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BISMARCK • MANDAN • DICKINSON<br />

APRIL 2013<br />

Use your smart<br />

phone barcode<br />

scanner to learn<br />

more about<br />

City Magazine.<br />

Creative How-To<br />

Hobby Hub 19<br />

Success Under 45<br />

City Magazine 22<br />

Leisure<br />

Travel 29<br />

Executive Director,<br />

North Dakota Indian Affairs Commission<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 1<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>


ADOPT ME- Schatzie<br />

Oatmeal<br />

Oreo’s Animal Rescue<br />

ph: 701.483.0240<br />

web: lovingpetsinneed.com<br />

701.667.8666<br />

“My name is Schatzie. I am a five-year-old neutered<br />

male that has lived at the Central Dakota Humane Society<br />

since November of 2008. I was found wandering around<br />

north Bismarck and when the people who found me had<br />

me tested for Feline Aids, they discovered I was positive for<br />

the virus, so I couldn’t live with their other cats. That’s how I<br />

came to live at the shelter.<br />

Feline Aids virus is not contagious to people or dogs, just<br />

other cats. Many times the cat who has it shows no signs of<br />

sickness. If you’d like to meet me, I’d like to meet you, too!<br />

I’m patiently waiting for the right someone to fall in love<br />

with me and give me my very own house to run.”<br />

Sue Buchholz is the Central Dakota Humane Society shelter director.<br />

For more information about Central Dakota Humane<br />

Society call 701.667.2020 or visit cdhs.com<br />

ADOPT ME<br />

Bismarck-Mandan Impound<br />

ph: 701.223.1212<br />

web: bismarck.org<br />

Department > Police > Field<br />

Services > Animal Control ><br />

Impounded Animal<br />

WORK WITH US!<br />

CITY MAGAZINE<br />

PUBLISHER’S NOTE<br />

The Power of Failure<br />

This article will be more<br />

about success than failure.<br />

Success sometimes makes us<br />

over-confident, which can<br />

make us a bit arrogant and<br />

of course, no one likes that.<br />

We learn so much more<br />

from the difficult times.<br />

Failure may make us<br />

more humble and a bit<br />

kinder. Often, financial<br />

success has more value<br />

placed upon it than the<br />

many other successes.<br />

Financially successful people<br />

often want to give advice on<br />

issues that are not in their<br />

scope of expertise. So, here<br />

are some thoughts that I Joe Hauer, publisher<br />

have collected from reading<br />

that I will share.<br />

For your own well-being, you must instill in your<br />

mind that you are successful even in failure. Look at your<br />

achievements against benchmarks realistically. Don’t let<br />

someone else’s words damage your self confidence or selfesteem.<br />

See yourself as a winner and your attitude will support<br />

that. Some failures are not within our control and we should<br />

not let them effect us in a negative way. Do not let success go<br />

to your head. Remember it’s the people around us that may<br />

have played a bigger part than you may have. I have known<br />

successful people that had a very difficult time dealing with<br />

failure that came their way. People want to help you succeed<br />

and you need to show them respect and gratitude.<br />

Desire success in anything you do. Don’t be down on<br />

failure; embrace it like gold. It is the life lesson for your own<br />

good. If you fail to fail, you will have no measure of the<br />

extent of your success. And so we approach the challenges of<br />

daily life and we try to focus on tomorrow. Yesterday is in the<br />

past, and hopefully we learned something from it.<br />

STAY IN TOUCH WITH US<br />

TWITTER<br />

Follow us at twitter.com/#!/bismarckcitymag<br />

FACEBOOK<br />

Follow us at facebook.com/thecitymagazine<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 3<br />

APRIL 2013 | Contents<br />

City Magazine n<br />

Publisher’s Note 3<br />

Cover Story n<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong> 6<br />

Community Cluster n<br />

City Magazine Salutes 10<br />

Sports Watch 12<br />

New Around Town 14<br />

Mandan on the Move 15<br />

Arts and Entertainment n<br />

Local Events 16<br />

Taste of N.D. 18<br />

Hobby Hub n<br />

Creative How-To 19<br />

Mommy Blog 20<br />

Crossword 21<br />

Good Reads 21<br />

City Magazine n<br />

Success Under 45 22<br />

Business and Money n<br />

Ask the Professor 24<br />

Home n<br />

Home 101 26<br />

Health n<br />

Healthy Lifestyle 28<br />

Travel n<br />

Leisure 29<br />

The Badlands 30<br />

Western N.D. n<br />

Curt Dacar 31


PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Hauer<br />

UNITED PRINTING PRESIDENT<br />

Ken Bischof<br />

EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND EDITOR<br />

Rebecca Rattei<br />

ADVERTISING MANAGERS<br />

Corey Hittle<br />

Kayli Thiel<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Sue Buchholz<br />

Deb Dragseth<br />

Jim Fuglie<br />

Amanda Godfread<br />

Joe Hauer<br />

Maxine Herr<br />

Kevin Holten<br />

Ellen Huber<br />

Amy Jo Johnson<br />

Michael Lindblom<br />

Pam Link<br />

Rebecca Rattei<br />

Tom Regan<br />

Terri Schlichenmeyer<br />

Mandy Thomas<br />

Mitch Vance<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY<br />

Platinum Photography<br />

Kristin Byram<br />

DISTRIBUTION<br />

Sheldon Dewald<br />

The city Magazine does not<br />

necessarily endorse or agree with the<br />

contents of articles or advertising appearing<br />

in the magazine.<br />

The city Magazine<br />

published monthly by United Printing<br />

117 W. Front Avenue • P.O. Box 936<br />

Bismarck, ND 58502-0936<br />

Ph. 701-223-0505 • Fax 701-223-5571<br />

www.thecitymag.com<br />

Printed in the USA. Free at limited locations.<br />

Subscription rates are $24/year. For advertising<br />

information call 223-0505.<br />

CITY MAGAZINE<br />

EDITOR’S NOTE<br />

Hometown Pride<br />

Rebecca Rattei,<br />

executive director<br />

and editor<br />

4 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

A person should be proud<br />

of where they came from.<br />

Growing up in a small town<br />

has molded me into the person<br />

I am today. I’m proud to<br />

be from Napoleon, and as if<br />

I didn’t have enough reasons<br />

to be proud of my hometown,<br />

recently the Napoleon girls<br />

basketball team made it to the<br />

2013 State Class “B” tournament.<br />

Watching the girls play<br />

on television brought back<br />

fond memories of running up<br />

and down the court with my<br />

teammates. Although they<br />

didn’t win, I’m proud to see<br />

my hometown make the tournament,<br />

congratulations girls!<br />

Another person who’s<br />

upbringing molded him into<br />

CONTENTS APRIL 2013<br />

19 22<br />

the person he is today is our cover person <strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>. You can<br />

City Magazine 3/13 read Crossword about his success story and how he serves for the state of<br />

North Dakota starting on page six.<br />

As our region continues to grow, learn how Mandan is handling<br />

growth in our Mandan on the Move section, which you<br />

can find on page 15.<br />

Don’t forget to read about this month’s Success Under 45<br />

PuzzleJunction.com<br />

feature on page<br />

22. You probably<br />

listened,<br />

laughed and<br />

sometimes<br />

cried to Stacy<br />

Sturm’s voice<br />

Solution<br />

CROSSWORD PUZZLE<br />

Answers for March 2013 crossword puzzle<br />

M I R A C R O U P<br />

O R A L R I A T A<br />

P I C K P O C K E T<br />

S T E M<br />

T U B E<br />

A N O N<br />

FEATURES<br />

19 Creative How-To<br />

Learn how you can upcycle your<br />

favorite t-shirts.<br />

in your car<br />

S E A R C H I S L A N D<br />

or sitting at<br />

L E S T R O L L<br />

work. Read S L I P D O E E S S E N<br />

what she’s A M O S S E T T E E A V E<br />

doing now M A T E E L A S K F E W<br />

days and how P S T C A T N I P B E N T<br />

you can still S H O A L A N N D A R T<br />

Paper is one of the most<br />

recyclable, renewable<br />

and natural mediums for<br />

communication, please<br />

recycle.<br />

listen to her<br />

voice today.<br />

Happy reading!<br />

L<br />

F A J I<br />

A G O G<br />

M A I N<br />

E R N S<br />

A P S E R U N<br />

T A S E E D E D<br />

I N O C U L A T E S<br />

N O V A S N O A H<br />

S T A T E A N D Y<br />

29<br />

22 Success Under 45<br />

As local radio stations started<br />

going corporate, this radio<br />

personality started her own<br />

station.<br />

6 Cover Story<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong><br />

Executive Director,<br />

North Dakota Indian Affairs<br />

Commission<br />

29 Travel<br />

Spring is a great time to take an<br />

ag vacation.<br />

thecitymag.com<br />

this month’s online extras<br />

EXTRA QUESTIONS <strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong><br />

