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NOVEMBER 2009 BISMARCK • MANDAN<br />

DICKINSON<br />

Inside:<br />

• United Blood Services<br />

• Midkota Solutions<br />

• When a Heart Attack Strikes<br />

Sara<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong><br />

Director of Tourism,<br />

North Dakota Department of Commerce


2 thecitymag.com


Publisher’s Note<br />

Study and<br />

Work Habits<br />

As parents send their children to school, they often assist them<br />

with homework because they want their children to learn good<br />

study habits and do well. As students reach the 5th grade,<br />

however, parents start to become challenged by the homework.<br />

At about that time, parents reduce their level of assistance and<br />

begin to encourage their children to do well on their own (mostly<br />

because the time and information becomes too difficult).<br />

Recently, I listened to a mother talk about becoming more<br />

involved in the lives of her children. One way she did this was by<br />

reading the books her children were assigned in class before they read<br />

them. This helped her understand how her children interpreted the<br />

material.<br />

By staying ahead of her children’s homework, it was easier for<br />

the mother to give direction when necessary. However, we all have<br />

different DNA and approach the daily tasks of life differently.<br />

Staying ahead of studies assigned to our children may be the best<br />

way to determine if they understand what is being taught, or if they<br />

are misinterpreting the information as they want to see it. When<br />

students understand certain material as they see it, rather than how<br />

it really is, they may have problems with their homework. Over time,<br />

this can also create an issue in the work place.<br />

Good study habits begin early and last a lifetime.<br />

6<br />

9<br />

10<br />

14<br />

24<br />

Joe Hauer<br />

Printed in the USA. • Subscription rates are $24/year. • Free at limited locations.<br />

For advertising information, please call United Printing at (701) 223-0505.<br />

www.thecitymag.com<br />

PUBLISHER<br />

Joe Hauer<br />

UNITED PRINTING PRESIDENT<br />

Ken Bischof<br />

GENERAL MANAGER<br />

Kilee Harmon<br />

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF<br />

Mandy Thomas<br />

CREATIVE DIRECTOR<br />

Billie Michele Stanton<br />

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS<br />

Jackson Bird<br />

Sarah Devereaux<br />

Debora Dragseth<br />

Wes Engbrecht<br />

Candace Brannan Gerhardt<br />

Joel Gilbertson<br />

Renae Hoffmann Walker<br />

Ellen Huber<br />

Mike LaLonde<br />

Marilyn Mitzel<br />

Nicole Morrison-Mathern<br />

Tom Regan<br />

Katherine Satrom<br />

Jan Schultz<br />

Britni Schwartz<br />

Stan Stelter<br />

Mandy Thomas<br />

Silvia Vigier<br />

Deanna Voutsas<br />

Chelsea Watterud<br />

Mike Wetsch<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY<br />

Ashley Lynn Harris<br />

DISTRIBUTION<br />

Ron Lechner<br />

John Metzger<br />

ADVISORY BOARD<br />

Darrell Dorgan<br />

Dick Heidt<br />

Tom Regan<br />

The city <strong>Magazine</strong> does not necessarily<br />

endorse or agree with the contents of articles or<br />

advertising appearing in the magazine.<br />

The city <strong>Magazine</strong> is published monthly<br />

by United Printing / Spit’n Image<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 />

thecitymagazine@unitedprinting.com<br />

COVER STORY<br />

FEATURE<br />

FEATURE<br />

Sara-<strong>Otte</strong> <strong>Coleman</strong><br />

URL Radio<br />

Merit Pay - Part 3<br />

CM SMARTS<br />

Healing America’s Health Care<br />

YP UPDATE 25<br />

38<br />

Choices Today– Changes Tomorrow<br />

YESS AWARD<br />

Bismancoupons.com<br />

CM/KFYR SALUTES...<br />

United Blood Services<br />

PET PAGE<br />

26 Local Shelters 42 TRAVEL<br />

Soar to Salt Lake<br />

15<br />

16<br />

22<br />

WHATEVER HAPPENED TO<br />

Wanda Lou (Lowry) Royse?<br />

MANDAN ON THE MOVE<br />

Holiday Shopping Festivities<br />

YOU’VE COME A LONG WAY, BABY?<br />

A Place to Call Home<br />

FEATURE<br />

Midkota Solutions<br />

WE DRIVE 27 Modern Day Hot Rodders<br />

HOME SWEET HOME<br />

30 A Great Reason to Buy<br />

HEALTH 32 When a Heart Attack Strikes<br />

BRIGHT IDEAS 34 Turning the Lights on Agriculture<br />

43<br />

45<br />

47<br />

SAFETY TIP<br />

People United for Living in Safe<br />

Environments<br />

WESTERN ND SECTION<br />

Southwest Area Human Resource<br />

WESTERN ND SECTION<br />

Are You a Real North Dakotan?<br />

WINE NOTES<br />

November 23 Winetasting 2009 / Warehouse Part 2<br />

CITY WORKS 35 Reducing Winter Injury to Evergreens<br />

3<br />

36


| KILEE'S TAKE<br />

Thanksgiving<br />

Traditions<br />

This is my first year celebrating the holidays as a married<br />

woman, wife, or as some like to put it, an official balland-chain!<br />

This means there are new traditions, and<br />

Thanksgiving brings the first set. Since traditions are<br />

different from family to family, I wondered how they differed from<br />

country to country.<br />

I found my answer at Thanksgiving-day.org, where it states<br />

Thanksgiving is a harvest-related festival that celebrates communal<br />

harmony. In America, it’s a time for family reunions, while giving<br />

thanks for the fortunes we have received in our lives.<br />

For our neighbors to the north, Thanksgiving caused many<br />

arguments because people could not decide when to celebrate it. It<br />

went from a Thursday in November, to a Thursday in October. Then<br />

on Jan. 31, 1957, Parliament officially declared the second Monday<br />

in October Thanksgiving. It marks a day of parades, family feasts and<br />

reunions.<br />

In Korea, Thanksgiving is called “Chu<br />

Suk.” It’s held Aug. 15, and is a celebration<br />

to show respect for elders. Families go to<br />

ancestral homes, visit gravesites and have a<br />

meal that includes Songp`yon, or crescentshaped<br />

rice cakes stuffed with sesame seeds.<br />

Thanksgiving in Sabah, the second<br />

largest state in Malaysia, is celebrated during<br />

the Kadazan Harvest Festival in May. Locals<br />

believe without rice there is no life, so during<br />

this festival, they thank Bambaazon, the rice<br />

spirit, for a good harvest.<br />

In Australia, Thanksgiving is celebrated<br />

for three or four days in March during<br />

the Apple and Grape Harvest Festival.<br />

Grape crushing, apple competitions, street<br />

carnivals, grand parades and fireworks are<br />

among their favorite ways to celebrate.<br />

So, whatever your traditions are for the<br />

fourth Thursday of November, I hope they<br />

are filled with much happiness, love and<br />

laughter.<br />

4 thecitymag.com


GOOD READS |<br />

Still Alice<br />

A book review by Sarah Devereaux<br />

Alice” is a<br />

“Still<br />

work of fiction,<br />

however, the<br />

reader gains a great deal<br />

of understanding about<br />

the devastating disease<br />

of Alzheimer’s. In her<br />

first book, Lisa Genova,<br />

author, describes the<br />

process and journey a<br />

woman and her family<br />

go through while dealing<br />

with the diagnosis and<br />

progression of early-onset<br />

Alzheimer’s.<br />

Still Alice by Lisa Genova<br />

Alice Howland, 50,<br />

is a well respected, Harvard professor specializing, ironically,<br />

in cognitive psychology who begins to notice small glitches in<br />

her memory. The changes are slowly becoming more obvious to<br />

herself, her husband, her three grown children and colleagues.<br />

“Still Alice” brings the reader on Alice’s journey–and the<br />

writing is so personal, you feel like you are living Alice’s life with<br />

her. We go to work with Alice, where her prestigious career<br />

is suffering. She forgets to go to a conference where she is a<br />

keynote speaker, and then sits in the last row of a class she is<br />

supposed to teach, thinking she’s a student. At home, Alice is<br />

getting lost on her way to familiar places and forgetting recipes<br />

she’s cooked from memory her entire life.<br />

The book describes the day-to-day details of dealing with<br />

Alzheimer’s. Although “Still Alice” is written mainly from Alice’s<br />

point of view, it also gives the perspectives of her daughters and<br />

husband.<br />

The reader begins to understand how the disease affects<br />

not only the patient, but also the patient’s loved ones. Readers<br />

also experience the coping mechanisms Alice employs to get<br />

through life. As her Alzheimer’s progresses, the writing style<br />

changes with Alice’s symptoms.<br />

This is a book for people who want to understand the<br />

disease on a human level– it is both heartbreaking and uplifting.<br />

As the author so beautifully describes Alice, “She liked being<br />

reminded of butterflies. Just because their lives were short didn’t<br />

mean they were tragic. They have a beautiful life.”<br />

Good Reads is sponsored by:<br />

November 2009 5


| COVER STORY<br />

Sara-<strong>Otte</strong> <strong>Coleman</strong><br />

Luring Visitors to the State<br />

“We needed a statement<br />

about the whole state that<br />

we could live up to and<br />

deliver on.”<br />

– Sara <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong><br />

If you want to feel<br />

reinvigorated about<br />

living in N.D., just talk<br />

to Bismarck-native Sara<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong>, the state’s<br />

director of tourism. Her<br />

unbridled enthusiasm for the<br />

sights and sounds of N.D. can<br />

turn the most ambivalent<br />

resident into a diehard<br />

ambassador.<br />

The leader of one of the<br />

state’s primary industries since<br />

2003, <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong> seems<br />

to have found her calling.<br />

Previous to her tourism<br />

job, <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong> spent 15<br />

years in marketing with the<br />

Bismarck-Mandan Convention<br />

and Visitors Bureau.<br />

By Tom Regan<br />

Claiming a $3.96 billion<br />

piece of the state economic<br />

pie in 2007, and generating<br />

$12.7 million in taxes, tourism<br />

has grown by 16.8 percent<br />

since 2000. <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong>’s<br />

penchant for research, along<br />

with her focus on determining<br />

the best marketing strategies,<br />

has helped ensure that growth.<br />

Symptomatic of the<br />

passion she feels for N.D. as<br />

a travel destination, <strong>Otte</strong>-<br />

<strong>Coleman</strong> confesses a frustration<br />

with residents, including<br />

policymakers, who take for<br />

granted, and even downplay,<br />

the riches in their own<br />

backyard. She admits it’s the<br />

most challenging part of her job.<br />

“Bismarck, for example,<br />

has great city amenities<br />

including fabulous restaurants,<br />

great hotels and shopping,”<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong> says. “It is also<br />

located in a unique area—<br />

that’s a great combination!”<br />

The same sublime scenery<br />

and myriad of attractions that<br />

lure visitors to the state also<br />

add to the quality of life of all<br />

who dwell here. Let’s not take<br />

any of that for granted and,<br />

as Sara <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong> would<br />

have us to do, let’s talk N.D.<br />

up wherever and whenever we<br />

travel outside the state!<br />

–Staff<br />

6 thecitymag.com


“State tourism”<br />

CM: has had a lot of<br />

good advertising themes and<br />

slogans over the years. Do<br />

you have a favorite?<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman: My<br />

favorite is “Legendary,”<br />

which was developed around<br />

research. We aren’t a place<br />

of landmarks. We<br />

needed a statement<br />

about the whole<br />

state that we could<br />

live up to and<br />

deliver on. When<br />

you start thinking<br />

about what people<br />

know us for, it’s<br />

the history and the<br />

legends. The slogan<br />

is based on the key<br />

legends: Theodore<br />

Roosevelt, Custer,<br />

Sakakawea, Lewis<br />

and Clark and<br />

Sitting Bull.<br />

The slogan is<br />

applicable to many<br />

different areas. We<br />

can have legendary<br />

golfing. We can<br />

have legendary<br />

sunsets. It works<br />

well.<br />

CM: Define<br />

tourism as<br />

an “industry.”<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman: People<br />

