; 70374 Clm 2405 JIM'STOWING INC 195.00 315 03/05/15; 70375Clm 999999 JOE MENDRO 11.15 31503/05/15; 70376 Clm 191 JOE'S DIGGINGSERVICE INC 7425.00 315 03/05/15; 70377Clm 999999 JOSLYN MONTIJO 34.11 31503/05/15; 70378 Clm 999999 JP & LEEFOODS, LLC 283.00 315 03/05/15; 70379Clm 198 KDSR-FM 950.00 315 03/05/15;70380 Clm 999999 KEITH LEINTZ 0.67 31503/05/15; 70381 Clm 999998 KENT SKABO91.00 315 03/05/15; 70382 Clm 999999 KERIHAUGE 0.27 315 03/05/15; 70383 Clm 1299KNIFE RIVER-NORTH CENTRAL 9090.88315 03/05/15; 70384 Clm 220 LEARNINGOPPORTUNITIES 1033.22 315 03/05/15;70385 Clm 2416 Legand Data Systems762.15 315 03/05/15; 70386 Clm 999998LINDSEY HATCH 120.00 315 03/05/15;70387 Clm 2386 Lynn Card Company 115.45315 03/05/15; 70388 Clm 1606 MARS OFWILLISTON 1097.00 315 03/05/15; 70389Clm 999999 MARY BOTTASS 51.42 31503/05/15; 70390 Clm 999999 MATTHEWNAISMITH 39.04 315 03/05/15; 70391 Clm2403 MAVO SYSTEMS NORTH DAKOTALLC 4000.00 315 03/05/15; 70392 Clm 585MCCODY CONCRETE PRODUCTS, INC

999. Public Notices

Page 14: 04/10/15 - Williston Herald

B6 WILLISTON HERALD FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 Classified

NOTICE TO CREDITORSProbate No. 53-2015-PR-00120

IN THE DISTRICT COURT,NORTHWEST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

COUNTY OF WILLIAMS,STATE OF NORTH DAKOTAIn the Matter of the Estate of

Shirley Ann Hoburka, Deceased.NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that theundersigned has been appointed PersonalRepresentative of the above estate. Allpersons having claims against the saiddeceased are required to present their claimswithin three months after the date of the firstpublication of this notice or said claims will beforever barred. Claims must either bepresented to JIMMY A. HICKS, PersonalRepresentative of the estate, 314 4th AvenueEast, Williston, ND 58801, or filed with theCourt.DATED this 25th day of March 2015.

By: -s- JIMMY A. HICKSJIMMY A. HICKS, Personal Representative

Kathleen Key Imes ID#04180NEFF EIKEN & NEFF, P.C.111 East Broadway - P. O. Box 1526Williston, North Dakota 58802-1526(701) [email protected] for Personal Representative

(March 27, April 3, 10, 2015)

NOTICE OF HEARING PETITION FORAPPLICATION FOR FORMAL PROBATE

OF WILL AND APPOINTMENTOF PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE

Probate No. 53-2014-PR-00702IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF

WILLIAMS COUNTY,STATE OF NORTH DAKOTAIn the Matter of the Estate of

RUTH CRAIG MINOR,AKA RUTH C. MINOR, deceased

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that WilliamChampion, has filed herein an Application forFormal Probate of Will and Appointment ofPersonal Representative.Hearing has been set upon said petition onthe 28th day of April, 2015, at 4:30 o'clockP.M., Central Time, at the Courtroom of theabove named Court in the City of Williston,County of Williams, State of North Dakota.Dated this 24th day of March, 2015.