Go the thecitymag.com throughout the month for more extra content.<br />

FULL BOOK REVIEW: Astray<br />

APRIL RECIPES


<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong><br />

Life in Balance<br />

Name: “My Lakota name is Oskate Tawa, ‘his<br />

celebration,’ handed down from my uncle.”<br />

Title: Executive Director,<br />

North Dakota Indian Affairs Commission<br />

“Brokering nations.” That’s how, in two words,<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>, executive director of the North<br />

Dakota Indian Affairs Commission, describes<br />

the delicate mission of the governmental entity.<br />

“Overall, we’re here to create and strengthen a<br />

working government-to-government relationship<br />

between the state and the tribes.”<br />

Created by the state legislature in 1949, the<br />

North Dakota Indian Affairs Commission was<br />

one of the first of its kind established in the United<br />

States. The governor serves as the chairman of the<br />

commission; members include <strong>Davis</strong>, the chairs<br />

of the five tribal nations (Three Affiliated Tribes,<br />

Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Spirit Lake Nation,<br />

Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa, Sisseton-<br />

Wahpeton Oyate) and three at-large members.<br />

The commission exists to address serious issues<br />

such as jurisdiction, natural resources, economic<br />

development, employment, health systems,<br />

education, discrimination, transportation, court<br />

systems and gaming. Complicating matters<br />

considerably, these issues are between the state<br />

and sovereign nations.<br />

6 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

DOB: April 16, 1969<br />

Breckenridge, MN<br />

High School: Turtle Mountain Community<br />

High School, Class of ‘87<br />

College: University of Mary<br />

Bachelors in Business<br />

Masters in Business Management<br />

Family: Wife, Lorraine (9 years);<br />

daughters Angelina (8 yrs) & Santana (5 yrs)<br />

sons Anthony (19 yrs) & <strong>Scott</strong>y Jr. (newborn)<br />

Tribal Affiliation: Enrolled member of Standing<br />

Rock Sioux Nation, descendant of Turtle<br />

Mountain Chippewa<br />

“Nothing stimulates me more<br />

than watching a person succeed,<br />

knowing that they have internal<br />

sovereignty, an inner sobriety,<br />

an inner peace of God, and<br />

knowing that maybe I had a little<br />

bit to do with<br />

”<br />

it.<br />

“There is no script on how to do this,” said<br />

<strong>Davis</strong>, 43, who was appointed commissioner by<br />

Governor Hoeven and now serves Governor<br />

Dalrymple. “If there was a script, it’s constantly<br />

changing—each tribe is different, with evolving<br />

leadership and its own set of traditions, laws and<br />

tribal constitutions.”<br />

According to <strong>Davis</strong>, North Dakota is one<br />

of only three states where the Indian Affairs<br />

commissioner serves at the cabinet level. That<br />

status, achieved during the Schafer administration,<br />

means <strong>Davis</strong> is on an equal plain with the state’s<br />

other 16 cabinet members.<br />

“It says how important tribal-government<br />

relations are to the governor’s office and the<br />

legislature,” said <strong>Davis</strong>. “Having direct access to<br />

cabinet members—commerce, court systems,<br />

human services, health, the others—is huge.”<br />

<strong>Davis</strong>’ staff includes a deputy director, an assistant<br />

and a program administrator.<br />

<strong>Davis</strong>, the son of an educator (his father,<br />

Dr. Jim <strong>Davis</strong>, is president of Turtle Mountain<br />

Community College) and a dental assistant,<br />

approaches the commissioner’s job with<br />

respect, dedication, and a large measure of<br />

responsibility. “My wife and I went back<br />

and forth on whether or not to take this job<br />

for a good three weeks,” recalled <strong>Davis</strong>. “I<br />

didn’t want to be a token Indian; I wanted to<br />

have the freedom to run the commission as<br />

I thought it should be, and take it to a new<br />

level. But you have to prove yourself, so I am<br />

very grateful Governor Dalrymple trusts my<br />

leadership.”<br />

<strong>Davis</strong> is living up to his aspirations.<br />

Through visible leadership, genuine humility<br />

and a passion for his office’s mission, he<br />

has engendered a greater understanding<br />

among all North Dakota residents. “Trust<br />

and understanding, whether it’s between<br />

governments, or people, have always been<br />

the main barriers,” said <strong>Davis</strong>. “But I know<br />

we’re getting there.”<br />

What is your number one goal as<br />

cm: Indian Affairs Commissioner?<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>: To see the unemployment rate<br />

for our tribal nations go below 10 percent.<br />

That’s our internal office goal—achieving<br />

that goal has to come through the tribes. We<br />

want to partner with the tribes and develop<br />

plans for addressing unemployment over<br />

the next three, four or five years. Looking<br />

back at the Hoeven administration, and now<br />

Governor Dalrymple’s, it’s always been about<br />

jobs and the economy. With all the growth,<br />

what a perfect time in our state to take<br />

advantage of opportunity! We could once<br />

and for all reverse generations of poverty.<br />

It’s going to take more diversification. Right<br />

now there only three economies on the<br />

reservation: either you work for the schools,<br />

government or the casinos. There’s not a lot<br />

of private business, and we need to build that<br />

up.<br />

Continued on page 8<br />

CITY MAGAZINE COVER STORY


CITY MAGAZINE COVER STORY<br />

What’s the cm: most difficult<br />

part of the<br />

job?<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>: Navigating<br />

through the complexity<br />

of tribal-state-federal<br />

laws, so that at the end<br />

of the day they work in<br />

unison. Also, striving<br />

for that continuity in<br />

leadership to sustain<br />

unison, which can make<br />

or break good work done<br />

between governments.<br />

What has cm: been the<br />

biggest<br />

challenge of<br />

your life?<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>: My battle<br />

with addiction. There<br />

was a time in my life<br />

where I didn’t have any<br />

direction. I was out of<br />

college, working, single,<br />

had a lot of free-time,<br />

and I used alcohol and<br />

drugs. I finally had to<br />

get some help; I went<br />

into treatment. I was<br />

very fortunate in that<br />

I recognized it. I just<br />

knew I wasn’t being the true me. I didn’t have<br />

to wait for a judge, a court or an accident to<br />

decide for me. One thing I learned is that you<br />

have to sober up for yourself—not for anyone<br />

else. The day you do that, God will take care<br />

of the rest.<br />

What’s your basic approach to<br />

cm: life?<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>: Living my life with balance. The<br />

only tattoo I have is on my back and it’s of the<br />

Medicine Wheel, with the four colors and the<br />

four quadrants: Spiritual, Physical, Emotional<br />

and Mental. To sustain that balance is key.<br />

Sometimes I don’t eat right, or exercise, or<br />

pray enough and I feel it. Then I need to work<br />

to get back into unison.<br />

What do you want on your<br />

cm: headstone?<br />

<strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>: Here’s a guy who worked<br />

really hard and was committed not only to<br />

his people, but to people in general. I love<br />

people and I want them to succeed. Nothing<br />

stimulates me more than watching a person<br />

succeed, knowing that they have internal<br />

sovereignty, an inner sobriety, an inner peace<br />

of God, and knowing that maybe I had a little<br />

bit to do with it.<br />

Tom Regan, a former editor of City Magazine, has been<br />

a media professional for over 40 years.<br />

See <strong>Scott</strong> <strong>Davis</strong>’s answers to the “Extra Questions” by visiting<br />

thecitymag.com and clicking “Extra Content.”