don’t think of tourism as<br />

an industry; they think of<br />

it as an activity. They forget<br />

about the infrastructure–the<br />

buildings and the services<br />

out there for people to use.<br />

Without that, you wouldn’t<br />

be able to travel. The obvious<br />

big players are hotels, gas<br />

stations, airports, restaurants<br />

and shopping outlets. But,<br />

it goes beyond that to<br />

the outdoor recreational<br />

opportunities we have here,<br />

including state and national<br />

parks and wildlife refuges.<br />

Then, there are all the<br />

service providers such as all<br />

the folks at the smaller resorts<br />

and all the businesses that<br />

feed into that. The tourism<br />

industry is not always visible.<br />

You don’t see us like you see<br />

SARA OTTE-COLEMAN<br />

Title: Director of Tourism, N.D. Department<br />

of Commerce<br />

DOB: July 17, 1963<br />

High School: Century High School,<br />

Class of 1981<br />

College: Minnesota State University<br />

Moorhead, bachelor’s degree in business<br />

administration with major in marketing,<br />

advertising and public relations<br />

Family: Husband, Clark, married 24 years;<br />

Chloe, 14; Clint and Cooper (twins), 10<br />

Hobbies: Running, hiking, horseback riding,<br />

boating, water and snow skiing, cooking<br />

Most recently read book: “Unclutter Your<br />

Mind,” by Donna Smallin<br />

Favorite quote: “Be joyful always; pray<br />

continually; give thanks in all circumstances,<br />

for this is God’s will for you in Jesus Christ.”<br />

-1 Thessalonians 5: 16-18<br />

What people would be surprised to learn<br />

about you: “I’m a farm wife.”<br />

the wind turbines and the oil<br />

rigs, but we’re there. We’re in<br />

every community and every<br />

county throughout the whole<br />

state.<br />

How has a “down”<br />

CM: economy affected<br />

tourism nationally and<br />

locally?<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman: N.D.<br />

has fared much better than<br />

the region, or nation, as a<br />

whole. One difference is the<br />

Canadian traffic—we’re down<br />

considerably this year. Last<br />

year, when the dollar was at<br />

par, we saw huge increases.<br />

But, if you look at the fiveyear<br />

average, we’re still good.<br />

We positioned ourselves<br />

as “AAA’s most affordable<br />

state” and really hit that hard.<br />

We also tried to overcome<br />

objections like gas prices.<br />

Nationally,<br />

researchers and<br />

economists say<br />

people didn’t quit<br />

traveling. The<br />

media talked about<br />

“stay-cations” and<br />

“nay-cations” but,<br />

when you look<br />

at it, people still<br />

travelled. They’re<br />

still taking as<br />

many trips as<br />

before, just not<br />

spending as much<br />

money in sectors<br />

like shopping and<br />

dining. Also, people<br />

are shopping for<br />

“deals” rather than<br />

“destinations.”<br />

CM: What<br />

makes<br />

an attractive<br />

tourism<br />

destination?<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman:<br />

Uniqueness. If you need<br />

people to drive there<br />

from a distance, it can’t be<br />

something they are able to<br />

find in their own backyard.<br />

Quality is really important,<br />

and being able to deliver<br />

on the service—giving the<br />

people what they expect. It’s<br />

also about partnering, and<br />

figuring out what else you can<br />

do in the region or the area,<br />

and combining those into<br />

packages because people don’t<br />

have a lot of time to plan.<br />

November 2009 7


People’s expectations are higher<br />

than they used to be. They<br />

say that what was a luxury to<br />

one generation is an absolute<br />

necessity to the next.<br />

What are N.D.’s<br />

CM: most popular<br />

destinations?<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman: Theodore<br />

Roosevelt National Park is our<br />

number one attraction. It gets<br />

over a half-million visitors per<br />

year. The International Peace<br />

Gardens is one of our gems. It’s<br />

one of the only places where<br />

you can still cross the border<br />

without a passport. The Ralph<br />

Engelstad Arena and the Fargo<br />

Dome, as major event centers,<br />

draw huge numbers of visitors<br />

to the cities in which they are<br />

located.<br />

It’s the “oddities” that attract<br />

attention, as well. We’ve<br />

gotten so much press on the<br />

Enchanted Highway—it’s<br />

whimsical and different. People<br />

come from Germany to see the<br />

albino calves at the Jamestown<br />

Buffalo Museum—that’s one<br />

that’s really sought out.<br />

Peace Garden ad placed in the skywalks in Minneapolis, Minn.<br />

Tourism by The Numbers<br />

What are your<br />

CM: personal keys to<br />

success?<br />

<strong>Otte</strong>-COleman: Balance.<br />

And that goes beyond<br />

balancing being a mother and<br />

a professional. You need to take<br />

care of yourself, too. Everybody<br />

knows I’m a lot happier if I<br />

get that run in the morning.<br />

You also really have to believe<br />

in what you do. At the end of<br />

the day, if you really feel your<br />

work is worth something, then<br />

you feel good about it and it all<br />

comes together.<br />

• More than 16 million visitor trips are completed in N.D. each year.<br />

• Each visitor adds $81 to the gross state product.<br />

• Advertising N.D. adds a 1:8 return to the state tax base.<br />

• 68 percent of visitors/travelers are from out of state.<br />

• One of every 12 workers in the state owes their job to tourism.<br />

• Approximately $733 million in wages and salaries are generated<br />

through state tourism.<br />

Source: N.D. Department of Tourism<br />

See Sara <strong>Otte</strong>-<strong>Coleman</strong> answers to the “<strong>City</strong> Mag 10” questionnaire by<br />

signing up for <strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>’s online magazine at www.thecitymag.com.<br />

8 thecitymag.com


CM SMARTS |<br />

Beginning Conversation:<br />

Healing America’s Health Care System<br />

A<br />

good conversation to have these days,<br />

with a variety of people, is about health<br />

care reform. It helps to understand how<br />

other countries’ health care systems<br />

work, to see what some options are.<br />

T.R. Reid, a Washington Post journalist, went<br />

on an expedition to research alternatives to our<br />

nation’s health care system, as well as hoping<br />

to treat his bum shoulder. His new book, “The<br />

Healing of America. A Global Quest for Better,<br />

Cheaper, and Fairer Health Care,” offers a picture<br />

of four different types of health care systems.<br />

Reid describes Britain’s National Health<br />

Service, inspired by Willliam Beveridge, as<br />

probably closest to what Americans imagine when<br />

they think of socialized medicine (Spain, Italy, and<br />

New Zealand also follow this model).<br />

In this model, the government is as responsible<br />

for taking care of people’s health as they are for<br />

picking up trash. It’s paid for with taxes. The<br />

government owns the hospitals, employs the<br />

doctors and nurses, buys the pills and pays the<br />

bills. Patients must see a general practitioner first<br />

and, if a specialist is needed, there’s a waiting line.<br />

Administratively, it’s simple because it cuts out the<br />

need for insurance.<br />

Germany, Japan, France, Belgium and<br />

Switzerland all utilize the “Bismarck Model”, which<br />

has all private doctors, hospitals and insurance<br />

plans. The difference is there are about 200<br />

non-profit insurance companies in Germany. It’s<br />

not single-payer, and you can drop it and switch<br />

companies, and they can’t raise your premium.<br />

By Candace Brannan Gerhardt<br />

The third type is the Canadian Model which<br />

is a blend of both the Beveridge and Bismarck<br />

Models. They have private doctors and private<br />

hospitals, but the payment system is public. In<br />

some provinces, people pay a premium; in some<br />

provinces, it’s a tax. But, you don’t get a hospital<br />

bill, so anybody can go.<br />

The last and most common model of health<br />

care operates on one rule: if you can pay your<br />

doctor out-of-pocket, you get treated. If you can’t<br />

pay, you stay sick or die. Brutal, but that’s the fact<br />

of life in most countries.<br />

In the United States, all four models exist.<br />

According to Reid, if you’re Native American or<br />

a veteran relying on government care, you live<br />

in Britain. If you share your health insurance<br />

premium with your employer, you live in Germany.<br />

If you’re a senior and you buy Medicare insurance<br />

from the government and go to a private doctor,<br />

you live in Canada. And, if you’re one of the tens<br />

of millions of Americans who can’t get health<br />

insurance, you live in Nicaragua or Honduras.<br />

Reid points out this difference: all other<br />

countries have decided that health care is a right,<br />

not a privilege, and these countries have decided<br />

that it’s more fair and affordable to provide one<br />

model where everyone has access to the same care<br />

at the same price.<br />

How should Americans reform our health<br />

care system? There are no easy answers, but we<br />

can’t ignore it any longer. Let’s look at it, and let’s<br />

continue this dialogue.<br />

November 2009 9


| CITY MAGAZINE & KFYR<br />

Salutes<br />

United Blood Services<br />

As you make<br />

your plans<br />

for the<br />

holidays,<br />

put this on your list:<br />

save a life. That’s<br />

precisely what you<br />

may be doing if you<br />

devote an hour of<br />

your time to give<br />

blood at Bismarck’s<br />

United Blood Services<br />

(UBS) on South 7th<br />

Street.<br />

The need is great.<br />

One out of every 10<br />

people entering a<br />

hospital, including the<br />

emergency room, needs<br />

blood. Sadly, in our area,<br />

a meager five percent of the population supplies<br />

100 percent of the blood needs, according to<br />

Stephanie Radenz, donor recruitment manager.<br />

Bismarck’s UBS facility is part of a nonprofit<br />

corporation, headquartered in Scottsdale,<br />

Ariz., that provides blood, blood components<br />

and special services to patients in more than<br />

500 hospitals in 18 states.<br />

If you’re 16 years old, or older, at least 110<br />

pounds and are in good health, you can donate<br />

blood every 56 days. In N.D., 16 and 17-yearold<br />

donors need a permission slip signed by a<br />

parent or guardian.<br />

By Tom Regan<br />

United Blood Services Center, Bismarck.<br />

The donation process begins with a brief<br />

interview about your medical history and<br />

current health. Next, your temperature, blood<br />

pressure, pulse and blood hemoglobin level are<br />

checked.<br />

“Many donors view this ‘mini-physical’ as<br />

an added bonus for donating,” says Radenz.<br />

Once it’s been determined that it is safe for<br />

you to give blood, you will begin the actual<br />

donation process, which lasts about seven to<br />

ten minutes for a whole blood donation. After<br />

the donation, you’re asked to sit back, relax and<br />

enjoy some snacks before you are sent on your<br />

way. The entire process takes about 45 minutes<br />

to one hour from start to finish.<br />

10 thecitymag.com


“Most donors find the process painless and<br />

heartwarming,” says Radenz.<br />

Until the 1950s, blood was transfused exactly<br />

as it was collected—in its “whole” state. Today,<br />

blood can be separated in several components<br />

such as red cells (used by surgical patients),<br />

plasma (shock, burn and accident patients),<br />

platelets (leukemia and other cancer patients)<br />

and cryoprecipitate (patients with hemophilia<br />

and other clotting disorders). Since most patients<br />

require a specific blood product, a single donation<br />

can benefit several people.<br />

“The holidays are a challenging time for<br />

blood donations,” says Radenz. “People do a<br />

lot of traveling and they have other things, like<br />

Christmas parties and shopping, on their minds.”<br />

Bismarck’s UBS center is conveniently located<br />

at 517 S. 7th St., across from Kirkwood Mall. As<br />

you begin your holiday shopping, why not call<br />

them and schedule an appointment? You could<br />

give no greater gift.<br />

For more information, visit the UBS website at<br />

www.unitedbloodservices.org. Call 258-4512 or<br />

1-800-456-6159 to schedule an appointment.<br />

Blood Donation Facts<br />

• 90 percent of the population will use<br />

blood before age 72.<br />

• Every two seconds someone in the<br />

U.S. needs blood.<br />

• In the time it takes you to donate,<br />

1,800 people across the U.S. have<br />

needed blood.<br />

• Just one blood donation can save up<br />

to three lives of area patients.<br />

• Whole blood is good for only<br />

42 days. Other components like<br />

platelets are good for only five days.<br />

Just one emergency or disaster can<br />

deplete an entire supply of a certain<br />

blood type.<br />

November 2009 11


| A TASTE OF NORTH DAKOTA<br />

PHEASANT MEATBALLS WITH ALMONDS<br />

Ingredients<br />

1 lb. ground pheasant thigh meat<br />

1 cup fresh white bread crumbs<br />

2 eggs<br />

2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley<br />

3 tablespoons chopped toasted almonds<br />

3/4 teaspoon dried thyme<br />

2 cloves garlic, minced<br />

2 tablespoons chopped toasted almonds<br />

for garnish<br />

Sauce Ingredients<br />

2 tablespoons olive oil<br />

1 large onion, chopped<br />

1 large ripe tomato, chopped<br />

1 red bell pepper, chopped<br />

1 cup pheasant or chicken broth<br />

3 tablespoons chopped toasted almonds<br />

2 bay leaves<br />

Instructions<br />

Make sauce by heating olive oil in a heavy,<br />

large saucepan over medium heat. Add onion,<br />

tomato and bell pepper and cook for about 15<br />

minutes or until vegetables are soft, stirring<br />

occasionally. Add broth, 3 tablespoons almonds<br />

and bay leaves; simmer for about 20 minutes, or<br />

until sauce is thick and chunky. Discard bay leaves.<br />

Season with salt and pepper (This can be prepared<br />

a day ahead and refrigerated, then re-warmed).<br />

Heat oven to 400°F. Thoroughly combine<br />

the pheasant, bread crumbs, eggs, parsley, 3<br />

tablespoons almonds, thyme and garlic in a large<br />

bowl. Season with salt and pepper. Shape the mix<br />

into 1-inch balls. Arrange on a heavy, large baking<br />

sheet. Bake for about 12 minutes, or until cooked<br />

through and firm to the touch.<br />

Place meatballs on a plate and pour sauce over<br />

them. Serve with rigatoni pasta. Garnish with<br />

toasted almonds.<br />

Shoot straight this season because you’re going to want to have some birds to try out the 100<br />

pages of tasty recipes in the color-illustrated Pheasants Forever Essential Game Bird Recipes<br />

cookbook. Many of the recipes were submitted by PF members and staff, concoctions handed<br />

down by generations of experienced pheasant hunters and chefs. Following are some great recipes<br />

in the book, which are available for only $12.95 by calling 877-773-2070 toll-free.<br />