KUBIK, BOGNER, RIDL & SELINGERBy: -s- BRUCE A. SELINGER

Bruce A. SelingerAttorney for Petitioner117 First Street East

P. O. Box 1173Dickinson, ND 58602-1173

(I.D. # 04368)(701) 225-9155

e-mail: [email protected](March 27, April 3, 10, 2015)

NOTICE TO CREDITORSCourt File No. 53-2015-PR-00140

IN THE DISTRICT COURT OFWILLIAMS COUNTY,

NORTH DAKOTAIn the Matter of the Estate of

Donald M. Anderson,a/k/a Donald Meredith Anderson,

Deceased[1] NOTICE IS GIVEN that the undersignedhas been appointed Personal Representativeof the above estate. All persons havingclaims against the Deceased are required topresent their claims within three (3) monthsafter the date of the first publication of thisNotice or claims will be forever barred.Claims must either be presented to ChristineH. Anderson, Personal Representative of theEstate, at 4596 Camino Molinero, SantaBarbara, CA 93110, or filed with the Court.Dated this 25th day of March, 2015.

/s/ CHRISTINE H. ANDERSONChristine H. Anderson

4596 Camino MolineroSanta Barbara, CA 93110

Personal RepresentativePatrick T. Dixon (ND #06431)NILLES LAW FIRM1800 Radisson Tower201 North 5th StreetP. O. Box 2626Fargo, North Dakota 58108-2626(701) [email protected] for Personal Representative

(March 27, April 3, 10, 2015)

Granite Peaks that may leak into Sand Creekproperty. Mayor Klug is assigning this to thefire department. It will be addressed. MayorKlug stated there is a spot on the website forsuch complaints.B. John Cameron, representing the WesternND Regional Director for Senator JohnHoven. The FBI announced they havesigned a lease on a property to be built inWilliston. It will be at the Badlands TownCenter. This is a 600 Sq. Ft. stand-alonebuilding. Agents will be on the ground in Mayand construction should be completed bySeptember.13. Executive Session14. AdjournMOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to adjourn the meetingUNANIMOUS BY VOICE VOTE

By: -s- HOWARD KLUGHoward Klug, President

Board of City CommissionersBy: -s- JOHN KAUTZMANJohn Kautzman, City Auditor

(April 10, 2015)

999. Public Notices

payment will be $1,146.34.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYBEKKEDAHL, to approve the flex PACEinterest buy-down to Little Muddy Gifts aspresented by Mr. WenkoAYE: Piesik, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenABSTAIN: CYMBALUKCARRIED: 3-0(2) Community Build Granta. Mercy Medical FoundationMercy Medical is requesting a grant up to$50,000 for the transformation of the MercyCenter Outpatient Birthplace to an InpatientBirthplace. The facility will make adjustmentssuch as a required larger nursery and withthe increase capacity additional monitoringand equipment and supplies. Following thecompletion of the transformation, the OBdepartment can relocate to the Birthplace;which will increase labor, delivery andpostpartum capacity from 10 to 16 rooms.Another significant benefit to this relocation isthe convenience of the first floor surgicalsuites to be used for C-sections. MercyMedical is the only healthcare facility toprovide labor, delivery and postpartumservices in the Williston area.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the community build grantto the Mercy Medical Foundation not toexceed $50,000 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0b. Williston State College SBDCWilliston State College SBDC is requesting acommunity build grant of $3,451. This is forthe development of a new interactivebusiness plan that is location specific to theNW region of ND. This is a 50/0 cost shareso if the office, funding or director goes away,the local infrastructure maintains ownership.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYBEKKEDAHL, to approve the communitybuild grant to the Williston State CollegeSBDC in the amount of $3,451 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0Anthony Dudas, Sloulin Airport presented thefollowing:J. Airport(1) Ground Lease Agreement - AmericanTruck & Equipment - Hanger #3This is an agreement transfer between LynnLeininger and Brad Peterson.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approveAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(2) Request for Bid - Plow Truck/SpreaderRequest to go out for bid for a plow truck andspreader vehicle. This equipment wasbudgeted at $600,000 using passengerfacility charges.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approveAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(3) Request for Bid - Multi-Function SnowRemoval EquipmentRequest to go out for bid for a multi-functionsnow removal equipment. This equipmentwas budgeted at $675,000 using PFC funds.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to approve the piece of equip-ment as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0K. AssessorL. Convention and Visitorʼs Bureau10. Appointments and Consultations withOfficers11. Unfinished BusinessA. Larry Grondahl - MDU Utility PoleHOLDB. Taxi Committee - Limo Services Exemptfrom MetersHOLDAgri-Industries- Ed Garcia/Borsheim Subdivi-sion - Water Well Committee W/City AttorneyA meeting will be held with the BorsheimSubdivision in the first part of April to discussthe possibility of water and sewer lines.Mayor Klug asked why it is being held off untilJune when the item has been on the agendafor two months. Commissioner Cymbalukstated he thought it was possibly due to legal-ity concerns.HOLDBakken Club - Reacquire of AlcoholicBeverage License - reorganization ofbusiness - table for 30 days (from 1/13/15) -Readdress 3/24/2015 MeetingHOLDNorthern Heights Subdivision/66th St. Water,Sewer and Street ImprovementsA meeting is scheduled March 19th, at thelibrary at 6:00pm and notices have been sentout.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to remove this item from the agendaUNANIMOUS BY VOICE VOTEF. REMOVED12. New BusinessA. Darlene Slingsby presented pictures to thecommission with concerns of a leak at