COMMUNITY CLUSTER COMMUNITY CLUSTER<br />

CITY MAGAZINE SALUTES CITY MAGAZINE SALUTES<br />

AID, INC. AIDS THE COMMUNITY<br />

“Adam” is a 46-year-old man with the problems<br />

of a lifetime. His wife died about a year ago, leaving<br />

him to care for their severely autistic daughter.<br />

Adding insult to injury, Adam was laid off from<br />

his job and, behind in rent, faced eviction. Adam’s<br />

church and another charity were able to match<br />

$1,000 from AID, Inc., giving Adam some breathing<br />

room and time to grieve.<br />

“Trista,” a single mother working full time, had<br />

to put college on hold because her mother was in a<br />

The late Fr. Charles Backes started AID, Inc.<br />

30 years ago to provide emergency and<br />

temporary assistance to the working poor.<br />

10 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

Photos by Kristin Byram<br />

terrible car crash. Spending so many hours with<br />

her mom put Trista behind in paying day care<br />

costs. Then she totaled her vehicle. AID, Inc. is<br />

helping her get back on her feet.<br />

Through no fault of their own, many families<br />

in Morton and Burleigh counties struggle.<br />

AID, Inc., a local non-profit established in 1983,<br />

provides funds for past-due rent and utilities;<br />

provides food to families; helps with transportation<br />

related to employment or health care; and<br />

assists with day care expenses, car insurance,<br />

class fees, employment-related clothing, and<br />

some prescriptions.<br />

The late Father Charles Backes, a priest at<br />

Mandan’s St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, founded<br />

AID, Inc., with the mission of “providing emergency,<br />

temporary assistance to the working poor.”<br />

Beginning with an operating budget of $20,000,<br />

AID, Inc. has continued to grow to meet community<br />

needs. The organization employs nine individuals<br />

and relies on a large group of volunteers<br />

and community groups.<br />

AID, Inc.’s funding comes from the United<br />

Way, community churches, federal and foundational<br />

grants, and business and individual donations.<br />

Client service providers determine need,<br />

either financial and/or non-financial, through an<br />

interview process. Sales revenue generated from<br />

Brighten’s Thrift Shop, 314 W. Main, Mandan, is<br />

used for operational expenses and supports the<br />

programs of AID, Inc.’s Self-Help<br />

Center.<br />

AID, Inc.’s, food pantry is<br />

stocked with contributions from<br />

the general public and supporting<br />

organizations, and also<br />

from community food drives.<br />

Additional foods and non-foods<br />

are purchased in bulk from the<br />

Great Plains Food Bank. In the<br />

last six months of 2012, over<br />

10,000 pounds of foods and<br />

1,500 pounds of non-foods were<br />

distributed.<br />

To set up an appointment<br />

with AID Inc.’s Self-Help Center,<br />

call 701-663-1274. The website is<br />

www.aidincbrightens.com.<br />

Tom Regan, a former editor of City<br />

Magazine, has been a media professional<br />

for over 40 years.<br />

Schedule<br />

Your<br />

Tammy Lee, Dawn Jahner and Patti Regan organize and<br />

manage AID, Inc.<br />

senior<br />

portraits<br />

today!<br />

www.platinumphotographynd.com • (701) 323-7818


COMMUNITY CLUSTER COMMUNITY CLUSTER<br />

SPORTS WATCH SPORTS WATCH<br />

Tuesday, April 2:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. Minot, Clem Kelly<br />

Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - U-Mary vs. University<br />

of Minnesota Crookston, U-Mary, 2 p.m.<br />

Thursday, April 4:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. Minot, Clem Kelly<br />

Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - MHS vs. Beulah, Memorial<br />

Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 5:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. North Fargo,<br />

Clem Kelly Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. West Fargo,<br />

Municipal Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Shiloh vs. Bottineau, Haaland Field, 5 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 6:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - St. Mary’s vs. West<br />

Fargo, Municipal Ballpark, 1 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, April 9:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. Minot Ryan,<br />

Clem Kelly Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, April 10:<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. Wayne<br />

State College, Bismarck Municipal, 1:30 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 12:<br />

H.S. Boys Golf - Dickinson Invitational, Heart<br />

River Golf Course, 10 a.m. (MT).<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Williston,<br />

Haaland Field, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 13:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - MHS vs. Bismarck,<br />

Memorial Ballpark, 12 p.m.<br />

St. Mary’s vs. Williston, Haaland Field, 11 a.m.<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. Concordia<br />

University St. Paul, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

12 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - U-Mary vs. Minnesota<br />

State University Mankato, U-Mary, 1 p.m.<br />

12 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

Sunday, April 14:<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. Concordia<br />

University St. Paul, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

12 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - U-Mary vs. Concordia<br />

University St. Paul, U-Mary, 2 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, April 16:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. Century, Clem<br />

Kelly Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - U-Mary vs.<br />

Northern State University, U-Mary, 2 p.m.<br />

H.S. Girls Soccer - MHS vs. St. Mary’s, Dacotah<br />

Centennial Park, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, April 17:<br />

Men’s College Baseball - BSC vs. Jamestwon<br />

College JV, 3 p.m.<br />

Thursday, April 18:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Minot, Haaland<br />

Field, 4:30 p.m.<br />

St. Mary’s vs. Bismarck, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

H.S. Girls Soccer - MHS vs. Bismarck, Dacotah<br />

Centennial Park, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 19:<br />

H.S. Boys Golf - Mandan Invitational, Prairie<br />

West Golf Course, 10 a.m.<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - MHS vs. Dickinson,<br />

Memorial Ballpark, 4.30 p.m.<br />

St. Mary’s vs. Century, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 20:<br />

H.S. Boys Golf - Bismarck Invitational, Tom O’<br />

Leary 10 a.m.<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. Winona<br />

State University, Bismarck Municipal, 12 p.m.<br />

BSC vs. Dakota College at Bottineau, 1 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - BSC vs. Dakota<br />

College Bottineau, 1 p.m.<br />

Sunday, April 21:<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. Winona<br />

State University, Bismarck Municipal, 12 p.m.<br />

BSC vs. Dakota College at Bottineau, 1 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - BSC vs. Dakota<br />

College Bottineau, 1 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, April 23:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Bismarck,<br />

Municipal Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

St. Mary’s vs. Dickinson, Haaland Field,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - BSC vs. Williston<br />

State College,1 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, April 24:<br />

Women’s College Softball - U-Mary vs. Bemidji<br />

State University, U-Mary, 2 p.m.<br />

BSC vs. Williston State College,1 p.m.<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. University<br />

of Sioux Falls, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

1:30 p.m.<br />

Thursday, April 25:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Jamestown,<br />

Municipal Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Shiloh vs. Beulah, Haaland Field, 4 p.m.<br />

MHS vs. St. Mary’s, Memorial Ballpark,<br />

4:30 p.m.<br />

H.S. Girls Soccer - CHS vs. Jamestown,<br />

Bismarck Community Bowl, 6 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 26:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Fargo Davies,<br />

Municipal Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 27:<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - Shiloh vs. Enderlin,<br />

Haaland Field, 12 p.m.<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. St.<br />

Cloud State University, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

12 p.m.<br />

BSC vs. Miles Community College, 1 p.m.<br />

Sunday, April 28:<br />

Men’s College Baseball - U-Mary vs. St.<br />

Cloud State University, Bismarck Municipal,<br />

12 p.m.<br />

BSC vs. Miles Community College, 1 p.m.<br />

Monday, April 29:<br />

H.S. Girls Soccer - St. Mary’s vs. Jamestown,<br />

Bismarck Community Bowl, 8 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, April 30:<br />