12<br />

For more great recipes visit the “Extra Content” section at<br />

www.thecitymag.com<br />

thecitymag.com


Ingredients<br />

2 pheasant breasts<br />

seasoning salt<br />

1 box (6 oz.) long grain and wild rice blend with seasonings<br />

1/4 cup chopped yellow onion<br />

1 Granny Smith apple<br />

1/2 cup chopped walnuts<br />

1/2 cup sweetened dried cranberries<br />

Sauce Ingredients<br />

1 jar (12 oz.) red currant jelly<br />

3 oz. sweet orange marmalade<br />

1 cup port wine<br />

1 cup orange juice<br />

1 tablespoon light brown sugar<br />

1 teaspoon ground ginger<br />

1 teaspoon dry mustard<br />

1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper<br />

1/8 teaspoon salt<br />

Instructions<br />

A Taste of North Dakota<br />

is sponsored by:<br />

NORTHWOODS PHEASANT WITH<br />

CUMBERLAND SAUCE<br />

Lightly season breasts with seasoning salt. Breasts may be<br />

sautéed or grilled. Prepare rice as shown on box. In a little butter,<br />

sauté onion and apple. When rice is done, combine rice, onions,<br />

apples, walnuts and cranberries. Garnish with fresh bay leaves.<br />

Sauce Cooking Instructions<br />

Combine all ingredients for sauce and bring to a boil. Let<br />

sauce simmer for 10 minutes. Serve sauce on the side. The unused<br />

sauce may be frozen.<br />

November 2009 13


Whatever happened to<br />

Wanda Lou (Lowry) Royse<br />

Wanda Lou Lowry, Miss North Dakota<br />

1967. It’s hard to believe it’s been<br />

four decades since that name was a<br />

household word. Let’s catch up with her!<br />

Having just graduated from New Town High<br />

School, Royse moved to Bismarck to prepare for the<br />

Miss America pageant. She says it was THE turning<br />

point in her life. “I met Jane Grey Stewart, who directed<br />

the N.D. pageant and became my chaperone,” said<br />

Royse. “I worked at KFYR-TV, where I did commercials<br />

and sang on the ‘This is Music’ broadcast to schools<br />

across the state. And, I toured the U.S. with Fred<br />

Waring for a year. These experiences truly changed my<br />

life!”<br />

After the national pageant, Royse returned to<br />

Bismarck to be a KFYR-TV weather person and host<br />

the “Be Our Guest” show. She graduated from Bismarck<br />

Junior College, and in 1976, her life took another major<br />

turn when she married Al Royse of Mandan. “I moved<br />

to the Bay area because my husband got a job with a<br />

CPA firm there,” said Royse. “We’ve been in Calif. ever<br />

since!”<br />

With a tear in her voice, Wanda says she’s most<br />

proud raising two fantastic kids, Jennifer and Matthew,<br />

who would come home each summer to work at<br />

Grandma and Grandpa Royse’s produce stand in<br />

Mandan. Jennifer was a performer in New York <strong>City</strong><br />

for two years before founding The Royse Group, a real<br />

estate agency specializing in relocating executives.<br />

Matthew recently graduated with a master’s degree in<br />

accounting and is job hunting.<br />

Wanda, who earned a Bachelor of Arts with honors<br />

in broadcasting and theatre arts from San Jose State,<br />

By Renae Hoffmann Walker<br />

Calif., continues to perform with many West Coast<br />

groups, most recently the Golden Gate <strong>City</strong> Orchestra.<br />

Besides raising kids, singing, doing community<br />

theatre and volunteer work, Royse owns three<br />

businesses. She founded WR Communication<br />

Consultants 26 years ago. She and her five consultants<br />

work with large companies and individuals on<br />

presentation skills, writing, team building, leadership<br />

and customer satisfaction.<br />

Two years ago, she created WR Costume<br />

Collective to rent out her many costumes. Recently,<br />

she started her third business. “It’s my retirement plan,”<br />

said Royse. “I get to eat and share delicious, healthy<br />

Belgian chocolate called Xocai.”<br />

While Wanda has been involved with her<br />

community and church in San Mateo, Calif., she says<br />

it’s not the same as living in N.D., where she feels<br />

there’s a deeper connection with people. “They seem<br />

more like family,” said Royse.<br />

NEW NEIGHBOR WELCOME SERVICE<br />

Welcomes you to Bismarck-Mandan<br />

For Free Gifts Contact:<br />

Verdeen at 391-0094 or Ileen at 400-2919<br />

or email us at newneighbors@bis.midco.net<br />

14 thecitymag.com


MANDAN ON THE Move |<br />

Mandan Offers Holiday<br />

Shopping Festivities<br />

By Ellen Huber, Business Development Director<br />

Santa’s elves, Wanda Knoll<br />

and Tami Helmers, will greet<br />

customers and pass out<br />

candy canes during the<br />

Santa Shop Hop on Nov. 28.<br />

This holiday season, give your family the gift of fun and<br />

fellowship by participating in Mandan’s “Over the River<br />

and Through the Shops” hometown Christmas celebration<br />

complete with carolers, horse-drawn wagon rides, Santa<br />

Claus and more than $5,000 in Mandan Bucks giveaways.<br />

Find more than you imagined during “Shop Hop ‘Til You<br />

Drop” customer appreciation weeks from Nov. 21 to Nov. 27,<br />

Nov. 28 to Dec. 4, and Dec. 5 to Dec. 11, where merchants will<br />

offer special discounts. Each “shop hopper” will receive a Holiday<br />

Shopping Passport at any participating store. Shoppers who have<br />

their passports stamped at 10 businesses are eligible to win $250 in<br />

Mandan Bucks each week.<br />

A special “Santa Shop Hop” will be held Saturday, Nov. 28, with<br />

entertainment at the Mysteria Theater from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Visit<br />

five participating stores to become eligible to win $500 in Mandan<br />

Bucks. The day culminates with Santa’s Arrival at 5 p.m. at the<br />

Mandan Community Center, 901 Division St.<br />

Shoppers also have other opportunities to win and earn Mandan<br />

Bucks. Many businesses throughout the community are serving as<br />

registration sites. Fifty dollars in Mandan Bucks will be awarded<br />

each day of the festivities from Nov. 21 to Dec. 11.<br />

Be among the first to buy $100 in Mandan Bucks between<br />

Nov. 21 and Christmas to receive an extra $20 certificate. The<br />

offer is limited to the first 150 purchases. Gift certificates are<br />

available at Mandan financial institutions and the Mandan Progress<br />

Organization, 411 W. Main St.<br />

Expect bright lights in Mandan for the Christmas season. Shops<br />

will compete in a storefront decorating contest. Celebrity judges will<br />

select a winner from downtown, Memorial Highway and elsewhere.<br />

Shoppers can vote between Nov. 28 and Dec. 4 for a “People’s<br />

Choice” winner when they submit a completed Shop Hop Passport.<br />

For more information, call 701-751-2983 or visit www.<br />

mandanprogress.org.<br />

November 2009 15


| YOU'VE COME A LONG WAY, BABY!<br />

A Place to Call Home<br />

A meal. A haircut. A shower. A roof. A hug.<br />

What do these words have in common?<br />

They are things that most people<br />

take for granted on a daily basis.<br />

On Jan. 28, 2009, the North Dakota Coalition<br />

for Homeless People (NDCHP) conducted a<br />

statewide point-in-time survey (the count of all<br />

the people who are homeless on a given day).<br />

This survey revealed 987 homeless people right<br />

here in N.D., 220 of which were children under<br />

the age of 18.<br />

In December 2008, Tina Grumbo became the<br />

executive director of the Missouri Valley CHP.<br />

Three months later, she started planning a Project<br />

Homeless Connect event. In April, Jaime Fox,<br />

the single point of entry coordinator of the Ruth<br />

Meiers Hospitality House, joined her. The next<br />

month, Carrie Transgrud, the shelter coordinator<br />

at Ruth Meiers jumped on board; and in July,<br />

Ashlie Bieber, a social worker at Ruth Meiers;<br />

and Kristina Kalenze, an administrative assistant<br />

intern at the Missouri Valley CHP completed the<br />

team. They partnered with the Central Dakota<br />

Veterans Stand Down group, which also brought<br />

assistance from Joe Hall and Tyson Quire.<br />

The Project Homeless Connect event was<br />

initiated in response to goal #28 in Bismarck-<br />

Mandan’s 10-Year Plan to, “End long-term<br />

By Nicole Morrison-Mathern<br />

16 thecitymag.com


homelessness in Bismarck-Mandan.” The planning started from<br />

scratch, but modeled the U.S. Interagency, National Homeless<br />

Connect, which started in Calif. More than 200 events have<br />

been held nationwide.<br />

The goal of the event was to pull agencies together and pool<br />

resources, so they could provide a one-stop-shop for guests to<br />

access all services and become educated on what is available to<br />

them in our community.<br />

On Sept. 2, 2009, around 70 volunteers joined together at<br />

the Bismarck Amvets to provide: haircuts, housing applications,<br />

meals, health screenings, food pantry items, sleeping bags<br />

and blankets and hygiene products. Free transportation<br />

was provided by UTTC to help those in need get a driver’s<br />

license, birth certificate or ID card that may be needed for job<br />

applications, veteran services and more.<br />

On that day alone, volunteers impacted 476 lives, 78 percent<br />

of which had never participated in something like this before.<br />

Their goal was to educate and empower those who are homeless<br />

and those who have a low income to ultimately prevent<br />

homelessness.<br />

Wes Engbrecht, a volunteer with the Optimist Club, enjoyed<br />

being a part of the extremely well run event. “I volunteer with<br />

our church,” said Engbrecht. "We serve dinners on Tuesday<br />

night for Riverside Harvest, and I recognized a lot of the people<br />

that participated. It made me realize that there’s a community<br />

out there that needs our help more than once a year.”<br />

The successful event has come and gone as fast as the<br />

summer in N.D. The ladies are finishing their thank-you notes,<br />

and then it’s time to gear up for National Hunger and Homeless<br />

Awareness week Nov. 15-21. They’ll start planning next year’s<br />

Project Homeless Connect after Christmas. In the mean time,<br />

the ladies will keep doing what they do best–helping those<br />

enduring a difficult time find a meal, haircut, shower, roof and a<br />

hug!<br />

For more information at www.missourivalleyhomeless.org.<br />

Photo (L to R): Jaime Fox, single point of entry coordinator, Ruth Meiers<br />

Hospitality House; Kristina Kalenze, administrative assistant, Missouri<br />

Valley Coalition for Homeless People, Inc./ Job Service of N.D. Summer<br />

Work Intern Program; Ashlie Bieber, social worker, Ruth Meiers Hospitality<br />

House; Tina Grumbo, executive director, Missouri Valley Coalition for<br />

Homeless People, Inc.; Carrie Transgrud, shelter coordinator, Community<br />

Action Program Region VII, Inc.<br />

Nicole Morrison-Mathern is assistant director of the Harold<br />

Schafer Emerging Leaders Academy at the University of<br />

Mary, as well as the co-owner of the 100% women-owned<br />

businesses, Moxe In Action, LLC, Entertainment Resources,<br />

and URL (U Rock Lately) Radio.<br />

November 2009 17


| CROSSWORD<br />

<strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> 11/09 Crossword PuzzleJunction.com<br />

Across<br />

1 Stigma<br />

6 Vitriols<br />

11 Prayer word<br />

14 Get up<br />

15 Inert gas<br />

16 Modern<br />

17 Wyoming park<br />

19 Compass pt.<br />

20 Negatively charged<br />

particle<br />

21 More spooky<br />

23 Sod<br />

26 Mosquito<br />

28 Wanders<br />

29 Retired<br />

30 Burst<br />

32 Via<br />

33 Publisher Doubleday<br />

36 Wave rider<br />

38 Annex<br />

39 Actress Ruby or<br />

Sandra<br />

41 Digit<br />

42 Distress call<br />

45 Fears<br />

48 Pour<br />

50 Sp. girl<br />

51 Golf item<br />

52 Cookie<br />

53 Use up<br />

55 Scruff<br />

58 ___ Breckinridge<br />

59 Adhesives<br />

61 Witchcraft trials<br />

locale<br />

63 Conjunctions<br />

64 Some cartoons<br />

69 Shoshonean<br />

70 Dwelling<br />

71 Coral reef<br />

72 Small amount<br />

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13<br />

14 15 16<br />

17 18 19<br />

20 21 22<br />

23 24 25 26 27 28<br />

29 30 31 32<br />

33 34 35 36 37<br />

38 39 40 41 42 43 44<br />

45 46 47 48 49<br />

50 51 52<br />

53 54 55 56 57 58<br />

59 60 61 62<br />

63 64 65 66 67 68<br />

69 70 71<br />

72 73 74<br />

73 Chordophones<br />

74 Disreputable<br />

Down<br />

1 Utter<br />

2 Three (It.)<br />

3 Suffer<br />

4 Azores, e.g.<br />

5 Sign gas<br />

6 Incendiarism<br />

7 Snoozes<br />

8 Vow words<br />

9 Finished<br />

10 Express contempt<br />

11 Special date<br />

Copyright ©2009 PuzzleJunction.com<br />

12 Thin wood coat<br />

13 Pitchers<br />

18 Peruke<br />

22 Lasso<br />

23 Path<br />

24 Garden offspring<br />

25 Looking good!<br />

27 Tipster<br />

31 Goad<br />

34 Lyric poem<br />

35 Cool!<br />

37 Fixed charge<br />

40 Promised land<br />

43 Ace<br />

44 Gr. portico<br />

46 Lease<br />

47 Coastal<br />

49 Travel back and<br />

forth<br />

50 Ancient Greek<br />

city<br />

53 Gush<br />

54 Transfer paper<br />

56 Strides<br />

57 High note<br />

60 Jungle boy<br />

62 Gr. letters<br />

65 Decompose<br />

66 Fish eggs<br />

67 Time of life<br />

(Poet.)<br />

68 Cunning<br />

For results of the crossword puzzle from the last issue of <strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong>, please see page 33.<br />