999. Public Notices

This will be 11th St going west from the 32ndAve W round a bout near where Menards isbeing built towards 139th Ave. This is a twopart project. The first half would be built from32nd Ave going west about half mile. Thesecond part of the project would be goingacross a relatively deep coulee with theintention of constructing a dry dam whichshould add flood protection. RFPʼs weredone for this. Quite a few responses werereceived. AE2S has reviewed theseproposals. AE2S recommends the top twoengineering firms; Sanderson Stewart andUlteig Engineering. Sanderson Stewartsestimated fees are $394,000 and Ulteig hasestimated fees of $750,000.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request from BobHanson to Sanderson Stewart for the amountnot to exceed $394,000 as presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-026th Street Lift Station and West WillistonSewer Capacity IssuesThis is a request to create a committee foradvice on how to handle a sewer capacityissue on the west end of 26th St. This isinitiated by the new high school project.During the preliminary design, it wasdiscovered the amount of waste waterproduced in the development in that areamay have been underestimated. Theconcern is if the 12 inch sewer will be largeenough to handle the population in that area.The development is denser than expected.Solutions include rebuilding the 12 inch lineor pumping waste water south across SandCreek to the West Williston lift station alongthe highway. Mr. Hanson would like himself,David Tuan, Kent Jarcik and one or twocommissioners on the committee. MayorKlug appointed, Bob Hanson, David Tuan, aplanning representative, CommissionerCymbaluk and Commissioner Piesik.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request Bob haspresented to appoint the committee andsuggested by the mayorAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0E. Fire ChiefF. Chief of PoliceG. Building OfficialH. City PlannerShawn Wenko, Economic Developmentpresented the following:I. Economic Development(1) Flex Pacea. C&D Food Franchise, LLCC & D are requesting an interest buy downnot to exceed $17,163 to establish a LittleCaesars in the Badlands Town Center. Theproject cost is associated with tenant improvements, build out and purchase ofequipment for the location. Yearly paymentsare not to exceed $5975.48, with the first yearpayment of $2987.75. The project shouldcreate five full-time positions and twenty-fivepart-time positions.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the request as presentedfrom ShawnAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0b. Little Muddy Gifts, LLCLittle Muddy Gifts, LLC is requesting aninterest buy-down not to exceed $3,289 toestablish a 1400 Sq. ft. gift shop. First year