H.S. Girls Softball - BHS vs. Dickinson, Clem<br />

Kelly Softball Complex, 4:30 p.m.<br />

H.S. Boys Baseball - CHS vs. Mandan,<br />

Municipal Ballpark, 4:30 p.m.<br />

Shiloh vs. Washburn/Wilton/Wing/Center-Stanton,<br />

Haaland Field, 4 p.m.<br />

Women’s College Softball - BSC vs. Minot<br />

State College, 2 p.m.<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 13


COMMUNITY CLUSTER COMMUNITY CLUSTER<br />

NEW AROUND TOWN MANDAN ON THE MOVE<br />

CREATE A BEAUTIFUL LIVING SPACE WITH<br />

BRIDGET’S ROOM<br />

Rustic modern.<br />

This is the feeling customers are<br />

greeted with as they enter Bridget’s<br />

Room in Bismarck. The store, owned by<br />

Bridget Gerhardt, is quickly becoming the interior<br />

design business of choice in central North Dakota.<br />

Started in 2002 as a home-based design consulting<br />

business, Gerhardt’s talent quickly spread by<br />

word of mouth and the business rapidly expanded.<br />

She began branching into various lines of flooring,<br />

special window treatments and additional home<br />

décor.<br />

“I am honored that customers trust me to come<br />

into their homes and help create special spaces<br />

that create memories for their families,” Gerhardt<br />

said. “My goal is to help select quality products<br />

that last years and create a feeling of warmth and<br />

beauty in each home.”<br />

In 2010, Bridget’s Room became an official<br />

storefront, showcasing unique lines of furniture<br />

and more décor to help add finishing touches. The<br />

store is an official dealer of Hunter Douglas products,<br />

which Gerhardt finds to be the best fit for her<br />

design styles.<br />

Clients are not shy about sharing their enthusiasm<br />

for the finished product and also for Gerhardt.<br />

She has a wealth of thank you notes that she<br />

treasures.<br />

14 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

“We are so grateful for Bridget. She has a special<br />

gift to see each home through the customer’s<br />

eyes and meet the needs of what each client truly<br />

wants,” said Cindy, a Bismarck customer. “From<br />

countertops, flooring, paint colors, tile, beautiful<br />

décor, window coverings and accessories – we just<br />

found everything we loved at Bridget’s Room. We<br />

definitely recommend Bridget’s Room and are so<br />

thankful for such an awesome experience!”<br />

Live beautiful. These words are her personal<br />

motto that she wants each person she works with<br />

to experience.<br />

“We all need to find more beauty in our lives.<br />

Whether it is in the spaces we inhabit or the people<br />

we surround ourselves with, beauty enriches<br />

us,” she said.<br />

Gerhardt has created a community of loyal<br />

customers. Her Facebook following is growing<br />

each day at www.facebook.com/bridgetsroom,<br />

and recently she decided to kick off a personal<br />

blog called Live Beautiful at www.bridgetsroom.<br />

wordpress.com.<br />

Bridget’s Room is located at 3250 Rock Island<br />

Place, northeast of Sam’s Club. Visit the website<br />

www.bridgetsroom.com or call 701-250-9600 to<br />

schedule a design consultation.<br />

Pam Link is a public relations professional and freelance<br />

writer, currently living in Washburn, N.D.<br />

Photo by Kristin Byram<br />

TRAFFIC & ROADWAY SYSTEM UNDER STUDY<br />

IN NORTH MANDAN<br />

The Bismarck-Mandan Metropolitan<br />

Planning Organization (MPO) is overseeing<br />

two studies in 2013 that take into<br />

account Mandan’s rapidly developing<br />

area north of the interstate. The I-94 corridor from<br />

Mandan to Bismarck has experienced increasing<br />

traffic volumes in the past few years. This growth<br />

is the result of both local traffic increases, as well<br />

as an uptick in regional trips to and from western<br />

North Dakota related to the oil boom.<br />

Mandan’s development north of I-94 is spurred<br />

by construction of a Wal-Mart Supercenter near its<br />

152 interchange at Sunset Drive. Additional projects<br />

include an 86-room Comfort Inn, a three-story<br />

St. Alexius Medical Clinic, a Keitu Engineering<br />

office building and a future Prairie Rose Dentistry<br />

site. Developers are planning infrastructure and<br />

creating concepts with restaurant pad sites, strip<br />

malls and additional office buildings.<br />

All of this development might have people<br />

wondering about future roadway plans. One of<br />

the MPO studies focuses on the entire Interstate<br />

94 corridor encompassing 17 miles from west of<br />

Mandan to east of Bismarck. Engineers are examining<br />

on and off ramps and nearby intersections to<br />

Photo by Kristin Byram<br />

Construction of north Mandan’s new Wal-Mart is almost complete<br />

as the town is examining future roadways.<br />

Bridget’s Room has expanded from a home business to a<br />

growing store front.<br />

address traffic and safety issues. They’ll review current<br />

and year 2040 traffic projections, crash data,<br />

and motor vehicle, pedestrian and bicycle access,<br />

plus interchange and cross street design. More info<br />

is available at www.bis-mani94study.com.<br />

The other study looks at a large amount of land<br />

north of I-94 in Mandan between Old Red Trail/<br />

Highland Road and Highway 1806. The North<br />

Mandan Subarea Study considers future road<br />

network possibilities for improving safety and<br />

connectivity while avoiding congestion. Residential,<br />

business and industrial interests are being<br />

considered in identifying needs and potential<br />

solutions. An initial public information and input<br />

session was held last fall. More public meetings will<br />

be held during the study. Stay tuned for dates and<br />

recommendations at www.northmandanstudy.<br />

com.<br />

Metropolitan areas such as Bismarck-Mandan<br />

are required to study long-range transportation<br />

needs to receive federal funding for road projects.<br />

Both studies are to be complete in 2013.<br />

Ellen Huber is the Mandan business development director.<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 15


COMMUNITY CLUSTER COMMUNITY CLUSTER<br />

LOCAL EVENTS LOCAL EVENTS<br />

EVENTS TO ATTEND, MUSIC TO HEAR<br />

AND EXHIBITS TO SEE – OH MY!<br />

Tuesday, April 2:<br />

Bellamy Brothers<br />

With special guest Brewer Shipley to benefit<br />

the Bismarck Rural Fire Department - Bismarck<br />

Civic Center, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, April 3:<br />

Hellyeah & All That Remains<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center, 7 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 5:<br />

Shrine Circus<br />

Ride the elephants, enjoy the inflatable games<br />

and experience the excitement of the Circus -<br />

Bismarck Civic Center, 1:30 p.m. and 7 p.m.;<br />

Sat. 10 a.m., 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 5:<br />

Dakota Digital Film Festival<br />

The second annual Dakota Digital Film Festival<br />

celebrates film-making with a day filled with<br />

workshops and an evening presented with<br />

awards - Bismarck Civic Center, 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 6:<br />

March of Dimes Walk<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center Exhibition Hall, 9 a.m.<br />

Pinochle Tournament<br />

- Bismarck Eagles Club, 9 a.m. (Apr. 6-7)<br />

72nd Annual ND State USBC WBA<br />

Tournament<br />

- Midway Lanes, TBA (Apr. 6-7, 13-14, 20-21)<br />

Nano Days<br />

- A nationwide festival of educational programs<br />

about nanoscale science and engineering -<br />

Frances Leach High Prairie Arts & Science<br />

Complex, 1 p.m.<br />

Amazing Amphibians!<br />

Animal Ed-Venture -Dakota Zoo, 2 - 4:30 p.m.<br />

16 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

Celebration Talent Competition<br />

- Belle Mehus Auditorium (Apr. 6-7)<br />

Wednesday, April 10:<br />

The Chamber Spring Mixer<br />

The Ramkota Hotel, 5 - 7:30 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 12:<br />

NDSU Garden Expo<br />

Bismarck Civic Center, 3 - 8 p.m.;<br />

Sat. 8 a.m. - 4 p.m.<br />

Bismarck-Mandan Spring Parade of Homes<br />

6 - 8:30 p.m.; Sat. 11 a.m. - 5 p.m.;<br />

Sun. 12 - 5 p.m. (Apr. 12-14; Apr. 19-21)<br />

Sinbad<br />

One of Comedy Central’s top 100 standup<br />

comedians, Sinbad, visits Bismarck to share<br />

his humorous stories of his youth - Belle Mehus<br />

Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Live Music: Rhyme or Reason<br />

The Burnt Creek Bar & Grill, 9 p.m. (Apr. 12-13)<br />

Saturday, April 13:<br />

Breakfast at the Zoo<br />

- Dakota Zoo, 8 - 10 a.m.<br />

The Great American Bike Race<br />

- Century High School, 9 a.m. - 3:15 p.m.<br />

Adult Zookeeper Day Camp<br />

- Dakota Zoo, 1 - 4 p.m.<br />

Impact Fighting Championships -<br />

Revolution<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, April 14:<br />

University of Mary’s Spring Choir Concert<br />

- Our Lady of the Annunciation Chapel, 3 p.m.<br />

Monday, April 15:<br />

The Dwight Murdy Show<br />

- Belle Mehus Auditorium, 2 p.m.<br />

Machine Gun Kelly<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center, 7 p.m.<br />

Wednesday, April 17:<br />

Tech N9ne<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center, 8 p.m.<br />

Thursday, April 18:<br />

University of Mary’s Vocal Arts Ensemble<br />

- R.M. Heskett Hall, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, April 20:<br />

Cozy Cattle!<br />

Little Tykes Ed-Venture - Dakota Zoo,<br />

1 - 2 p.m.; 2:30 - 3:30 p.m.<br />

BMSO presents Three’s Company<br />

- Belle Mehus Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Sunday, April 21:<br />