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

18 thecitymag.com<br />

Solution on next page


FEATURE<br />

Captain Freddy's<br />

is the newest<br />

HOTSPOT<br />

in Bismarck-<br />

Mandan founded<br />

in 2009 by<br />

Rick White.<br />

While learning from his father, Fred White,<br />

who owned bars in Steele and Napoleon<br />

for over 30 years, Rick saw a need for a bar<br />

in Bismarck-Mandan that offers more than<br />

what was currently available and further<br />

enhances the Missouri River experience.<br />

Experience Captain Freddy’s with its pool<br />

and darts, horseshoe pits, sand volleyball<br />

court (with leagues), 6,000 square feet of<br />

outdoor deck, five 110" HD projection<br />

screens and 10 big-screen TVs (#1 location<br />

CORRAL BAR<br />

2111 E Main Ave<br />

Bismarck, ND 255.5045<br />

Come in Mondays and Sundays<br />

for Football Days when the NFL<br />

dominates our flat screens. Karaoke is still a favorite<br />

every Wednesday thru Saturday evening. Play Wii<br />

Bowling anytime—day or night.<br />

Saturday mornings the Corral Bar offers breakfast<br />

from 10 a.m. to whenever the food runs out<br />

(sausages, eggs, eggs benedict and more). Check<br />

out our Beer Pong Tournaments coming soon.<br />

2MANCAB<br />

701.425.6699<br />

2mancab@bis.midco.net<br />

After a night out on the town, be sure you make<br />

the right choice and call 2MANCAB. For only $26<br />

per ride, we will get you AND your car home<br />

safely! We operate "nightly" starting at 9 p.m.<br />

Proof of your current auto insurance is required.<br />

2MANCAB is a locally owned, affordable and<br />

accessible Designated Driver Service serving the<br />

Bismarck-Mandan area.<br />

Advance reservations are always welcome.<br />

THE WALRUS<br />

1136 N 3rd St<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

250.0020<br />

BAR GUIDE |<br />

CAPTAIN FREDDY'S<br />

2500 Pirate S Loop SE, Mandan, ND / 751.3348<br />

for watching sporting events such as NFL,<br />

UFC and Sioux Hockey), two Nintendo<br />

Wii Systems, burgers/steaks/more, and the<br />

BEST VIEW OF THE MISSOURI RIVER!<br />

Mondays: $3 Morgan, and Monday Night<br />

Football<br />

Tuesday: $2 You-Call-It on wells/domestics<br />

Jeremiah Weed Wednesdays: $3 Country<br />

Peach and Southern Style teas. Also listen to<br />

Tom O’Neil.<br />

Thursdays Ladies Night: $2 Tidal Waves; $1<br />

off wells/domestics for chicks; and $.50 off<br />

for men. Also enjoy Ben Suchy and the guys.<br />

Sundays: UFC on the screens; as well as<br />

Sunday Football with specials that include<br />

FREE chili and $2.50 taps from 12 p.m. – 6<br />

p.m.; and buy one pizza get the second one<br />

Half Off!<br />

SPACE ALIENS<br />

GRILL & BAR<br />

1304 E Century Ave.<br />

Bismarck, ND 223.2412<br />

Daily Happy Hour: Monday - Friday<br />

3:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. – Close<br />

Saturday 9:00 p.m. – Close Sunday All Day<br />

Includes tall tap beer, house wine and well drinks.<br />

Daily Drink Specials feature Lunar Island Teas,<br />

Moon Me Margaritas, Bloody Martians and other<br />

unique beverages. Monday Night Football fun with<br />

SPECIAL drink prices and FREE food Monday nights<br />

all season long. Win a Minnesota Viking weekend!<br />

Come enjoy the LARGEST BEER SELECTION<br />

in the region at The Walrus restaurant. Take the<br />

Brew Tour by choosing from 64 bottled domestics,<br />

imports and microbrews and 25 beers on tap for<br />

a truly refreshing experience. For a good time,<br />

visit The Walrus to enjoy daily drink specials like<br />

Microbrew Monday, Tapper Tuesday, Winer<br />

Wednesday, Heinie/Leinie Thursday, Canuck<br />

Friday and Sammy Saturday. Good food. Good<br />

drinks. Good times. thewalrusrestaurant.com.<br />

November 2009 19


| DINING GUIDE<br />

MR. DELICIOUS<br />

CHEESECAKE CAFE<br />

& BAKERY<br />

307 N. 3rd St.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-258-2598<br />

In the former Kathleen’s building, you will now<br />

find Mr. Delicious Cheesecake with a twist! Now<br />

serving lunch from 10am to 4pm (Mon-Sat) followed<br />

by our NEW dinner menu. Pair your meal<br />

with different wines or beers, and top it all off with<br />

our 140+ delicious cheesecake flavors! Enjoy your<br />

sweet experience inside or on our great patio seating<br />

up to 50.<br />

BRUNO'S PIZZA<br />

910 E. Front Ave.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-751-3700<br />

Bruno’s Pizza, Bismarck’s newest, family owned<br />

and operated pizza restaurant, is offering several<br />

quick ideas for lunch. Whether you want to have<br />

delivery, dine-in or carryout, Bruno’s pizza is the<br />

quick choice for lunch. We have several great pasta’s<br />

to choose from, or try our flavor of the day for<br />

pizza by the slice. Call ahead for faster service at<br />

701-751-3700.<br />

Bismarck’s Newest Hotspot<br />

Thanks to Mr. Delicious<br />

Cheesecake, on 307 N. Third St.,<br />

Bismarck is quickly becoming<br />

N.D.’s cheesecake central. With<br />

over 200 unique flavors; four certified<br />

culinary professionals on staff; and an<br />

incredible lunch and dinner menu-the<br />

restaurant is one of Bismarck’s locally<br />

owned hotspots.<br />

Mr. Delicious creates hundreds of<br />

freshly baked cheesecakes, with wild<br />

flavors ranging from pink lemonade and<br />

MYSTERIA THEATER<br />

210 West Main<br />

Mandan, ND<br />

701-663-2900<br />

By Mandy Thomas<br />

A historic Mandan location is home to Mysteria<br />

Threatre, a place with entertainment, food and fun.<br />

Great food – exciting stage entertainment – close up<br />

magic. Enjoy a romantic dinner or bring the whole<br />

family. Corporate meetings and parties are our<br />

specialty, creating special experiences for wedding<br />

receptions, birthdays and family parties. Open<br />

Wednesday through Saturday starting at 11 a.m.<br />

Check us out at www.mysteriatheater.com<br />

ROBY’S SUPPER CLUB<br />

I-94 & Exit 147<br />

Mandan, ND<br />

701-663-2288<br />

Mysteria<br />

Mysteria<br />

Theater Theater<br />

Roby’s Supper Club is fine dining at its best. Roby’s<br />

features nothing but the highest quality cuts of<br />

Certified Angus Beef, the sweetest seafood and<br />

their famous applewood-smoked, dry-rubbed loin<br />

baby back ribs. Enjoy a delicious dinner, 5 miles<br />

west of Mandan on I-94, exit 147. Open Tuesday<br />

thru Saturday, serving 4:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. with an<br />

elegant lounge open until 1a.m.<br />

20 thecitymag.com


oot beer, to seasonal favorites<br />

like pumpkin, sweet potato and<br />

candy cane.<br />

“One of our most unique<br />

flavors is the chocolate-peanut<br />

butter-bacon cheesecake,” said<br />

Aaron Bank, owner. “It sounds<br />

crazy, but the sweet and salty<br />

flavors go great together.” As for<br />

his personal number one, well,<br />

that’s interesting too.<br />

“My favorite is our strawberry<br />

with green peppercorn<br />

cheesecake,” said Bank. “It’s<br />

not spicy, and the way the two<br />

flavors go together is awesome.”<br />

Whatever the flavor, guests can<br />

buy it by the slice, or as a whole,<br />

and even request a new flavor.<br />

Mr. Delicious also creates<br />

wedding cheesecakes for those<br />

seeking a delicious touch.<br />

Wedding cheesecakes are just like<br />

PIROGUE GRILLE<br />

121 N. 4 th St.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-223-3770<br />

Downtown Bismarck has the finest for destination<br />

dining at Pirogue Grille. Make your Holiday party<br />

special by hosting it at Pirogue Grille in our private<br />

“Journey Room”. Featured in “Gourmet” with<br />

its seasonal menu and unparalleled emphasis on<br />

quality and service, Pirogue Grille provides dining<br />

experiences like no other. You need to experience it<br />

for yourself. Tuesday-Saturday at 5:00.<br />

www.piroguegrille.com<br />

PEACOCK ALLEY<br />

422 E. Main Ave.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-255-7917<br />

Absorb historic elegance at Peacock Alley as you<br />

enjoy fine cuisine. Much of the elegance and tradition<br />

of the old Patterson Hotel has been preserved,<br />

showcasing the Hotel's glory days. The majestic<br />

lobby and palatial dining room were transformed<br />

into the New Peacock Alley where you can savor<br />

our wide variety of entrees individually prepared to<br />

perfection. www.peacock-alley.com<br />

traditional wedding cakes and<br />

can be personalized with multiple<br />

flavors, colors and decorations.<br />

“If you see a photo of something<br />

you like online, we can come<br />

really close to it,” said Bank. Mr.<br />

Delicious is much more than a<br />

sweets station, however.<br />

Although he never thought<br />

he would return to N.D. after<br />

graduating from culinary school<br />

in West Palm Beach, FL., Bank<br />

brought much more to our<br />

capitol city than his skill for<br />

creating decadent desserts.<br />

“My passion is cooking, so I<br />

decided to add lunch and dinner<br />

items to our menu,” said Bank.<br />

“Our selections include a variety<br />

of unique sandwiches and wraps<br />

like our: roast beef with Brie<br />

cheese sandwich; turkey with<br />

Gouda cheese, jalapeno jelly<br />

EAST 40 CHOPHOUSE<br />

& TAVERN<br />

1401 Interchange Ave.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-258-7222<br />

and applewood-smoked bacon<br />

sandwich; Indian-style curry<br />

wrap; and Santé Fe wrap.”<br />

Mr. Delicious hosts “Sushi<br />

Night” on the third Friday and<br />

Saturday of each month. Unlike<br />

competitors serving sushi in<br />

town, Mr. Delicious offers a set<br />

dinner, which includes two pieces<br />

of nine different sushi rolls, a<br />

piece of cheesecake and two<br />

glasses of wine or beer for $35.<br />

It’s really fun because we<br />

pick what you eat,” said Bank.<br />

“I would suggest making a<br />

reservation because we fill up<br />

pretty quickly.”<br />

Mr. Delicious is open Monday<br />

through Friday from 7 a.m. to 9<br />

p.m., and on Saturday, from 11<br />

a.m. to 9 p.m.<br />

Try Bismarck’s newest<br />

hotspot!<br />

East 40 delivers big-city flavors with small-town attitude.<br />

Premium Sterling Silver Steaks, Dakota buffalo<br />

and succulent seafood straight from the coast<br />

are served in the charming surroundings of our<br />

turn-of-the-century dining rooms and Old World<br />

tavern. Don't miss Sake, Sushi and Live Music<br />

Night every Monday or Tavern Jam with live music<br />

on Thursdays. www.east40chophouse.com<br />

BISTRO “AN AMERICAN CAFé”<br />

1103 E. Front Ave.<br />

Bismarck, ND<br />

701-224-8800<br />

Want the finest N.D. Beef: Dixon Waygu Gourmet<br />

Beef? Then come to The Bistro where we have<br />

exclusive restaurant rights to serve it to you. Starting<br />

in June, listen to live music on the patio every Friday<br />

night and don't forget about Thursday night with<br />

Shawn Oban and Fresh Rolled Sushi. Check our<br />

website for the upcoming music schedule.<br />

www.bistro1100.com<br />

November 2009 21


| FEATURE<br />

Midkota Solutions:<br />

Online in a Big Way<br />

By Wes Engbrecht<br />

There are many small<br />

business success<br />

stories in the<br />

Bismarck/Mandan<br />

area, and Midkota Internet<br />

Media and Marketing Group<br />

is among them. This group<br />

of Internet partners and<br />

developers are responsible<br />

for the maintenance and<br />

marketing of several, wellknown,<br />

local websites,<br />

including bismanonline.com,<br />

kxnet.com and fishingbuddy.<br />

com. As of August 2009,<br />

Midkota is delivering over 1.6<br />

From left to right: Stephen Schnaible, Gina Sandaker,<br />

billion Internet ads per year on their websites.<br />

Eric Kubischta, Mike Haas, Wade Vogel.<br />

Bismanonline.com has become a household<br />

name among local websites. If you have something great place for outdoorsmen to share information and<br />

to sell; whether it’s real estate, a used car, a trumpet or post photos and videos of their own. If you’re looking<br />

absolutely anything else, you can post a free ad and to sell outdoor-related items, you can post a free ad in<br />

photo of the item and get it sold.<br />

the classifieds or go shopping there, as well.<br />

You can then log in and maintain or alter your ad, KXnet.com has become an integral piece of Reiten<br />

as well as see how many people have viewed it. The Television’s media presence. Midkota developed and<br />

website also allows you to upgrade your ad for a small has been operating the new website since its launch in<br />

fee to improve its position.<br />

2006.<br />

According to Eric Kubischta, executive director of “We are especially proud of the live feeds we can<br />

operations, bismanonline.com is the busiest website in get rolling on the site when something exciting happens<br />