999. Public Notices

This is creating Water and Sewer District15-7 for a water and sewer line in WillistonPark Subdivision on 49th St. This is apetitioned project. No protest hearing isrequired. Cost is estimated at $600,000 with$300,000 for the sewer system and theremainder for the water system. The watersystem will be eligible for a 60% cost sharegrant from the state water commission. TheCity will be paying for the water improve-ments up to $300,000 utilizing the 60% costshare grant. The remaining costs would beassessed to the property owners on anequivalent lot basis. Neighborhood meetingsare scheduled with the rest of Williston ParkSubdivision regarding the possibility ofconstructing similar projects on 46th, 47thand 48th Street. Those meetings arescheduled April 1st at 6:00pm at the library.MOTION BY PIESIK, SECONDED BYCYMBALUK, to adopt resolutions 15-046Creating the water, sewer and street improve-ment district, 15-047 Directing the engineer toprepare a report, 15-048, Approving theengineers report, 15-049 Declaring thenecessity of the district, 15-050 Directing theengineer to prepare plans and specificationsfor construction, 15-051 Approving the plansand specifications, 15-052 Orderingadvertisement for bid, for District 15-3 aspresented from Bob using the 60% cost sharegrant from the state water commission andestimation of $300,000 to installAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0AMENDED MOTION BY PIESIK,SECONDED BY CYMBALUK, to adoptresolutions 15-046 Creating the water, sewerand street improvement district, 15-047Directing the engineer to prepare a report,15-048, Approving the engineers report,15-049 Declaring the necessity of the district,15-050 Directing the engineer to prepareplans and specifications for construction,15-051 Approving the plans and specifica-tions, 15-052 Ordering advertisement for bid,for District 15-7 as presented from Mr. BobHansonAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(3) Approval of Plans & Specifications andAuthorization to Advertise for Bids for the2015 Water Main Replacement ProjectThe City is proposing to replace the existing 6inch cast iron water mains along 16th Ave Wbetween 9th and 10th Street along 17th AveW between 6th and 10th Street and alongGate Ave between 10th And 11th Street.Also proposed is to replace the existing 6inch cast iron water main along 10th Streetbetween 9th and 14th Ave W and the loopingconnections on to 11th Street. This is a Cityproject so there will be no assessments. Itwill be paid through sales tax dollars andsurge funding. The estimated cost is $2million.MOTION BY CYMBALUK, SECONDED BYPIESIK, to approve the resolutions for theplans and specifications and authorize theengineer to advertise for bids for theconstruction of the 2015 water main projectas presentedAYE: Piesik, Cymbaluk, Bekkedahl, KlugNAY: NONEABSENT AND NOT VOTING: BrostuenCARRIED: 4-0(4) REMOVED(5) Engineering Services Agreements for the11th St W Project from 32nd to 139th AveWest

999. Public Notices999. Public Notices999. Public Notices

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a special meeting and a public hearing on Thursday, April 23, 2015, at 5:30PMC.T., in the Commission Room of City Hall, to consider Ordinance 1017: An ordinance of the Cityof Williston amending and expanding the one-mile extra- territorial jurisdiction of the City of Williston.

LOCATION MAP

Copies of said Ordinance and map of proposed extraterritorial jurisdiction will be available to thepublic for inspection and copying from Monday through Thursday, 8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AMto 1 PM in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a public hearing on Monday, April 20, 2015, at 5:30PM C.T., in the CommissionRoom of City Hall, to consider a rearrangement of Lots 1-8 of Block 6 of the Harvest Hills Subdivision,located along Golden Vista Ave. between 32nd St W and 30th St W, containing 1.95 acres.

LOCATION MAP

Map of property will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Monday through Thursday,8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a public hearing on Monday, April 20, 2015, at 5:30PM C.T., in the CommissionRoom of City Hall, to consider a rearrangement of Lots 2-9 of Block 16 of the Harvest Hills Subdivision,located along Long Branch Avenue between 32nd St W and Prairie Commons St, containing 2.08acres.

