CARRINGTON, N.D. (NewsDakota.com) After a tight game through five innings, the Cardinals scored eight runs in the home half of the sixth and win by a walk-off walk with the bases loaded 14-4 over the Blacksox of SNR. Carrington is now 9-4 overall and 6-2 in region 3 play, Sheyenne/New Rockford drops to 6-9 overall and 3-6 in region 3.
SNR used three pitchers in the sixth, and they recorded only one out. Nick Berglund suffers the loss, working five innings on 108 pitches. Lucas Hendrickson picks up the victory, working five innings and 109 pitches, Grady Shipman worked an inning in relief. Hudson Schmitz and Austin Trelstad had two hits each for Carrington.
North Dakota Community Foundation Surpasses $115 Million in Net Assets
SPECIAL TO DEVILS LAKE JOURNAL
BISMARK - The North Dakota Community Foundation (NDCF) has announced that it surpassed $115 million in net assets in 2020. The organization was founded in 1976 to improve the quality of life of North Dakotans through charitable giving and promoting philanthropy.
NDCF currently manages over 750 charitable funds, including 69 local community foundations in the state and over 150 scholarship funds for North Dakota students. It has awarded over $84 million in grants since its inception. The organization has offices in Bismarck, Larimore, Dickinson, and Wahpeton, North Dakota.
Local community foundations at NDCF in this part of the state include:
North Dakota man found guilty of cattle theft
Richard Musland has been sentenced to 366 days in county jail for pleading guilty to two counts of cattle-related theft.
Written By:
Agweek Staff Report | 4:42 pm, Apr. 15, 2021 ×
(Emily Beal / Agweek)
An Edgeley, N.D., man pleaded guilty last week to two counts of theft in a cattle-related case in LaMoure County.
On April 8, Southeast District Court Judge Daniel D. Narum sentenced Richard Musland to 366 days in county jail for each of the Class C felonies, but suspended the jail sentence. Narum also ordered Musland to pay more than $2,500 in court fees and restitution and to serve 18 months on supervised probation. Among the conditions of the probation, Musland is prohibited from buying any livestock, directly or through a third person, during his probation period and must receive permission from his probation officer in order to sell any of his existing animals.
An Edgeley, N.D., man pled guilty last week to two counts of theft in a cattle-related case in LaMoure County.
On April 8, Southeast District Court Judge Daniel D. Narum sentenced Richard Musland to 366 days in county jail for each of the Class C felonies, but suspended the jail sentence. Narum also ordered Musland to pay more than $2,500 in court fees and restitution and to 18 months of supervised probation. Among the conditions of the probation, Musland is prohibited from buying any livestock, directly or through a third person, during his probation period and must receive permission from his probation officer in order to sell any of his existing animals.
By Doug Barrett
The North Dakota Senate has approved the bill that funds K-12 schools.
That includes language on what school districts are to do with the increased state funding.
The Senate is proposing a one percent increase in per-pupil payments in each year of the upcoming biennium. This, as school districts will be receiving federal money due to the COVID-19 pandemic. But comes with strings attached.
Grand Forks Republican Senator Ray Holmberg chairs the Appropriations Committee, and also chaired the K-12 subcommittee. He says that subcommittee – which also included Bismarck Republican Senator Nicole Poolman and Senate Minority Leader Joan Heckaman of New Rockford – approved language that tells local districts 70 percent of the new state money has to be spent on teacher compensation. “In schools education takes place in the classroom and that’s where we want to focus North Dakota money.”