N.D., with 18 million page views and 170,000 unique in our area,” says Kubischta. Many local residents<br />

visitors per month.<br />

watched the Memorial Bridge demolition on the KX<br />

“We estimate between $25 and $40 million in site.<br />

transactions are completed on this website each year. The average website user probably doesn’t realize<br />

It is a boost for the local economy and brings a lot of that the Midkota group, through its Web portal,<br />

buyers and sellers together,” Kubischta says.<br />

totaloutdoornetwork.com, controls a large share of the<br />

Bismanonline.com has been owned and operated online outdoor market. If you consider upcoming and<br />

by Stephen Schnaible since 2003. Kubischta joined the current expansion plans, the group will have a market<br />

company in 2006 to help maintain and program the reach which extends into eight U.S. states and two<br />

website. They now have a group of partners operating Canadian provinces.<br />

the websites and adding value through marketing and Go to totaloutdoornetwork.com and check<br />

advertising.<br />

out the other local and regional websites operated<br />

Fishingbuddy.com is another N.D. “original” by Midkota. Look for them to continue to grow and<br />

promoting fishing and hunting. The amount of outdoor provide innovative websites for us locally and around<br />

information on this website is staggering. It is also a the world!<br />

22 thecitymag.com


Last month, we traveled with this grandpato-be<br />

to a winery tasting extravaganza in<br />

Woodinville, Wash., just north of Seattle.<br />

There are about 50 wineries in this so-called<br />

“Warehouse District” of Woodinville November that feature 2009<br />

some excellent wines in the emerging Wash. wine<br />

industry. These are very<br />

small wineries with small<br />

productions. You have to<br />

purchase them online if<br />

you want to try them, but<br />

they all have websites. I<br />

pretty much always feature<br />

only locally available wines<br />

in this column, but this<br />

time, I decided to make an<br />

exception.<br />

First of all, I need to<br />

bring you all up to date.<br />

Last month, I indicated that<br />

I ventured out to Seattle<br />

to be with our daughter<br />

and son-in-law. She was<br />

in the hospital expecting<br />

twin boys who wanted to<br />

join the party a bit early. To<br />

update you, I will simply<br />

say that the “soon-to-be”<br />

part of the “soon-to-be<br />

grandpa” is history. William<br />

Daniel and Oliver Gilbert<br />

are now part of the family.<br />

What a great thrill (well,<br />

two great thrills)!<br />

This is a wine column,<br />

however, and we do have some wines to taste,<br />

so let’s go there. Last month, I took notes in the<br />

Third Thursday Warehouse Winery tour of about<br />

15 wine tasting rooms in Woodinville. One of the<br />

clear winners in the premium category was the<br />

2006 Bishop’s Blend by William Church Winery.<br />

It is what I call a “Wash. Bordeaux” blend. In<br />

WINE NOTES |<br />

Warehouse Winetasting –<br />

Part Two<br />

By Joel Gilbertson<br />

BAGA <strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> Ad<br />

Wash., they love to add some Syrah (which is from<br />

Rhone, not Bordeaux) to their blends. In addition,<br />

they added a little Sangiovese. Whatever the blend,<br />

it is delicious.<br />

Another great premium wine is Red Sky<br />

Serendipity (redskywinery.com). This is a classic<br />

Bismarck Art & Galleries Association<br />

Festival<br />

of the Arts<br />

Themed dinner with live entertainment<br />

Road<br />

to Rio<br />

Saturday, November 21, 2009<br />

Radisson Hotel, Bismarck<br />

Call BAGA for ticket information (701) 223-5986.<br />

422 East Front Avenue • www.bismarck-art.org<br />

Bordeaux blend of<br />

Cabernet Sauvignon,<br />

Merlot and Cabernet<br />

Franc. The first taste<br />

shows some subtle<br />

blackberry, and it<br />

finishes with several<br />

layers of flavor.<br />

On the white side,<br />

I really liked two<br />

wines in my tasting<br />

excursion. One was<br />

the Cowan Vineyards<br />

2008 Pinot Gris<br />

(cowanvineyards.com).<br />

It had luscious fruit<br />

throughout. I also really<br />

liked the 2007 Alma<br />

Terra Coeo Viognier<br />

(almaterrawines.<br />

com), which is a blend<br />

from three different<br />

vineyards of Viognier.<br />

It captures the best of<br />

the underappreciated<br />

Viognier grape, with<br />

deep florals in the nose<br />

and citrus and lemon<br />

zest on the finish.<br />

It will be incredibly interesting to watch the<br />

Wash. wine industry grow. I believe we will see<br />

more and more glowing reports about wines made<br />

in this great state. It also will be interesting to<br />

watch these newborn grandsons in Seattle change<br />

and grow. Here’s to life–and to you–Will and<br />

Oliver.<br />

November 2009 23


| FEATURE<br />

URL Radio<br />

Movin’ and Groovin’<br />

URL Radio is on the move. They have<br />

moved their station across town, added<br />

more programs and taken the station<br />

on the road, in more ways than one.<br />

First off, URL Radio is now located at 1315 E.<br />

Front Ave., Bismarck, next to Impressions by<br />

Ashley Lynn. The owners, Stacy Sturm and Nicole<br />

Morrison-Mathern, are very excited about the<br />

new space. “It’s so cool ‘cause we’re finally able to<br />

decorate,” said Morrison-Mathern.<br />

With their new location, Sturm and Morrison-<br />

Mathern want to thank those who have been<br />

with them from their humble beginning at the<br />

Kirkwood Mall. “We will always remember our<br />

roots and the people who believed in us from the<br />

beginning,” said Morrison-Mathern. They make<br />

sure they show it too. When they have space, Sturm<br />

and Morrison-Mathern feature extra ads for their<br />

loyal supporters.<br />

URL continues to add more programs to their<br />

line-up. Shake It Up With Lil’ Miss Molly and Nikki<br />

Martini, starring Molly Sullivan and Morrison-<br />

Mathern, aired in September. They also added a<br />

N.D. Teen Challenge show on Sunday mornings,<br />

and The Details With Anastasia on Friday nights.<br />

The Details is a music-based show featuring local<br />

and national music, along with artist interviews.<br />

By Chelsea Watterud<br />

Sturm and Morrison-Mathern have also given time<br />

to radio students at the University of Mary. The<br />

students’ shows can be heard from 4 p.m. to 8 p.m.<br />

on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays. These<br />

shows cover sports, college issues and various other<br />

topics.<br />

U Rock Lately has taken the show on the road.<br />

Every Monday, they do live lunches at various<br />

restaurants and businesses around town. So far,<br />

they’ve broadcast live from: Smoothie Operator,<br />

Erbert and Gerbert’s and Nibbles and Brunch.<br />

They also took their show live to Sturgis, where it<br />

was such a success that event promoters have been<br />

contacting URL and asking them to do live shows<br />

at their events.<br />

The station also organized its first beer run/<br />

rock/crawl on Oct. 17. It involved a run around<br />

Sertoma Park, complete with beer refills at each<br />

pit stop. The event concluded with a party at the<br />

Bismarck Elks.<br />

URL Radio is on the move, and hopes to make<br />

things more convenient for listeners who are also<br />

on the move. Anywhere with Internet access, log<br />

on to urlradio.net, and listen live or watch past<br />

broadcasts on YouTube. You never know, the music<br />

might even make you move a little too.<br />

24 thecitymag.com


YP UPDATE<br />

Choices Today–<br />

Changes Tomorrow<br />

By Britni Schwartz<br />

Close your eyes and name nine of your closest friends<br />

and family members. Go ahead, I’ll wait. Now, imagine<br />

three of those nine, and yourself, being involved in<br />

an alcohol-related crash. It may seem unlikely, but<br />

according to alcohol alert statistics, it’s not.<br />

Nationally, in 2007, 37 percent of driving fatalities were<br />

related to alcohol. Statewide, 57 percent of driving fatalities were<br />

related to alcohol during the same year.<br />

“We’ve lost 1,581 people due to alcohol related crashes on<br />

N.D. roadways from 1978 through 2008,” said Highway Patrol<br />

Lieutenant, Jody Skogen. “Over 47 percent of our total traffic<br />

fatalities during that 20 year period are alcohol-related.”<br />

From time to time, we all think we are invincible from bad<br />

things happening to us, but we aren’t–just ask Amanda Weslund.<br />

At age 16, she turned to a life of drinking and partying.<br />

“Alcohol and drugs took away my freedom,” said Weslund.<br />

“It took away my family, my trust, and in the end, it took away<br />

my son.” Weslund admits that she always drank and drove, and if<br />

someone tried to take her keys, she would fight them.<br />

“Driving drunk is a choice, and the tragedy it causes is no<br />

accident,” said Skogen. “Many of these victims were innocent<br />

motorists or pedestrians who had not consumed a drop.”<br />

Thankfully, after experiencing various treatment programs,<br />

which always lead to relapse, Amanda finally was set free. At the<br />

age of 24, she graduated from N.D. Teen Challenge, a faith-based<br />

drug and alcohol treatment program located in Mandan, N.D.<br />

Weslund encourages people to think of the long-term effects their<br />

decisions have.<br />

“My dad always said, ‘Amanda the decisions you make today<br />

will affect the next 10 years of your life,’” said Weslund.<br />

How true those words are for us all. With winter holidays<br />

approaching, the Bismarck-Mandan Young Professionals<br />

Network would like to encourage everyone to make smart<br />

choices. It only takes a second for life to change forever.<br />

If you do find yourself unable to drive one evening, our<br />

community has plenty of services that are ready and willing to<br />

help such as: Taxi 9000 (701-223-9000), Nightlife (701-222-0202)<br />

or 2MANCAB (701-425-6699.)<br />

For more information, contact the YP Network at 701.223.5660 or<br />

info@ypnetwork.org.<br />

November 2009 25


| PET PAGE<br />

Local Animal Shelters<br />

CENTRAL DAKOTA HUMANE SOCIETY<br />

701.667.2020 • cdhs.net<br />

The Central Dakota Humane Society is a nokill<br />

shelter that does not receive any federal,<br />

state or local funding, and relies completely on<br />

its members and fundraisers to raise enough<br />

money to care for the animals.<br />

Take Photos with Santa and Support CDHS!<br />

The Annual Santa Paws event is on Saturday<br />

and Sunday, Nov. 14 and 15, from noon to<br />

5:00 p.m. at Plant Perfect, 4615 Ottawa St., N.<br />

Bismarck, just off Highway 83.<br />

BISMARCK-MANDAN ANIMAL IMPOUND<br />

701.223.1212 • bismarck.org<br />

Animal Control wishes to thank all those who<br />

have taken on the loving challenge of adopting<br />

a pet from us. We also wish to extend our<br />

appreciation for those responsible owners who:<br />

call the police as soon as their pet is missing;<br />

have their pet’s license on them; spay and neuter<br />

their pets!<br />

Keep checking back for the most current<br />

residents needing homes!<br />

Visit bismarck.org - police department -<br />

divisions - impounded animals<br />

OREO’S ANIMAL RESCUE<br />

701.483.0240 • lovingpetsinneed.com<br />

We are an adoption guarantee organization.<br />

What this means is no animal in our control is<br />

ever euthanized unless they are suffering or<br />

considered dangerous. We embrace animals<br />

with special needs and those that require extra<br />

training and love. We do not believe in the<br />

process of destroying animals to control pet<br />

over population. We believe in a strict spay and<br />

neuter policy to control pet population.<br />

12/5/2009 - Santa Pet Pictures<br />

My Name is Inga<br />

Adopt me<br />

My Name is Tiffy<br />

Inga is a spayed German<br />

Shepherd, date of birth,<br />

August 2001.<br />

“I’m a shy girl in need of a<br />

loving human friend. I’ve had<br />

some tough times in the past,<br />

but I’m very hopeful for the<br />

future. I just know there is<br />

a special someone out there<br />

who can offer me a caring,<br />

affectionate home.”<br />

This little, female Chihuahua<br />

mix is tan in color and is a<br />

younger dog.<br />

Tiffy is a young, German<br />

Shepherd mix. She is shy when<br />

she first meets new people,<br />

but it doesn't take her long<br />

to warm up. She is truly<br />

a happy and playful girl<br />

once she is comfortable.<br />

She enjoys playing with<br />

other dogs and is good<br />

around cats.<br />

26 thecitymag.com


WE Drive |<br />

Modern Day Hot Rodders–<br />

The “Tuners”<br />

By Mike LaLonde<br />

Photo by Mike LaLonde<br />

A<br />

common question among vehicle enthusiasts today is,<br />

“What will future motor hobbyists have to do to modify<br />

modern, complex vehicles?” Fear not, the hobby is alive<br />

with the current generation of car crazy, young drivers.<br />

Take Walt Regan and Travis Rohrich, local, 22-year-olds<br />

involved with tuning high performance vehicles since their early<br />

teens. “My first car was a ’95 Bonneville, which got me interested<br />

in the car hobby,” says Regan. “It wasn’t a high performance car,<br />

but it reminded me of my dads ’69 Bonneville convertible. That’s<br />

when it all started.” He continues, “The movie Fast and Furious<br />

kindled an interest too, and I took auto tech courses at Mandan<br />

High.”<br />

Regan has owned 13 vehicles, most given his special<br />

treatment of motor mods, along with suspension and exhaust<br />

tuning. Regan recently sold his ’92 Honda Civic, with an Acura<br />

motor, that peaked around 500-horsepower, up from the stock<br />

180-horsepower.<br />

“It got close to 30 mpg!” said Regan. “I totally went through the<br />

motor, beefed it up and worked with the ECU (Electronics Control<br />

Unit) to modify engine timing, fuel and air ratios. The final touch<br />

was turbocharging. We also use E-85 fuel, with its higher octane<br />

rating, as the fuel of choice.”<br />

Regan is just finishing BSC’s Power Plant Technology program,<br />

and has plans for his next vehicle. “My daily driver is a Dodge<br />

Neon, but my dream machine is a Cadillac CTSV with the GM<br />

LS3 motor, which is also used in the Corvette.” Regan is currently<br />

November 2009 continued on page 29<br />

27


green tip<br />

Did you know that the Minnesota Vikings<br />

are encouraging businesses and households<br />

to become more energy efficient?<br />

The Vikings are offsetting the electricity used at the<br />

Metrodome by purchasing renewable energy as part of Exel<br />

Energy’s Windsource © program. Wind power is the least<br />

expensive of all forms of alternative energy. It’s also a clean<br />

source of energy that won’t deplete our natural resources.<br />

To learn more about alternative energy visit www.epa.gov.<br />

28 thecitymag.com


continued from page 27<br />

employed as a lube tech at Schwan GMC-Buick-<br />

Cadillac, and sees these cars firsthand.<br />

Travis Rohrich, owner of the 400-horsepower,<br />

2001 Honda Prelude pictured here, has given his<br />

ride similar treatment, including turbocharging,<br />

suspension, exhaust and some beautiful body work.<br />

“This Prelude is my first car,” says Rohrich. “It was<br />

about a year and a half old when I got it.”<br />

Travis is also in the vehicle business, working<br />

as a paint technician at Ressler Chevrolet-Subaru<br />

in Mandan. After spending some time with Regan<br />

and Rohrich, I am confident that the car hobby will<br />

continue, if these skilled and enthused motorheads<br />

are any indication.<br />

As Regan puts it, “Tuning still consists of the<br />

basics: spark, fuel and compression. We work with<br />

diagnostic procedures to re-program the computers<br />

to handle the modifications.”<br />

So today, the technology is advanced, but the<br />

desire to improve and modify is in the hearts of<br />

enthusiasts, just as it always has been since the<br />

invention of the automobile.<br />

Mike LaLonde is a local writer and photographer and is<br />

genuinely car (and bike) crazy!<br />

November 2009 29


| HOME SWEET HOME<br />

A Great Reason to Buy<br />

By Wes Engbrecht<br />

There are a lot of reasons to buy your first<br />

home. Most of those reasons are very<br />

personal to your financial situation. This<br />

year, the federal government added 8,000 good<br />

reasons to buy that first home–and people took<br />

advantage of it.<br />

The First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit is a<br />

credit equal to 10 percent of the purchase price of<br />

your home, not to exceed $8,000. If you haven’t<br />

owned a home in the previous three years, you<br />

would qualify as a first-time home buyer for<br />

purposes of the credit. Your income must be below<br />

30 thecitymag.com


$150,000 for married couples, and $75,000 for a<br />

single taxpayer, in order to take full benefit of the<br />