University of Mary’s Chamber Ensemble<br />

Concert<br />

- R.M. Heskett Hall, 3 p.m.<br />

Gabriel Iglesias<br />

America’s favorite “fluffy” comedian, Gabriel<br />

Iglesias, preforms a high octane stand up show<br />

- Bismarck Civic Center, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Thursday, April 25:<br />

St. Mary’s Grade School Concert<br />

- Belle Mehus Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.<br />

University of Mary’s Steele Band Concert<br />

- Arno Gustin Hall, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Live Music: 32 Below<br />

Borrowed Bucks Roadhouse, 9 p.m.<br />

Friday, April 26:<br />

Monster Jam<br />

Enjoy a family friendly experience starring the<br />

biggest performers on four wheels - Bismarck<br />

Civic Center, 7:30 p.m.; Sat. 2 p.m. and 7:30<br />

p.m.<br />

Live Music: All Aces<br />

The Burnt Creek Bar & Grill, 9 p.m. (Apr. 26-27)<br />

Saturday, April 27:<br />

Dakota Zoo Opening Day<br />

(Weather Permitting) - Dakota Zoo<br />

Bismarck-Mandan Civic Chorus<br />

- Belle Mehus Auditorium, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Monday, April 29:<br />

Northern Plains Ballet - Belle Mehus<br />

Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. (Apr. 29 - May 5)<br />

*The above are entertainment events in Bismarck-Mandan, which are subject to change<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 17


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ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT<br />

TASTE OF N.D. CREATIVE HOW-TO<br />

WHITE BEAN SOUP<br />

Serves: 8 Prep Time: 30 minutes<br />

Marinating Time: 1.5 hours<br />

Cooking Time: 20 minutes<br />

Ingredients:<br />

1 pound dried white beans, soaked overnight<br />

2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil<br />

2 large onions, finely chopped<br />

2 stalks celery, finely chopped<br />

2 large carrots, finely chopped<br />

1 quart water<br />

2 large ripe tomatoes, peeled and mashed or 1<br />

tablespoon tomato paste<br />

1 teaspoons dried oregano<br />

1 teaspoon salt<br />

1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper<br />

Freshly ground pepper to taste<br />

Directions:<br />

Drain beans<br />

and cook them,<br />

covered, in a<br />

large pot of<br />

boiling water<br />

until tender,<br />

about 1.5<br />

hours. Drain.<br />

Heat oil in<br />

Dutch oven or<br />

soup pot over<br />

medium heat.<br />

Saute onions,<br />

celery and<br />

carrots for 3<br />

to 5 minutes. Add water, the cooked beans, tomatoes, oregano,<br />

salt, cayenne pepper and pepper. Simmer vegetables until they are<br />

tender for about 20 minutes. Taste and adjust seasonings.<br />

Nutritional Analysis Per Serving<br />

Calories Per Serving 258<br />

Total Fat 5 g<br />

Saturated Fat 1 g<br />

Monounsaturated Fat 3 g<br />

Sodium 326 mg<br />

Carbohydrates 43 g<br />

Fiber 16 g<br />

Protein 13 g<br />

Potassium 895 mg<br />

18 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

EIGHT CREATIVE WAYS TO UPCYCLE OLD<br />

SHIRTS<br />

We<br />

all have<br />

t-shirts that<br />

are exiled<br />

to the back<br />

of our closets in the land of misfit<br />

clothes, either because we just<br />

don’t like them that much, they<br />

were free, or because they’re our<br />

favorite and we’ve worn them to<br />

pieces and can’t find the will to<br />

throw them away.<br />

For those who are too sentimental<br />

to toss their favorite vintage<br />

Rolling Stones t-shirt, there’s<br />

a way to keep these garments<br />

alive, and it’s called upcycling,<br />

which is using less than new materials<br />

to create products that are<br />

better than the original.<br />

Here are eight creative ways to<br />

upcycle t-shirts:<br />

• Create a quilt. Just cut your<br />

t-shirts in large rectangles,<br />

Creating a quilt of your favorite, sentimental t-shirts is a great way upcycle<br />

arranging them in the order<br />

instead of keeping them buried away in your closet.<br />

you want to sew them. Continue<br />

until you have four rows<br />

of five blocks. Pin together your rows and sew<br />

them together.<br />

• Make a tie. Have you heard about shirt-tie.<br />

com? Simply send the shirt off your back to<br />

them and they’ll send you a tie made from it.<br />

• Fabricate a new-sew infinity scarf. Start with a<br />

large shirt you don’t wear anymore. Search the<br />

web to see how you can cut, stretch and fold<br />

any shirt to create your very own infinity scarf<br />

for free.<br />

• Create a rug. Cut t-shirts into long strips to<br />

create your own yarn for colorful dish rags,<br />

rugs and more. Simply browse the web for<br />

some creative ideas and instructions.<br />

• Convert your t-shirt into a reusable bag. Be<br />

twice as eco-chic by upcycling an old t-shirt<br />

into a reusable bag to take to the supermarket,<br />

mall or gym—no sewing required.<br />

• Make your own headband. Have your glue<br />

gun and scissors handy to create a fashionable<br />

headband, two or three, from your favorite<br />

old-t.<br />

• Accessorize. Braid, twist or stretch an old shirt<br />

to create a modern bracelet that you can wear<br />

over and over again.<br />

• Create your own pillows. Transform a used<br />

shirt into a decorative throw pillow. Just enter<br />

your search online to get started.<br />

So there you have it. Get those old shirts out of<br />

the closet and into your lifestyle again; you’ve<br />

got this.<br />

Mandy Thomas is a local communicator, writer, graphic artist<br />

and photographer with a love for all things creative.<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 19


HOBBY HUB HOBBY HUB<br />

MOMMY BLOG CROSSWORD<br />

READ ON<br />

One of my fondest memories growing up<br />

was on a lap following along to Green<br />

Eggs and Ham or In a People House.<br />

I would beg for one more book right<br />

before I journeyed off to dreamland. According to<br />

recent studies, I definitely have to give Dr. Seuss<br />

credit, along with my parents, for some of the<br />

successes in my life.<br />

Studies show reading to your baby will affect<br />

their long term educational success and that literacy,<br />

as well as the number of books in the home,<br />

can have a direct effect on the amount of education<br />

your child will attain. Reading daily to your<br />

baby also helps ensure they will continue to have<br />

an interest in books when they enter school. “Even<br />

if your baby wants the same book read again and<br />

again, the value of repeated readings will impress<br />

patterns of language on the baby’s brain,” said<br />

Joyce Hinman, former reading specialist and principal<br />

who serves on the board of the International<br />

Reading Association.<br />

Reading is important to your baby’s development<br />

early on as most brain growth has occurred<br />

by age three. In fact, babies begin to understand<br />

the basic sounds of language by six months. Babies<br />

learn through experiences and interactions and<br />

20 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

one of the best ways for an infant to learn how to<br />

talk is by reading (as well as music and rhymes).<br />

Reading also stimulates baby’s senses as well as<br />

feelings of love and security. There are a few things<br />

to keep in mind when reading to your baby:<br />

• Infants have short attention spans. Short<br />

stories with few words and vivid pictures<br />

(and faces of other babies) are best. Use<br />

board books with thicker “pages” that won’t<br />

be easily damaged by little hands or teeth,<br />

but can be easily turned.<br />

• Newborns see things best from about a<br />

foot away. Select books with high-contrast<br />

images such as black-and-white illustrations<br />

and patterns.<br />

• Repetition is important for learning, so<br />

reading the same book over and over is a<br />

good thing. As baby gets older he/she will<br />

have favorite books will request to hear over<br />

and over.<br />

• Touch/feel and lift flap books foster learning<br />

through senses and offer your baby an opportunity<br />

to experience new textures.<br />

• Find books that appeal to your baby’s interests.<br />

If your little one loves monkeys, find<br />

books with monkeys.<br />

• Rather than just reading words, teach simple<br />

reading concepts such as turning pages and<br />

following text from left to right. Point to the<br />

pictures, name them, and talk about them.<br />

As your infant grows, he/she will imitate<br />

you by turning pages or pointing to objects.<br />

• Use different sounds and tones and even<br />

sing as you read. This will help them to learn<br />

speech patterns and sounds.<br />

• Finally, try to read to your child daily.<br />

Reading right before bed is a great way to<br />

stay consistent and will calm your baby in<br />

preparation for sleep.<br />

Babies aren’t born readers, but can learn to be<br />

lovers of books. So let them “Hop on Pop” with a<br />

book and read on!<br />

Amy Jo Johnson is a full-time mommy and Mojo Radio<br />

personality.<br />

City Magazine 4/13 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com<br />