LOCATION MAP

Maps of property will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Monday through Thursday,8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a public hearing on Monday, April 20, 2015, at 5:30PM C.T., in the CommissionRoom of City Hall, to consider a plat in the NE1/4, SE1/4, Sw1/4, and NW1/4 of Section 21, T154NR101W, containing 122.29 acres; a zone change from A: Agricultural to C-2: General Commercialfor 29.81 acres, from A: Agricultural to R-3: Low-Rise Multifamily and Townhouse Residential for46.73 acres, and A: Agricultural to R-4: High-Rise Multifamily Residential for 43.41 acres; and anamendment to the future land use plan from Low Density Residential to High Density Residentialfor 43.41 acres and Industrial to Low to Medium Density Residential for 20 acres, High Density Residentialto Commercial for 21 acres, and Low Density Residential to Commercial for approx. 9 acres.

LOCATION MAP

Maps of property will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Monday through Thursday,8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a special meeting and a public hearing on Thursday, April 23, 2015, at 5:30PMC.T., in the Commission Room of City Hall, to consider Ordinance 1018: An ordinance amendingSection 26 of Ordinance 613, otherwise known as the zoning ordinance of the City of Williston, toinclude and extend the city building code and fire code to the one-mile extra-territorial jurisdictionfor the City of Williston.Copies of said Ordinance will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Mondaythrough Thursday, 8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM in the office of the Planning and ZoningDepartment.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Planning and Zoning Commission of the City of Williston, NorthDakota, schedules a public hearing on Monday, April 20, 2015, at 5:30PM C.T., in the CommissionRoom of City Hall, to consider a zone change from A: Agricultural to M-1: Light Industrial and anamendment to the future land use map from Commercial to Industrial for 8.625 acres and a in theproposed Iron Point Subdivision, located west of Schlumberger and east of 140th Ave NW, north ofHwy 2/85.

LOCATION MAP

Map of property will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Monday through Thursday,8 AM to 5 PM and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THEW ILLISTON PLANNING AND ZONING COMMISSIONBy: -s- KENT JARCIKKent Jarcik, City Planner

(April 10, 17, 2015)

PUBLIC HE ARING NOTICENOTICE OF FILING OF A PETITION FOR VACATION AND DISCONTINUANCE OF A PUBLIC RIGHT–OF-WAY (50-FOOT WIDE STREET) BETWEEN BLOCKS 9 and 10, WILLISTON PARK SUBDIVISIONNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that a written petition signed by Thomas Weiss and Douglass Schyvinctand filed with the City Auditor of the City of Williston, North Dakota requesting that a Public Rightof Way adjoining the above- described property be vacated and discontinued

LOCATION MAP

A Plat of the Property, together with the aforementioned Petition to which it is attached, showing theproperty affected, is on file with the City Planning Department of the City of Williston and may beexamined by anyone wishing to do so between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday throughThursday and 8:00 a.m. to 1:00p.m. on Friday.A hearing on the Petition will be held in the Commission Room located in City Hall within the Cityof Williston, North Dakota on the 12th day of May, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. Central Time, at which timeany interested person or persons may appear and make protests of objections to the vacation ofthe street described herein.Should you plan to attend and need special facilities or assistance relating to a disability, contactCity Hall at (701) 55-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711DATED AT WILLISTON, NORTH DAKOTA THIS 8th DAY OF APRIL, 2015By: -s- JOHN KAUTZMANJohn Kautzman, City Auditor

(April 10, 17, 24, May 1, 2015)

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICENOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the City Commission of the City of Williston, North Dakota, schedulesa public hearing on Tuesday, April 14, 2015, at 6:00 PM C.T. in the Commission Room of City Hallto consider a zone change for the following lots, containing approximately 24.6 acres:Lots 1 and 2 of Block 1, Lot 1 and 8 of Block 2; Lots 1, 2, R1 Rearrangement of Lots 4 thru 9, R2Rearrangement of Lots 4 thru 9, R3 Rearrangement of Lots 4 thru 9, R4 Rearrangement of Lots 4thru 9, Block 3; of Hi-Land Heights 1st Subdivision.Lots 7, 8, 10, 11 and 12, Block 4; the S 150ʼ of E 150ʼ of Lot 1, Block 5, Hi-Land Heights 2nd Subdivision.Unplatted 165ʼ x 561.87ʼ in Section 25 Between Lots 8 and 10 of Hi-Land Heights 2nd Subdivison,T155N R101W.From A: Agricultural to R-1A: Rural Residential, located along 70th St E.