credit. The tax credit is only available until Dec. 1,<br />

2009 unless the government decides to extend the<br />

program.<br />

According to David Weikum, of<br />

eLendingNow, Bismarck, local home buyers have<br />

been taking advantage of this new program. “A lot<br />

of buyers are mentioning that they are aware of<br />

the tax credit, and some have definitely purchased<br />

their home this year just because of the $8,000<br />

bump they will get at tax time,” Weikum says.<br />

According to Weikum, they have originated<br />

about 75 more first-time home buyer mortgages<br />

this year than during the same time last year. He<br />

added, “With all of the first-time home buyer<br />

advantages, it’s possible to close on a home with<br />

only $500 to $1,000 in cash.” The result is, more<br />

starter homes are being purchased in the area,<br />

which keeps the overall housing market more<br />

stable.<br />

The North Dakota Housing Finance Agency<br />

(NDHFA) originates the first-time home buyer<br />

loans in the state. NDHFA had reservations for<br />

almost 1,100 loans between May and September<br />

of this year. This compares to around 750 to 850<br />

loans during those same months in previous<br />

years. Homeownership Division Director, Dave<br />

Flohr, says, “In spite of the banking and credit<br />

crunch, we saw an increase in reservation for<br />

first-time home buyer loans. Most of this was<br />

attributable to the tax credit.”<br />

Note: Because of the time it takes to originate<br />

a loan, the current tax credit will most likely<br />

expire before any new loans can be completed.<br />

At this time, the government is considering a sixmonth<br />

extension of the program.<br />

To learn more about the benefits available to<br />

first time home buyers, and to see if you qualify<br />

for these benefits, visit the NDHFA’s website at<br />

www.ndhfa.org. To contact Dave Weikum at<br />

eLendingNow, visit their website<br />

www.elendingnow.com.<br />

November 2009 31


| HEALTH<br />

When a Heart Attack Strikes<br />

The Difference Between Life and Death<br />

So you think you are having a heart attack.<br />

What should you do?<br />

Call 911, drive yourself to the hospital,<br />

or have a friend or family member take you<br />

there?<br />

The latest research shows, 911 is the best call to<br />

make when a heart attack strikes.<br />

It could mean the difference between life and<br />

death.<br />

Victims treated by paramedics obtain life-saving<br />

treatment faster than hospital walk-ins.<br />

By Health Specialist Marilyn Mitzel<br />

That is the conclusion of Dr. Ivan Rokas, a<br />

UCLA emergency medicine physician who<br />

reviewed data from hospitals and counties around<br />

the nation.<br />

“Even a 15 minute delay in treating a heart<br />

attack increases the risk of death, and causes more<br />

damage to the heart,” says Dr. Rokas.<br />

Paramedics can more quickly diagnose serious<br />

heart attacks and call ahead to hospitals, telling<br />

them what procedure is likely needed even before<br />

they arrive.<br />

32 thecitymag.com


B E R M C A S H S P A<br />

I D E A L O T T O C L I P<br />

T I L D E R E E D L I N E<br />

T Y C O O N A S P E C T S<br />

A N I M A L A R K S<br />

R A S P L E D E R G<br />

O U T W A D G E Y S E R<br />

I R E R E L C O D O R E<br />

L A W F U L R A T L I D<br />

I L L O R R I D E S<br />

M I N E M Y R I A D<br />

M I N E R V A I P E C A C<br />

A X E S A R I A R A L L Y<br />

K E P T S I N G O R E A D<br />

O R T E A S E D E N S<br />

Answers for the October 2009 crossword puzzle.<br />

Since many<br />

hospitals are<br />

not staffed to<br />

immediately<br />

perform<br />

some heart<br />

procedures,<br />

calling ahead<br />

allows them to<br />

set up as fast as<br />

possible, sharply<br />

reducing the<br />

time it takes<br />

for patients to<br />

receive lifesaving<br />

treatment.<br />

According<br />

to data from<br />

the American<br />

College of<br />

Cardiology, 90<br />

percent of heart<br />

attack patients<br />

who call 911<br />

have necessary<br />

procedures<br />

performed<br />

within 90<br />

minutes of<br />

arriving at the<br />

hospital.<br />

Treating 75 percent of severe heart attack victims within<br />

90 minutes, is a key in preventing irreversible damage. Rapid<br />

treatment also leads to faster patient recovery. Many of those<br />

patients go home within three to five days, rather than seven to ten<br />

days.<br />

Unfortunately, only about half of all heart attack victims arrive<br />

at hospitals by ambulance. The rest drive themselves or have<br />

someone take them, wasting precious seconds.<br />

Experts say, the largest hurdle is educating the public to<br />

call 911 when a heart attack is suspected. Dr. Rokas believes<br />

when everyone finally gets that, it will save thousands of lives,<br />

significantly dropping mortality rates. His final word, "The<br />

paramedics can provide you with one-on-one concierge service."<br />

But, there is one more thing you should do even before dialing<br />

911.<br />

Take one or two aspirin. It will start working its magic even<br />

before the medics arrive. The same advice applies for people who<br />

think they are having a stroke.<br />

Take an aspirin immediately and then call 911; in that order.<br />

Even if you are not sure if you are having a heart attack or stroke;<br />

do it any way. Chances are, it won’t hurt and might just help.<br />

Better safe then sorry.<br />

November 2009 33


| BRIGHT IDEAS<br />

Turning the Lights on Agriculture<br />

Have you ever wondered why the lights in the<br />

hotel bathroom make you look pale? Or why<br />

things start to change color under different<br />

lighting? John Curcio knows the answers.<br />

Curcio specializes in lighting design, and has<br />

used his talents in the entertainment and architecture<br />

industries for the last 25 years. He is now using his<br />

knowledge to help an industry close to the heart of<br />

North Dakotans, agriculture.<br />

Curcio’s plan is to develop lighting for night<br />

harvesting, and eventually, for petroleum plants, oil<br />

rigs and coal mines. According to his surveys, no<br />

other companies are currently designing lighting for<br />

agricultural markets specifically.<br />

Curcio’s lighting promises to be safer and more<br />

energy efficient. “I could reduce about 40 percent<br />

of the electricity currently being used,” Curcio said.<br />

The lighting would also be pleasing to the eye, and<br />

unaffected by weather or shock. LED technology is<br />

being applied in new and different ways to make these<br />

improvements possible.<br />

By Chelsea Watterud<br />

Curcio wants to develop new technology and<br />

revise older methods, that won’t even require live<br />

electricity. Many of his products are self-sufficient,<br />

solar-powered and maintenance free. Curcio describes<br />

this technology in terms of streetlights. If his lights<br />

were used in Bismarck streetlights, they would run for<br />

20 years before needing replacement or maintenance.<br />

“The average light runs for 8,000 to 20,000 hours,”<br />

said Curcio. “These new lights could run for 130,000<br />

hours. The idea is to improve lighting for productivity,<br />

efficiency and safety.”<br />

For many, this product seems too good to be true.<br />

The initial start-up costs are more expensive than<br />

traditional lighting but, Curcio promises his lights will<br />

pay for themselves within three to five years.<br />

Curcio overall goals are: to be successful in<br />

Bismarck; improve efficiency in the agriculture and<br />

petroleum work environments; and decrease power<br />

use.<br />

This promising innovation is in the works at the<br />

IDEA Center in Bismarck. Watch for the culmination<br />

of this truly “bright” idea.<br />

34 thecitymag.com


CITY WORKS |<br />

Reducing Winter Injury<br />

to Evergreens<br />

By Jackson Bird, <strong>City</strong> Forester of Bismarck<br />

Winter sun, wind and cold temperatures can<br />

desiccate (also known as winter injury)<br />

evergreen foliage. In the spring, many<br />

evergreens exhibit brown needles. In extreme<br />

cases, whole evergreen branches will appear brown or dead.<br />

This damage usually appears on the side of the prevailing<br />

winds, or a source of reflective heat, such as a brick wall<br />

or street. In N.D., this damage is usually on the north or<br />

northwest side of the tree or shrub.<br />

During the winter months, the roots of the evergreen are<br />

not able to absorb water from the frozen ground. Needles on<br />

evergreens continue to lose moisture throughout the winter.<br />

When dry, cold winter winds blow over these needles, it<br />

increases the amount of moisture that is lost. Insufficient root<br />

systems, root injury and soil conditions contribute to this<br />

injury.<br />

There are several things the home owner can do to minimize<br />

winter injury to evergreens. The best thing home owners<br />

can do is keep the soil adequately moist during dry seasons<br />

and into the fall, right up to the time the ground starts to<br />

freeze. Relying on a lawn irrigation system to water your trees<br />

and shrubs is not enough; deep watering to a depth of 18 to<br />

24 inches is best. Ease up on the watering in September to<br />

encourage the plant to prepare for winter. In October, deepwater<br />

trees and shrubs until the ground freezes.<br />

Another thing the home owner can do to help their trees and<br />

shrubs is to add a layer of mulch in the fall. Apply a 3 to 6 foot<br />

diameter ring of mulch around the trees and shrubs. Apply 3<br />

to 4 inches of mulch, but keep it 3 to 4 inches from the trunk of<br />

the plant. This mulch layer will help conserve soil moisture and<br />

help moderate soil temperature around the tree.<br />

Many ask about using anti-desiccants to help with<br />

evergreens. Unfortunately, the current research indicates this is<br />

ineffective in our N.D. climate. They need to be applied when<br />

the temperature is above freezing. The winter winds wear off<br />

this product within a month, so you need to reapply a month<br />

or so later, but by then, it is too cold to apply the product.<br />

With a bit of preparation for winter, you can insure healthy<br />

evergreens year round.<br />

November 2009 35


| FEATURE<br />

Merit Pay Meets Roadblocks:<br />

Teachers Voice Concerns<br />

When it comes to merit pay for<br />

teachers, most teachers are skeptical<br />

about the concept for several reasons.<br />

Who will determine who gets merit pay?<br />

Will it be demoralizing to teachers who don’t get it?<br />

Will it be determined by test scores?<br />

Will politics enter in to the decisions?<br />

These are the central questions on teacher’s<br />

minds, and when asked to come up with the perfect<br />

merit pay plan, most just shrug their shoulders.<br />

One teacher, who prefers to remain anonymous,<br />

said he favors merit pay, but can’t trust the people<br />

who will make the decision. “Bill” said, “It can’t be<br />

based on test scores because there are too many<br />

variables among classes.” He adds that, if it were<br />

based on test scores, he would never teach another<br />

low-level class because these students don’t care<br />

about grades (for the most part).<br />

The tests in question are the result of the<br />

national No Child Left Behind (NCLB) program<br />

that requires a comprehensive statewide test each<br />

fall for students at each grade level. Schools with<br />

By Jan Schultz<br />

students deemed “not proficient” are subject to<br />

special programs to enhance and enrich teaching<br />

and bring students up to the required proficiency.<br />

Sonja Mahlum, third-grade teacher at Miller<br />

Elementary, agrees that merit pay shouldn’t be<br />

based on test scores. Her reasons also include the<br />

variability of students and classes. “Consider special<br />

needs classes,” she said. “While testing is adjusted for<br />

these levels, there is still too much of a discrepancy<br />

between regular and special needs classes.”<br />

Then there is the home environment aspect.<br />

“Students come from all manners of home<br />

environments and may not get support from their<br />

parents,” said Mahlum. Some students may also<br />

just be learning English. She said, “Foreign students<br />

entering Bismarck schools have just one year to<br />

learn the language before taking the test.”<br />

Mahlum’s school, Miller Elementary, was one of<br />

the schools that failed to reach NCLB requirements.<br />

“Next year we’ll be initiating a before and afterschool<br />

program that helps students prepare for the<br />

test,” said Mahlum. “I fear, though, that it may just<br />

be glorified babysitting if students are too tired from<br />

a long day in school.”<br />

The discussion continues in the next issue.<br />

36 thecitymag.com


WEDDING GUIDE |<br />

November 2009 37


Young Entrepreneur<br />

Success Story<br />

Award<br />

Leah Walker<br />

Bismancoupons.com<br />

Bismarck, N.D.<br />

By <strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> Staff<br />

Young Entrepreneur Success Story<br />

RECOGNIZING ENTREPRENEURS UNDER 30 WHO ARE CULTIVATING<br />

THE SPIRIT OF INNOVATION IN N.D.<br />

Bismancoupons.com is a company<br />

that, according to owner Leah Walker, is<br />

about to revolutionize the way we shop<br />

and clip coupons. An environmentally<br />

friendly, efficient and no-hassle way to link<br />

businesses with new and old customers,<br />

the site allows users to search and<br />

print coupons by category including:<br />

restaurants, bakeries, gas, automotive,<br />

health and beauty, fitness, lodging,<br />

hobbies, party supplies, dry cleaning<br />

and agriculture. Efficiency matters to the<br />

26-year-old entrepreneur and mother of<br />

two whose typical day includes making<br />

dozens of sales calls, doing laundry,<br />

making lunch, proofing coupons and<br />

changing diapers.<br />

“Go green and save green”<br />

Leah Walker, owner of Bismancoupons.com.<br />

worked as a sales representative. Working<br />

for others, I had no control of the product<br />

I sold or what percentage of the sales I<br />

received. Bismancoupons.com allows me<br />

to be in complete control of my business<br />

while doing the things I love–working with<br />

people and sales.<br />

Tell us about yourself. I’m a wife and<br />

mother of two small children (2 ½-yearold<br />

daughter and 9-month-old son).<br />

Family is the most important thing to me.<br />

Bismancoupons.com allows me to put<br />

my family first while having the freedom to<br />

control my family’s financial destiny.<br />

Tell us what your company does.<br />

Bismancoupons.com assists advertisers in<br />

Tell us when and why you began your putting their coupons and daily specials in<br />

company. I graduated from Minot State the hands of new and existing customers.<br />

University in 2005 with a bachelor’s degree Bismancoupons.com puts coupon clippers<br />

in marketing and management. Coupling on the cutting edge. Consumers benefit<br />

my love of people and sales together, I by having more than 50 local businesses’<br />

38 thecitymag.com


printable coupons in one location. Users<br />

will find that it takes less energy than ever<br />

to save money.<br />

How has being a mom impacted your<br />

decision to be an entrepreneur?<br />

Being a mom and entrepreneur is just a<br />

part of who God made me. It’s only natural<br />

that both abilities express themselves.<br />

What is it about your business that<br />

you are most proud of? I am proud of<br />

the fact that I had the guts to leave my<br />

conventional job and walk towards my<br />

dreams.<br />

Did you have any early doubts that<br />

might have stopped you? Show me an<br />

entrepreneur that doesn’t have fears and<br />

doubts! They don’t exist. It’s called faith. I<br />

just keep looking forward and walk in the<br />

faith that God will help me overcome any<br />

obstacle put in my path.<br />

What do you think is the key to your<br />

success? Clearly keeping in mind my<br />

priorities: my faith in God, my family and<br />

my business.<br />

About the Y.E.S.S. Awards<br />

<strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> and Dickinson State<br />

University’s Strom Center for Entrepreneurship<br />

and Innovation’s Young Entrepreneur<br />

Success Story (Y.E.S.S.) Award winner will be<br />

announced each issue.<br />

We will profile individuals who personify the<br />

entrepreneurial spirit of our state and offer<br />

advice to others facing similar challenges as<br />

our featured entrepreneur. Experts tell us there<br />

is a strong correlation between innovation,<br />

entrepreneurial activity and a region’s<br />

economic vitality.<br />

Creative young adults are key to N.D.'s<br />

economic future. If you know of an<br />

entrepreneur under 30 who is making a<br />

difference, we invite your nominations.<br />

E-mail us at <strong>City</strong> <strong>Magazine</strong> (thecitymagazine<br />