Across<br />

1 Average<br />

4 Craving<br />

7 Boxer’s punch<br />

10 Shade tree<br />

13 ___ de France<br />

14 Tokyo, formerly<br />

15 ET carrier<br />

16 Caribbean, e.g.<br />

17 Cushion<br />

18 Assist<br />

19 Clean-up guy<br />

21 Bakery buy<br />

23 Employs<br />

24 Certain exams<br />

26 Dracula, at times<br />

27 It doesn’t hold water<br />

31 Absorbed<br />

32 Rodeo rope<br />

34 Remain<br />

35 Swiftest mammal<br />

37 “That’s disgusting!”<br />

39 Did lunch<br />

40 Chafe<br />

41 Authorize<br />

43 Newt<br />

46 Jack-tar<br />

75 Bit of butter<br />

48 Fine<br />

76 12th graders<br />

52 Film ___<br />

(Abbr.)<br />

54 Direct elsewhere 77 Canny<br />

56 Feel concern 78 Dry, as wine<br />

57 Coffee order<br />

59 Small number<br />

60 Small change<br />

61 November<br />

birthstone<br />

63 Locale<br />

64 Dolomite, e.g.<br />

67 Ariz. neighbor<br />

68 ___’easter<br />

71 Action word<br />

72 Linear unit<br />

73 Lubricate<br />

74 Low card<br />

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12<br />

13 14 15 16<br />

17 18 19 20<br />

21 22 23<br />

24 25 26 27 28 29 30<br />

31 32 33 34<br />

35 36 37 38 39<br />

40 41 42<br />

43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51<br />

52 53 54 55 56<br />

57 58 59 60<br />

61 62 63<br />

64 65 66 67 68 69 70<br />

71 72 73 74<br />

75 76 77 78<br />

Down<br />

1 Lulu<br />

2 Mode starter<br />

3 Bureaucratic stuff<br />

4 Time period<br />

5 Blue-pencil<br />

6 Affirmative action<br />

7 Martial art<br />

8 Way, way off<br />

9 Dog treats<br />

10 “C’___ la vie!”<br />

Copyright ©2013 PuzzleJunction.com<br />

11 DiCaprio, to fans<br />

12 Deface<br />

20 Horned goddess<br />

22 Modify<br />

23 Owns<br />

24 Tolkien beast<br />

25 Stadium cheer<br />

26 “___, humbug!”<br />

28 Greek letter<br />

29 Tank<br />

30 Needle part<br />

32 Toil<br />

33 On-looker<br />

36 Harbor craft<br />

38 Biddy<br />

42 Implied<br />

43 Conclude<br />

44 Adversary<br />

45 Twitch<br />

47 Happens<br />

48 Church bench<br />

49 Cries of sorrow<br />

50 Three (It.)<br />

51 Thumbs-up<br />

53 Miles per hour, e.g.<br />

55 Casbah headgear<br />

58 Applications, e.g.<br />

60 Beaut<br />

62 Poker holding<br />

63 Go yachting<br />

64 Blueprint<br />

65 Author Levin<br />

66 After expenses<br />

67 Romaine lettuce<br />

69 Be in arrears<br />

70 Bird of myth<br />

Results of the crossword puzzle from the last issue of City Magazine are on page 4.<br />

The answers for the puzzle above are printed in the next issue of City Magazine.<br />

GOOD READS<br />

The lady in the picture was wearing the biggest scowl you’d ever seen.<br />

The photo was taken long ago and it made you wonder what happened<br />

that day to make her so snarly. Was there a death, lost crops, an accident,<br />

bad weather, or did the photographer make her angry?<br />

You’ll never know but you wonder, just like the portrait makes you<br />

wonder about her life. And in the new book Astray a collection of short<br />

stories by Emma Donoghue, imagination becomes<br />

possibility.<br />

Solution on next page<br />

Terri Schlichenmeyer is owner of The Bookworm Sez, LLC, based out of<br />

LaCrosse, Wis. and writes book reviews for publications all across the country.


SUCCESS UNDER 45<br />

Stacy Sturm<br />

Co-Owner, URL Radio<br />

DOB: May 20, 1974<br />

High School: Bismarck High School<br />

College: University of Mary<br />

Family: Greg (Husband); Summer (12) & Ty (9)<br />

Favorite Quote: “All the Woulda-Coulda-<br />

Shouldas, layin’ in the sun. Talkin’ ’bout the<br />

things they woulda coulda shoulda done.<br />

But those Woulda-Coulda-Shouldas all ran<br />

away and hid - from one little Did.”<br />

-Shel Silverstein<br />

Favorite Books: ”America’s Cheapest Family<br />

Gets You Right on the Money”<br />

by Steve Economides and<br />

Annette Economides,<br />

“Where the Sidewalk Ends” by Shel Silverstein,<br />

“To Kill a Mockingbird” by Harper Lee,<br />

“The Odyssey” by Homer<br />

Hobbies: Digital scrapbooking, playing video<br />

games (especially “Just Dance” on the Wii),<br />

cooking, baking and listening to music.<br />

To<br />

look at Stacy Sturm, you would<br />

never think she has nearly 20 years’<br />

experience in the Bismarck-Mandan<br />

radio market. But don’t let that<br />

youthful appearance and demeanor fool you, she<br />

actually has nearly 35 years under her belt. “I think I<br />

had the radio bug when I was four. I used to host my<br />

own radio show.” And she’s still doing the same thing<br />

today at URL Radio, the Bismarck-based Internet<br />

radio station she co-founded four years ago. “In fact,<br />

some days, those shows are better than what I put on<br />

the air today!”<br />

URL Radio (www.urlradio.net) was born out of<br />

a nostalgic conviction to local radio. Having worked<br />

for local radio stations on and off from 1994 to 2009,<br />

Sturm witnessed first-hand the shift from local to<br />

corporate radio ownership. With a desire to open<br />

their own station, but without the million dollars<br />

needed to buy a traditional on-air signal, Sturm and<br />

co-owner Nicole Morrison-Mathern decided streaming<br />

Internet radio was the way to go. After getting<br />

22 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

“ I thought;<br />

‘This is fun!<br />

People actually<br />

get paid to do<br />

this?’<br />

”<br />

some old equipment from The University of Mary<br />

and business guidance from the IDEA center, URL<br />

Radio opened its doors in April 2009.<br />

Sturm credits a gregarious immediate and<br />

extended family for her creativity, love of communications<br />

and ability to laugh at herself. Watching her<br />

father and uncles play in a band and interacting with<br />

dozens of cousins, she honed her performing abilities<br />

at an early age. “It was a big family reunion almost<br />

every Sunday,” she said. When this self-described<br />

‘over the top kid’ wasn’t directing games and productions<br />

at family gatherings, she would hold court on<br />

the 5th grade playground with a stand-up comedy<br />

routine at recess.<br />

While in college, that “radio bug” took another<br />

small bite. When this U-Mary mass communication<br />

major hit the radio lab, things began to click. “I<br />

thought; This is fun! People actually get paid to do<br />

this?” During this time, Sturm interviewed someone<br />

at Y93 for a school project. That led to a job interview<br />

with the program director and a part-time on-air<br />

gig while still in college. Even after graduation,<br />

through stints in newspaper and public<br />

relations, she continued to keep one foot in the<br />

door of local radio. “I just couldn’t shake it. I<br />

loved it.”<br />

Several years later, it was an unusual<br />

encounter that led to Sturm’s first and most<br />

memorable full-time gig. Driving home from a<br />

part-time shift at Cool 98.7, she was “checking<br />

out the competition” down the dial at Y93.<br />

When Bob Brady couldn’t find a listener to<br />

answer a trivia question, Sturm called. “But I<br />

couldn’t say who I was because I worked for another<br />

radio station!” The comical on-air banter<br />

that followed led to a meeting out of which the<br />

popular “Brady and Stacy in the Morning” was<br />

conceived and began its seven year run.<br />

As corporate radio took over, Brady and<br />

Stacy were bought out of their contracts, with<br />

Sturm returning to a “normal job” in public<br />

relations and communications. But again, she<br />

was bitten, this time after a conversation with<br />

Morrison-Mathern, who shared a similar affinity<br />

for local radio.<br />

Getting back on air has been the easy part.<br />

“Radio Stacy is super fun. Business Stacy is not<br />

so much fun!” But so far, URL Radio has done<br />

well, with growing and diverse listenership<br />

from all over the world. They’ve also grown<br />

their services because of their client’s growing<br />

internet marketing needs. They now also blog,<br />

dabble in video, podcasting and guide clients<br />

on social media.<br />

Sturm says her most memorable moments<br />

so far are the personal stories she was able to<br />

tell during a weeklong broadcast from Guatemala<br />

and her coverage of the Missouri River<br />

flood of 2011. “You know you are doing what<br />

you are meant to be doing when you wake up<br />

in the morning and go to work and it’s not hard<br />

for you to go to work.”<br />

A lifelong communicator and former reporter, Michael<br />

Lindblom is a student of dynamics of human interaction.<br />

Photo by Kristin Byram<br />

CITY MAGAZINE SUCCESS UNDER 45<br />

APRIL 2013 APRIL | THECITYMAG.COM 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 23<br />