Maps of said property will be available to the public for inspection and copying from Monday throughThursday, 8 AM to 5 PM, and Fridays, 8 AM to 1 PM, in the office of the Planning and Zoning Department.If you plan to attend the hearing and will need special facilities of assistance relating to a disability,contact City Hall at 701-577-8104 or through the TDD State Relay at 711.BY ORDER OF THE W ILLISTON CITY COMMISSIONBy: -s- JOHN KAUTZMANJohn KautzmanCity Auditor

(April 3, 10, 2015)

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Classified FRIDAY, APRIL 10, 2015 WILLISTON HERALD B7

Sudoku puzzles are for-matted as a 9x9 grid, bro-ken down into nine 3x3boxes. To solve a sudoku,the numbers 1 through 9must fill each row, columnand box. Each numbercan appear only once ineach row, column andbox. See answer box intomorrowʼs paper.

719 2nd St. W.572-8167Web Page

www.fredricksens.net

Williston:

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FULL TIME POSITION OPEN FOR ACUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE

AT THE THE WILLISTON HERALDThis Positions Requires...

Calling on existing and new customers in Williston and surrounding area, for display advertising for a 4,500 daily, 15,200 circulation TMC product

and our newly established “Talkin’ the Bakken” monthly magazine.

This is a rich territory with a wide variety of businesses, both large and small. The ideal person to �ll this job is comfortable with mom and popbusinesses as well as major accounts. Our team does most of our selling

face-to-face which requires a professional appearance. Your ability to network and connect with the community is essential to your success.

EARN AN INCOME THAT FAR EXCEEDS AVERAGE.

If you are CUSTOMER SERVICE ORIENTED | ORGANIZED | ENTHUSIASTIC & POSITIVE

CREATIVE | HONEST | ENJOY WORKING WITH THE PUBLIC

this job may be for you.

Excellent GRAMMAR | SPELLING | COMMUNICATION | CUSTOMER SERVICE SKILLS

are a must.Sales experience is not necessary, if this describes you... we will train you!

Bene�ts...Paid Vacation | Paid Holidays | 401k

Blue Cross Blue Shield Health Insurance | and Optional Dental

Write Your Own Check!Salary plus Commission | Mileage Paid | Monday through Friday

Williston Herald, Attn.: Marley Morgan, P.O. Box 1447, Williston, ND 58802 or email your resume to [email protected] RESUME TO:

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Send resumes to: Western Cooperative Credit Union

Must be �exible, a team player, and have a positive attitude.

WWW.WCCU.ORG

Equal Opportunity Employer

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06NEW SERVICEDIRECTORYFor an additional $50 your ad

will be featured monthly inTalkin’ the Bakken

Ideal for professional service providers to increase recognition and generate new business!Our Service directory reaches over20,000 readers a week Call 701-572-2165 or e-mail

2X2 ad for$49.79monthly

3X2 ad for$99.00monthly

We are busier than ever and are gearing up for a great 2015 and we need quali�ed candidates to drive our Mixer Trucks! Our drivers earn great pay and bene�ts and are home every night. We currently have

openings throughout the greater Siouxland area.We offer:

401(K) planHealth, Dental & Vision insurancePaid vacationSafety incentive programNEW RETENTION BONUS FOR 2015

Quali�ed candidates who possess a valid Class A or B CDL and can pass a DOT physical and drug screen are encouraged to apply online

at www.lymanrichey.com and click the “employment” tab.