@unitedprinting.com), or call us at<br />

701-223-0505.<br />

Our Advice:<br />

Dr. Knude Swensen, professor of Marketing<br />

at Dickinson State University, noted that the<br />

fastest growing area of advertising today is<br />

Internet advertising. “Some companies are<br />

making millions of dollars a year and even<br />

millions a day by advertising online,” said<br />

Swensen. “The number of hits justifies the<br />

cost. Any business, anywhere, that wants<br />

its product known should seriously consider<br />

using the Internet aggressively at this point<br />

in the game. Eventually, there will be a<br />

saturation point. The first companies in will<br />

have an advantage, and now is the time to<br />

get in.”<br />

November 2009 39


| SPORTS WATCH<br />

Sunday, November 1:<br />

Men’s College Soccer – Upper Iowa vs. U-Mary, 11 a.m.<br />

Women’s College Soccer – Upper Iowa vs. U-Mary,<br />

1 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, November 3:<br />

Girls High School Volleyball – Jamestown at BHS, 7:30<br />

p.m.; St. Mary’s at CHS, 7:30 p.m.; Mandan at<br />

Dickinson, 8 p.m.<br />

Thursday, November 5:<br />

Girls High School Volleyball – CHS at Dickinson,<br />

8 p.m.<br />

Friday, November 6:<br />

Women’s College Basketball – MSU-Northern at DSU,<br />

6 p.m. (MT)<br />

Men’s College Basketball – MSU-Northern at DSU,<br />

7 p.m. (MT)<br />

Saturday, November 7:<br />

Men’s College Basketball – Great Falls at DSU, 7 p.m.<br />

(MT)<br />

Women’s College Basketball – Wisconsin–Superior at<br />

(Central Time unless otherwise noted)<br />

U-Mary, 1 p.m.; Great Falls at DSU, 5 p.m. (MT)<br />

Thursday, November 12:<br />

Girls High School Volleyball – West Region, Dickinson<br />

Friday, November 13:<br />

Women’s College Volleyball – SW Minnesota State at<br />

U-Mary, 7 p.m.<br />

Girls High School Volleyball – West Region, Dickinson<br />

Saturday, November 14:<br />

Women’s College Volleyball – Minnesota–Mankato at<br />

U-Mary, 4 p.m.<br />

Girls High School Volleyball – West Region, Dickinson<br />

Wednesday, November 18:<br />

Men’s College Basketball – Trinity at U-Mary, 7 p.m.<br />

Friday, November 20:<br />

Men’s College Basketball – Warren Arman Classic, BSC<br />

Women’s College Basketball – Lane Johnson Classic,<br />

BSC<br />

Saturday, November 21:<br />

Men’s College Basketball – Warren Arman Classic, BSC<br />

Women’s College Basketball – Lane Johnson Classic, BSC<br />

WANT TO KNOW WHAT’S<br />

HAPPENING IN THE ACTION-PACKED<br />

WORLD OF SPORTS?<br />

40 thecitymag.com


Tuesday, November 24:<br />

Girls High School Hockey – Bismarck Blizzards at<br />

Mandan, 7 p.m.<br />

Boys High School Wrestling – Mandan Dual, 7 p.m.<br />

Thursday, November 26:<br />

Bobcats Hockey – Alexandria Blizzard vs. Bismarck<br />

Bobcats, VFW, 7:15 p.m.<br />

Friday, November 27:<br />

Men’s & Women’s College Basketball – BSC Alumni Game<br />

Women’s College Basketball – Milonovich Tournament,<br />

Dickinson<br />

Boys High School Hockey – Williston at Mandan, 7:30 p.m.<br />

Saturday, November 28:<br />

Wizards Basketball – Maine Red Claws vs. Dakota<br />

Wizards, Civic Center, 7 p.m.<br />

Sunday, November 29:<br />

Wizards Basketball – Sioux Falls SkyForce vs. Dakota<br />

Wizards, Civic Center, 3 p.m.<br />

Girls High School Hockey – Bismarck Blizzards vs.<br />

Williston, VFW, 2 p.m.<br />

Tune in to KFYR 550AM and<br />

ESPN Radio 710AM for play-by-play<br />

action and updates. Just remember....<br />

don’t throw the radio!<br />

Take a step to become<br />

Miss North Dakota<br />

at the<br />

Bismarck<br />

Preliminary Pageant<br />

an official<br />

preliminary to<br />

Miss North Dakota &<br />

Katie Ralston<br />

Miss North Dakota<br />

2010<br />

missnorthdakota.org<br />

November 2009 41


| TRAVEL<br />

Soar to Salt Lake<br />

By Katherine Satrom<br />

Powder skiing at Snowbird Resort, Utah (courtesy of Salt Lake CVB)<br />

With the advent of Delta Airline’s<br />

direct flight from Bismarck to<br />

Salt Lake <strong>City</strong>, area residents can<br />

take advantage of a long weekend<br />

in a fascinating region. Salt Lake <strong>City</strong> has a<br />

unique atmosphere with historic buildings,<br />

museums, world-class restaurants and plenty<br />

of recreational activities at nearby mountain<br />

resorts.<br />

Ski Country<br />

As winter approaches, travelers can fly to skicountry<br />

as part of Delta’s direct flight in about<br />

1.5 hours. The Salt Lake <strong>City</strong> area boasts several,<br />

well-known ski resorts including: three at Park<br />

<strong>City</strong>; and one in Snowbird, Alta and Solitude.<br />

The Mormon Influence<br />

Salt Lake <strong>City</strong> reflects the heritage and<br />

presence of the Mormon Church. Temple<br />

Square features buildings and films reflecting<br />

Mormon history. Visitors can also hear the<br />

Mormon Tabernacle Choir and Orchestra on<br />

Sunday mornings when they tape their weekly<br />

television broadcast.<br />

People from diverse backgrounds can even<br />

research their heritage at the Family History<br />

Library, the largest depository of genealogical<br />

records in the world.<br />

Culture<br />

Salt Lake <strong>City</strong> has art, history and science<br />

museums like the: Draper Historical Society<br />

and Museum, The Salt Lake <strong>City</strong> Art Center and<br />

The Women’s Art Center. The city is also home<br />

to professional basketball team, Utah Jazz, and<br />

offers live jazz entertainment at Zanzibar.<br />

Great Accommodations<br />

For the 2002 Winter Olympics, Salt Lake <strong>City</strong><br />

built a spectacular hotel, The Grand America.<br />

This elegant, 24-story property has a white,<br />

granite exterior and balconies adorned with<br />

iron railings, not to mention rooms with a<br />

magnificent view of the mountains.<br />

The ambience of the Grand America is of<br />

lavish and comfortable, classic styling. In a<br />

beautiful lobby with a soaring ceiling, afternoon<br />

tea is served daily with background music by<br />

a harpist or pianist. Jazz is on tap Friday and<br />

Saturday evenings.<br />

The Hotel’s public rooms display Murano<br />

chandeliers, English, wool carpets, Richelieu<br />

furnishings and oak paneling. The Garden<br />

Restaurant is a beautiful venue with huge fresh<br />

flower arrangements and a view to the gardens<br />

outside. An attractive pool and a fine spa are<br />

also available.<br />

A great alternative to The Grand America<br />

Hotel is the Hotel Monaco. It features crisp,<br />

contemporary surroundings in a historic bank<br />

building. On the ground floor, you’ll find a<br />

fine restaurant called Bambara. The cuisine and<br />

service are superb. If you go there, try their<br />

roasted corn bisque with crab or one of their<br />

signature fish, pork and beef entrees.<br />

A direct flight from Bismarck to Salt Lake<br />

<strong>City</strong> is just under $300 (as of October 2009).<br />

Take advantage of this convenient air service to<br />

visit a delightful area.<br />

42 thecitymag.com


Last month, I gave a brief description<br />

of domestic violence. Whether it is<br />

overlooked, excused, denied or a<br />

complacent attitude, many believe domestic<br />

abuse and sexual violence are concerns meant<br />

only for law enforcement<br />

and its victims. Law<br />

enforcement will do its<br />

part to continue their<br />

fight against domestic<br />

abuse, however, the<br />

community as a whole<br />

must bring light into the<br />

darkness of domestic<br />

violence.<br />

Community members<br />

must recognize that the<br />

safety of victims and<br />

the accountability of<br />

perpetrators rests on<br />

the shoulders of each<br />

and every one of us. That’s why the community<br />

group, People United for Living in Safe<br />

Environments was created. Because prevention<br />

is vital to stopping violence, PULSE aims to stop<br />

domestic and sexual violence before it occurs.<br />

Through the use of public education,<br />

community support, community involvement<br />

and intervention, PULSE strives to change<br />

social norms and misconceptions of domestic<br />

abuse and violent behavior. It is a task force of<br />

members from the community who share the<br />

belief that domestic abuse and sexual violence<br />

can be eradicated when society as a whole<br />

confronts the issue.<br />

Whether one is a teacher, law enforcement<br />

officer, construction worker, member of the<br />

By Mike Wetsch<br />

SAFETY TIP |<br />

clergy, coach or homemaker, PULSE believes that<br />

all have vital abilities and ideas that are pertinent<br />

in the struggle against domestic violence. When<br />

a group of diverse people comes together,<br />

there is greater opportunity for the creation<br />

and development of<br />

numerous ideas that<br />

add to the probability<br />

of success.<br />

Even though the<br />

program is facilitated<br />

by the Abused Adult<br />

Resource Center, the<br />

ownership, success and<br />

courses of action rests<br />

upon the members of<br />

PULSE.<br />

Because we all share<br />

the responsibility<br />

of making our<br />

communities safe,<br />

members of our community are invited and<br />

encouraged to become members of PULSE.<br />

Those wishing to become a PULSE member or<br />

receive more information are encouraged to<br />

contact the Abused Adult Resource Center at<br />

(701) 222-8370.<br />

Mike Wetsch is a deputy with the Burleigh County<br />

Sheriff's Department and is assigned to the patrol<br />