| 23


BUSINESS AND MONEY HOME<br />

ASK THE PROFESSOR SPONSORED HOME SECTION<br />

SHOES’ CLUES<br />

When asked about her worldwide<br />

celebrity and jaw-dropping wealth,<br />

Oprah Winfrey quipped, “I still<br />

have my feet on the ground; I just<br />

wear better shoes.” Recently, this column discussed<br />

dressing for success, but if shoes make the man<br />

(or woman), it seems that working professionals<br />

would do well to pay as much attention to what is<br />

below their ankles as to what is above.<br />

Windows to the sole?<br />

Based on primitive cave drawings, foot coverings<br />

were one of the first things developed by early<br />

man. The main function in the beginning was to<br />

protect early man’s feet from burning sand and<br />

sharp rocks while he went about the business of<br />

hunting and gathering. It wasn’t long, however<br />

until the extravagance and style of the shoe began<br />

to denote the social standing of the wearer.<br />

Shoes offer others a quick insight into the kind<br />

of person you are. Researchers at the University of<br />

Kansas and Wellesley College say that people can<br />

accurately judge 90 percent of a stranger’s personality<br />

simply by looking at his shoes. They posit,<br />

“Shoes correlate with the owner’s personal characteristics.<br />

Age, gender, income and even psychological<br />

traits such as agreeableness and insecurity can<br />

be accurately judged from a picture of a person’s<br />

shoe.” For example, they say that wearers of drab,<br />

newish shoes are likely to be insecure about their<br />

relationships with other people while bright, well-<br />

24 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

worn shoes signaled confidence regarding relationships.<br />

Best foot forward<br />

According to the National Shoe Retailers<br />

Association, the annual revenue of the footwear<br />

industry is $48 billion worldwide with the annual<br />

consumer footwear spending in the United States<br />

ringing in at an astounding $20 billion. Women’s<br />

footwear accounts for 40 percent of U.S. sales,<br />

men’s 35 percent.<br />

Since the shoes are one of the most important<br />

influence items in your wardrobe, it’s vital that<br />

you buy well-made shoes and treat them right.<br />

Wearing shoes that are cracked, scuffed or falling<br />

apart conveys a negative impression, just as would<br />

a stained tie or wrinkled suit jacket. “Well heeled”<br />

means wealthy, and wealth implies success. Most<br />

of us have clothes for important meetings, clothes<br />

for interviews and clothes for casual Friday, but<br />

consider what your shoes may be saying about you.<br />

If you are reading this at work, take a quick peek at<br />

your shoes. Are they shouting whimsical, frumpy,<br />

trendy, or polished, professional and ready to be<br />

promoted?<br />

Debora Dragseth, P.D. is a professor of business at Dickinson<br />

State University. Her column provides common sense answers to<br />

common workplace issues. If you have a question you would like<br />

Dr. Dragseth to consider for her column, you may e-mail her at<br />

dr.dragseth@gmail.com.<br />

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HOME HOME<br />

HOME 101 HOME 101<br />

REFLECTING WHAT MATTERS<br />

Building or remodeling<br />

your<br />

home requires<br />

substantial<br />

time, money and effort,<br />

so sometimes wellplaced<br />

glass or mirrors<br />

can be the perfect finishing<br />

touch to reflect your<br />

carefully-selected design.<br />

“Customers typically<br />

call us at the end<br />

of the building process<br />

or remodeling project<br />

when they’re feeling<br />

overwhelmed because<br />

maybe there’s an outlet in<br />

the way of a mirror or a window had to be placed<br />

above a vanity. Those are our favorite projects<br />

REFLECTING WHAT MATTERS<br />

Haider Glass can tailor glass to a home owner’s specific taste.<br />

26 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

because we get to tailor our work and be unique,”<br />

said Haider Glass manager, Courtney Meier. “It<br />

doesn’t have to be expensive<br />

yet we can make it look like<br />

it was a design feature from<br />

the very beginning instead of<br />

something you had to work<br />

around.”<br />

Incorporating glass is a big<br />

trend in home design, with its<br />

ability to open a space with<br />

additional windows or provide<br />

maintenance free glass railings<br />

on porches and decks.<br />

“The railings offer protection<br />

from the elements, so<br />

it’s a wind break, but it also<br />

provides an unobstructed<br />

view and they’re easy to clean,”<br />

Meier said.<br />

The transparency of<br />

glass allows homeowners the<br />

opportunity to incorporate<br />

textures, colors or objects from<br />

other parts of the home to<br />

unify the space.<br />

“The beauty of glass is that<br />

it can be tailored for the homeowner’s<br />

specific taste. Glass<br />

can be heated and slumped<br />

to add a three dimensional<br />

texture and color can be<br />

added to add detail. For<br />

example, we are working<br />

on a project right now<br />

that has a business’ logo<br />

slumped in the glass and<br />

keep a custom texture<br />

added to the glass. Then<br />

lighting can be added<br />

to really make the piece<br />

pop.” Meier said.<br />

Stone and glass seem<br />

to pair well together, so<br />

granite intertwined with<br />

glass countertops are<br />

trending now. Haider<br />

Glass even customized<br />

living room pillars for<br />

one client creating a stunning<br />

showcase of stone<br />

and frosted glass from<br />

floor to ceiling.<br />

A little glass can make<br />

a big statement, so even<br />

simply replacing a few<br />

kitchen cabinet doors<br />

with frosted glass insets<br />

can inexpensively transform<br />

a wood-heavy room<br />

into a lighter, more modern one.<br />

“There are hundreds of options, sizes and styles,”<br />

Meier said. “Most we have in stock, so within a<br />

couple hours you could have a different look on<br />

your cabinets.”<br />

Paula, Courtney and Tom are Haider Glass’s glass experts and are involved in<br />

every project from design to installation.<br />

Haider Glass completes each project with one<br />

goal in mind: to ensure the reflection in each piece<br />

is a smile from a satisfied client.<br />

Maxine Herr is a Bismarck-based freelance writer who owns<br />

a home and therefore, always has a renovation project.<br />

APRIL APRIL 2013 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM THECITYMAG.COM | 27