Equal opportunity employer

PAVE YOURFUTURE

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Newspaper Carriers are independent contractors and are responsible for delivering the Williston

Herald to subscribers Mon- Fri by 6:00 pm and Sunday mornings by 9:00am. Prospects must have a valid driver’s license & current

vehicle insurance. Newspaper carriers are also responsible for maintaining and using their own

vehicle for deliveries, hiring and training substitute drivers, and increasing sales on route.

Routes currently available are in the Williston area. Apply in person at

The Williston Herald Circulation Dept.14 4th ST. W Williston , ND 58801.

701-572-2165. Ask for Heather Taylor or Tammy Britt.

$$ $Earn EXTRA INCOME

DeliveringThe Williston Herald

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Bids will be received at Community Development Institute Head Start (“CDI HS”) Serving Williams County, 409 7th Ave E, Williston, ND 58801 until April 21, 2015 3:00p.m. Central Daylight Time on for:

Project Title: Head Start Nature Play Yard.The selected Bidder (the “Contractor”) will provide the following services in connection with the Project:

Landscaping and irrigation, grading, installation of slide on hill.

Using Agency: Community Development Institute Head Start Serving Williams Co. Location: 409 7th Ave E. Williston, ND 58801

The Invitation for Bid (“IFB”) documents may be obtained from Christine Beck Site Manager at 989-860-7957 or from Lana Davis @ 409 7th Ave E, Williston, ND 58801 beginning April 6, 2015. For further informationregarding the project call Anne Nelson at 505-473-2819.

A pre-bid conference is being held on Friday, April 10, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. Central Daylight Time. The dial in number is: (712)775-7031 code942-602-600 #. This conference call is optional.

The IFB is available in digital format. Proposal preparation will be in accordance with Instructions found in the IFB. CDI HS reserves the right to waive irregularities and to reject any or all bids.

Community Development InstituteHEAD START

Serving Williams Co.

(701) 609-4000 phone

ARE YOU HAVING AGarage Sale?Advertise your garage sale for $19.99 a week in the Williston Herald and the Plains Reporter. Stop in at the Williston Herald and get your FREE Garage Sale Kit.

Contact your local sales representative to place an ad today.701-572-2165 or e-mail [email protected]

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B8 Williston Herald friday, april 10, 2015

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www.BasinBrokers.com

106 Main St. (or PO Box 456) Williston ND 58801701.572.5560 1.800.572.5560

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ROGER CYMBALUK 572.6247

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CHARLA OLSON 701.260.9924

OUR TEAM 2818 25th Street West MAJOR PRICE REDUCTIONBeautiful home in a nice quiet location ready to move right in! Home features 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, double attached heated garage, extra parking space and landscaped yard.

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421 20th Street EastNice, updated brick home with a large yard that features a salt water pool! Home has 6 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms and attached double car garage.

124 5th Street WestCute, updated home featuring 1 bedroom, 1 large bathroom, updated kitchen and office located off the kitchen.

2203 19th Ave. WestBeautiful custom built home by local builder. This home features 3 very large bedrooms, 2 bathrooms and unfinished basement offering lots of potential! Includes master bedroom with master bathroom and large closet.

2205 2nd Avenue EastThis home is a must see! Home features remodeled master bath, 3 season porch, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 bathrooms all on the main level! Home also has double car attached garage.

PROPERTIES OF ALL KINDS. TOO MANY TO LIST. OFFICES IN WILLISTON & WATFORD CITY

20 AGENTS TO SERVE YOU!

www.BakkenRealty.comWilliston Of� ce

1411 West Dakota Pkwy Suite 3A701-580-8116

Watford City of� ce232 Main Street North

701-842-4224

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MAKING DREAMS COME TRUE

We now proudly represent Windsong Country Estates.

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BUILDERS & PROJECTS WE REPRESENT;

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Residential • Land • Commercial

Williston Of� ce719 2nd Street West

Williston, ND701.572.8167

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Watford City, ND 58854701.580.1868

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