division. He is also a criminal justice instructor at<br />

Rasmussen College.<br />

Safety Tip is sponsored by:<br />

November 2009 43


| HISTORY<br />

mandan levee–GOOd fOr<br />

nearly 60 years<br />

For nearly 70 years, since Mandan’s<br />

incorporation in 1881, the Heart River,<br />

snaking through the city’s south side,<br />

flooded Mandan more than two dozen<br />

times.<br />

The biggest floods came in 1910, 1937 and<br />

1943, according to the United States Army Corps<br />

of Engineers. However, with flood control projects<br />

in the 1950s (the Heart Butte Dam on the Heart<br />

River and the Garrison Dam on the Missouri<br />

River), overflows into Mandan became more of a<br />

historical footnote.<br />

Today, Mandan residents know that although<br />

the Heart River continues to flood – that is,<br />

overflow its banks – they are safeguarded by<br />

the old installation and construction of a near,<br />

12-mile-long earthen levee. Estimated then to cost<br />

$246,000, the levee, authorized by Congress in<br />

1946, was designed to protect nearly 1,000 acres<br />

within the city and about 120 acres of what was<br />

then known as the N.D. State Training School.<br />

According to the Mandan Daily Pioneer,<br />

Construction began in June 1949, raising and<br />

widening 17,000 feet of levee and 350 feet of<br />

railroad embankment used as a levee, and<br />

raising the grade of U.S. Highway 10, protecting<br />

the Training School (now the N.D. Youth<br />

Correctional Center). The new levee also was<br />

shifted 50 to 60 feet back from the Heart’s banks.<br />

A previous floodwall had protected Mandan,<br />

but not nearly as well. “The floodwall was<br />

originally only eight-feet-high, and generally<br />

failed to hold the rampaging Heart from<br />

By Stan Stelter<br />

200 3rd Ave. NW Caption: Canoeing near<br />

downtown Mandan in the flood of 1943. Residential Street Caption: Canoeing in<br />

the flood of 1943, Mandan.<br />

Heart River Bridge Caption: The Heart River<br />

Bridge in the flood of 1943.<br />

Credit: Grace Gould Imhoff Collection –<br />

Mandan Historical Society<br />

overrunning the Syndicate and Dogtown sections<br />

(old names for southern city parts) of Mandan in<br />

floodtime,” noted the Fargo Forum in a 1949 story<br />

about the new levee’s construction. The Fargo<br />

contractor was elevating the levee to 15 feet, the<br />

Forum reported.<br />

On Aug. 1, 1950, the Pioneer headlined the<br />

project’s completion, “Final Work On Mandan<br />

Levee Finished – Army Engineers Give It O.K.”<br />

Since then, there have been upgrades and changes<br />

to the levee system, including raising the levee’s<br />

main and southern units to allow three feet of<br />

“freeboard,” and even “ice-affected” flooding.<br />

This spring, serious flooding eroded the<br />

Heart’s banks at two or three spots in Mandan<br />

requiring repair, but those damages don’t threaten<br />

the levee itself, according to Shannon Jeffers of<br />

the Corps office at Riverdale. Jeffers’ job includes<br />

inspection of Mandan’s levee system, while<br />

operation and maintenance responsibility lies with<br />

the Lower Heart River Water Resources District of<br />

Morton County.<br />

According to the United States Army Corps of<br />

Engineers, the levee system and Heart Butte Dam<br />

provides “adequate flood protection for the city”<br />

assuming the free flow of ice and flood waters at<br />

the city’s southeast edge.<br />

For nearly 60 years, it has done just that.<br />

Stan Stelter, development director at the Abused<br />

Adult Resource Center, is a native North Dakotan<br />

and free-lance writer.<br />

44 thecitymag.com


Unlocking Opportunities:<br />

This year, the Southwest Area Human<br />

Resource Association (SAHRA),<br />

of the Society for Human Resource<br />

Management, celebrates its 10th<br />

Anniversary.<br />

SAHRA is an inspiring group of over 65<br />

committed members representing over 40<br />

employers that continuously share ideas in a<br />

relaxed and informal atmosphere. The group<br />

meets once a month in Dickinson, N.D. and shares<br />

knowledge from the human resources field.<br />

As Jeanne MacDonald, president elect, states,<br />

“SAHRA provides local human resource<br />

professionals with a monthly opportunity to share<br />

lunch, network and stay up-to-date on current state<br />

and federal regulations.”<br />

According to membership director Melissa<br />

Stoltz, “SAHRA provides a great opportunity<br />

for members to network and gain the latest<br />

By Deanna Voutsas<br />

information on new legislation, policies and overall<br />

matters that may be facing their company.”<br />

Similarly, Gail Ebeltoft, SAHRA member,<br />

states, “You learn as you discuss and share. Some<br />

issues that you discuss are challenges facing the<br />

November 2009 45


entire area and some are applications of policy.<br />

When it's an issue that many are facing, such as a<br />

shortage of workers, we can work as a group to find<br />

solutions, or at least share the strategies, each of us<br />

are trying.”<br />

In addition to networking, SAHRA invites<br />

professional guest speakers to share the most<br />

current topics of the field including: ethics,<br />

harassment and discrimination. “We have had<br />

lawyers explain federal laws, such as FMLA;<br />

Vocational Rehabilitation Counselors explaining<br />

services they can provide for disabled employees;<br />

representatives from the Department of Labor<br />

explaining legislative updates and research; and<br />

colleagues who share global perspectives and<br />

workplace psychology,” says Gail Ebeltoft.<br />

Developing strong relationships is another<br />

benefit of joining the group. "SAHRA members<br />

are always willing to answer questions and give<br />

advice on what has and has not worked in their<br />

organization,” said Garnet Tisor, SAHRA member.<br />

“It is a comfort knowing that they are always<br />

willing to help.”<br />

SAHRA is always welcoming new members to<br />

share this rewarding, energizing and empowering<br />

experience. Alicia Buckman, SAHRA president,<br />

reports, “SAHRA is a rewarding experience for<br />

everyone, even those not in the HR field. There<br />

are so many resources at your fingertips and the<br />

networking you get is phenomenal.”<br />

Gail Ebeltoft encourages professionals to<br />

join SAHRA, “It's a wonderful organization,”<br />

said Ebeltoft. “It has added immeasurably to my<br />

growth as an HR Practitioner and has enriched my<br />

knowledge of the Dickinson community and the<br />

businesses that operate here.”<br />

46 thecitymag.com


WESTERN NORTH DAKOTA |<br />

Are You a Real<br />

North Dakotan?<br />

by Silvia Vigier, CVB/DSU Intern<br />

Have you ever posed with Salem Sue, the world’s largest<br />

cow, toured a picturesque Abbey or visited a haunted<br />

chapel? If you answered “yes” to most of these<br />

questions, congratulations, you might be a real Nodak.<br />

The Old Red/Old Ten Scenic Byway is a 108-mile road between<br />

Mandan and Dickinson that offers a leisurely drive through lovely,<br />

rural countryside and leads through New Salem, Almont/Sims,<br />

Glen Ullin, Hebron, Richardton, Taylor, Gladstone and Dickinson.<br />

The Old Red/Old Ten Scenic Byway is parallel to I-94, just a few<br />

miles north of the interstate.<br />

Many attractions and festivals are waiting for you, so take the<br />

day off, and prepare for adventure. Let’s begin our Nodak itinerary<br />

in Mandan.<br />

Visit Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park to see the home of<br />

General George Custer and his wife, Libby. Next, go to New Salem<br />

and pose with the world’s largest Holstein cow, “Salem Sue.”<br />

Now, drive to Almont/Sims and experience Sims Lutheran<br />

Church, which is rumored to be haunted by the “Gray Lady” who<br />

visits the church on Sundays. Your journey continues to Glen Ullin.<br />

Stop in for a round of golf at the Glenn Ullin Golf Course,<br />

weather permitting. Next, admire the charm of a little “Brick <strong>City</strong>”<br />

called Hebron.<br />

Hebron is home to Hebron Brick, one of the most successful<br />

brick companies in the Upper Midwest, and Dacotah Clay Pottery,<br />

a quaint, artist’s haven remodeled from a gas station. You’ll leave<br />

with wonderful, handcrafted items and a warm goodbye.<br />

Heading west, visit the Schnell Recreation area, a 2,000 acre,<br />

non-motorized location with wildlife viewing, hiking, horseback<br />

riding, biking and camping. Just three miles west, the Assumption<br />

Abbey in Richardton is home to 60 Benedictine Monks, 30 residing<br />

at the Abbey.<br />

Built in 1906-1910, with a Bavarian Romanesque structure,<br />

Assumption Abbey has a rare steeple design, comprised of four<br />

diamond shapes and 125-foot towers that soar to the top of iron<br />

crosses.<br />

A few more miles down the road is the Art Depot in Taylor<br />

with local artists housed in the restored train depot on the west<br />

edge of town. Next, drive to Gladstone and relax in one of their<br />

parks.<br />

You are finally at Dickinson and can enjoy a good night’s stay<br />

at one of the many fine hotels, complete with evening dining. Now,<br />

you belong to the Nodak family!<br />

Have fun on the Old Red Trail/Old US Highway 10 and don't<br />

forget to bring your camera!<br />

November 2009 47


MAGAZINE<br />

P.O. Box 936<br />

Bismarck, ND 58502-0936<br />

Change Service Requested<br />

48 thecitymag.com

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