HEALTH TRAVEL<br />

HEALTHY LIFESTYLES LEISURE<br />

ALL ABOUT HABITS<br />

Recently I did an interview on URL Radio<br />

in Bismarck about the importance<br />

of health planning. The host asked me<br />

a thought-provoking question: If you<br />

don’t already have will power or discipline, how<br />

do you get it? It took me aback for a second and<br />

reminded me of what is missing in many how-to<br />

articles: don’t just tell me what to do; tell me how<br />

to do it.<br />

The answer is deceptively simple: It’s all about<br />

habits. Doing the right things has to become habitforming.<br />

No one has the iron will to consciously<br />

think of the right thing to do all the time. The<br />

answer is to do the right thing, do it often, and before<br />

you know it, it becomes a habit. Habits, good<br />

or bad, are automatic; no discipline or will power<br />

required.<br />

The key to good health lies in cultivating the<br />

right habits, the key habits that will transform our<br />

life. Exercise, for example, tends to lead to better<br />

choices in how we eat, how often we check our<br />

blood sugar, and so on. Fortunately there are excellent<br />

books and articles on the science of habits.<br />

The Power of Habit: Why We do What We do in<br />

Life and Business, a new book by Charles Duhigg,<br />

provides an excellent place to start learning how<br />

habits work in your life and how to transform bad<br />

habits into good habits.<br />

28 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

I will share<br />

with you this<br />

admonition<br />

from my high<br />

school English<br />

teacher: be<br />

very careful of<br />

the habits you<br />

form; they are<br />

easy to make<br />

and hard to<br />

break. Research<br />

shows that<br />

you may never<br />

break an old<br />

habit. When<br />

you think<br />

you’ve got it<br />

licked, it comes<br />

back to haunt<br />

you.<br />

A good habit to start is exercising<br />

regularly.<br />

However, you can transform a bad habit into a<br />

good one. So there’s hope. Start reading, talking<br />

about it, and doing it. Remember: do right and do<br />

right often. It could become habit-forming.<br />

Mitch Vance is a retired educator, businessman and political<br />

activist.<br />

TAKING AN AG VACATION<br />

Souris Valley Vineyard offers tours of their vineyard<br />

during the summer.<br />

Summer is right around the corner (isn’t it?) and there are<br />

plenty of ways to enjoy the sunshine and warm weather<br />

each year without repeating the same vacation over and<br />

over again.<br />

A newer vacation trend that really hits home for North Dakota<br />

is agritourism. With 90 percent of the land in our state dedicated<br />

to agriculture and roughly 25 percent of our workforce in the<br />

industry, it’s not hard to understand how offshoots of agriculture<br />

can grow and even flourish here.<br />

So what is agritourism? It’s the opportunity for guests to enjoy a<br />

farm, ranch or other ag-related experience. One example is Papa’s<br />

Pumpkin Patch in Bismarck. This pumpkin farm hosted roughly<br />

52,000 people in 2012 to pick pumpkins, drink cider, take family<br />

pictures, hayrides, and more. As the weather changed, another<br />

1,200 guests played in a winter wonderland. It’s a farm experience<br />

for people who want to revel in the great outdoors but don’t have<br />

farmland of their own.<br />

Other agritourism options in North Dakota include traditional<br />

farming and ranching tours, but also vineyards, orchards, apiaries,<br />

and more.<br />

The entrepreneurs who open up their operations to the general<br />

public do so to expand their business opportunity, but also to<br />

help spread the interest in agriculture. The more individuals and<br />

communities directly connect with agriculture, the stronger the<br />

industry will continue to be in the future. That’s pretty important<br />

for a state like ours.<br />

We might be “fly-over country” but we feed the world. And<br />

that’s more important than any cluster of skyscrapers, concert<br />

halls, coffee shops, or shopping malls could ever be. Agritourism<br />

helps celebrate who we are and what we do in North Dakota, and<br />

how our leading industry impacts each and every one of us.<br />

For more information on North Dakota agritourism, visit<br />

www.ndtourism.com.<br />

Amanda Godfread is a freelance writer and communications strategist.<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 29


TRAVEL<br />

THE BADLANDS<br />

THE LONG X DIVIDE<br />

Right around the Spring Equinox, barring<br />

a late spring blizzard, park rangers<br />

re-open the scenic drive into the North<br />

Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National<br />

Park. Now, in April, is the time to look here for the<br />

first signs of spring—the emergence of the pasque<br />

flowers (crocuses to us laymen).<br />

When you visit the North Unit this year, drive to<br />

the end of the scenic road, stop at Oxbow Overlook,<br />

walk to the edge, and gaze south and west<br />

over the top of the Little Missouri River. Those tall<br />

hills you are looking at are the Achenbach Hills<br />

(no, that’s not some fractured German translation<br />

of “aching back” hills, but if you’ve ever hiked the<br />

steep Achenbach Trail, which winds through them,<br />

your back will likely be aching). Beyond them,<br />

30 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

welcome. Both beginning hikers and experienced<br />

backpackers enjoy these trails. Maps are available<br />

from the Forest Service offices in Dickinson<br />

and Bismarck, at the Park’s Visitor Centers, and at<br />

Western Edge Books in Medora.<br />

The Long X Divide is one of five badlands areas<br />

proposed for permanent wilderness protection. As<br />

the oil industry moves closer and closer to our national<br />

park boundaries, only that designation will<br />

guarantee the integrity of our state’s most dramatic<br />

skyline vista. You can learn more about how to protect<br />

this and other endangered badlands skylines<br />

by visiting www.badlandsconservationalliance.<br />

org<br />

Imagine working for 32 years in the oil industry<br />

and then discovering that the past 18<br />

months in North Dakota have been the most<br />

rewarding of your career.<br />

That’s what happened to Curt Dacar, the chief<br />

executive officer of Denver based Rock Pile Energy<br />

Services, who grew up in Scranton, N.D. and got<br />

into the oil industry to help pay his way through<br />

college.<br />

“My desire was to go to college and someday<br />

have my own business,” Dacar said. “In order to put<br />

myself through college, I searched out a job in the<br />

oil field, figuring that I could earn enough money<br />

in a couple of years to put me through school and I<br />

found the industry to be very challenging, dynamic,<br />

and interesting.”<br />

He ended up earning a Bachelors of Science in<br />

Business Administration from Regis University in<br />

Denver and then went on to get a Master’s degree in<br />

petroleum engineering from Heriot Watt University<br />

in Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />

He then spent 32 years working for the largest<br />

oil field services company in the world until coming<br />

to Rock Pile Energy Services in 2011 and that’s<br />

Jim Fuglie is a former North Dakota Tourism Director and has<br />

Rock Pile Energy Services went from one employee on January 1, 2012<br />

been exploring the back roads of the badlands since his first trip<br />

along the entire southern City skyline Magazine of the Park, 2/13 is Crossword an<br />

PuzzleJunction.com<br />

to 78 by the end of the year.<br />

there with his parents as a boy in 1959.<br />

area known as the Long X Divide.<br />

The Long X Divide is a 10,000 acre stretch of<br />

Badlands bordering the south side of the park, Correction<br />

owned by the U.S. Forest Service and extending the Oops, we accidentally posted the wrong crossword answers<br />

viewshed for those who visit the park’s overlooks. in last month’s issue of Solution City Magazine. Below are the<br />

This is the most spectacular view of the Little Mis-<br />

crossword answers for the February issue of<br />

City Magazine.<br />

souri River Valley. It is often called the Grand Canyon<br />

of the Little Missouri, a title it richly deserves.<br />

The Long X Divide is one of those areas still<br />

protected by the Forest Service from development,<br />

as well it should be. It serves as a visual buffer<br />

between the park and industrial development. To<br />

mar that skyline would rob us of one of our state’s<br />

most wondrous views and one of our truly unique<br />

outdoor experiences—wilderness hiking.<br />

Three primitive hiking trails meander through<br />

this area: The Long X, the Summit and the famous<br />

Maah Daah Hey. Primitive means no vehicle<br />

access—hikers, horse riders and bicyclists are<br />

W I C K A H E M F R A T S<br />

I D L E H U L A L O I R E<br />

L E A N A R I S T O C R A T<br />

D A W N S A W S P A<br />

E L S E E L A I N E<br />

L O G O F F R E S E T<br />

S E N R O A R L A V A<br />

C R E S T F I T A L T E R<br />

A G A R C O S T E R N<br />

N O T E S S A I L E D<br />

E V E N L Y E D G E<br />

L E O T I N V E A L<br />

A L L O T M E N T S O L L A<br />

T I D A L C O A T T I L T<br />

H A S T E A R M S E S S E<br />

when the fun began. But who is Rock Pile Energy?<br />

Rock Pile Energy is a company that was the vision<br />

of Triangle Petroleum, who realized, as a small operator<br />

in the Williston Basin, that getting fracking<br />

services for their drilling program would be very<br />

difficult. They could not spend $10 million to drill a<br />

well and then wait forever on fracking services.<br />

Instead they brought in additional resources into<br />

the frack business to service their needs and hired<br />

Dacar in September of 2011 to take the company<br />

from a vision to deployment in less than one year.<br />

“By the end of 2012 we were running 24/7,”<br />

Dacar said, “and had grown from one to 78 people.”<br />

And what has been the most rewarding part of his<br />

job? Working with the next oil field generation by<br />

passing along his knowledge and skills to the future<br />

of the industry.<br />

“I have a passion for teaching,” Dacar said. “And<br />

I am very pleased to be able to see friends and family<br />

members move back here and be part of energy<br />

development in this great state.”<br />

Kevin Holten is a writer for City Magazine.<br />

WESTERN N.D.<br />

CURT DACAR<br />

THE MOST REWARDING YEARS BY FAR<br />

APRIL 2013 | THECITYMAG.COM | 31


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32 | THECITYMAG.COM | APRIL 2013<br />

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warfordorthodontics.com

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