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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 17

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
17
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BISAAARCK AAANDAN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Friday, February 28, 1986 CLASSIFIED ADS Immfir i mm jWly in mwmmmmmiwmmmmmifMm mm i Latecomer odds mice Sylvester Danzl Gene Baldwin MANDAN CITY COMMISSION (2 seats) Bruce Boehm Robert Dykshoorn Edward R. Froehlich Doug Kocourek MANDAN PARK BOARD (3 seats) Ronald Biberdorf Pam Maki Berge Sandra Christianson Larry Schafer Bradley Thornton MANDAN MUNICIPAL JUDGE Thomas Schneider incumbents BISMARCK PARK BOARD (3 seats). Connie Sprynczynatyk Ed Hasche James Smid Jr. Timothy Mueller BISMARCK MAYOR Marian Haakenson John VonRueden BISMARCK CITY COMMISSION (2 seats) Emeroy Swanson Roger Peet Jack Kavaney RayO'Hara Marie Engelhard LeRoy Walker throw his hat into the ring. The same friends helped him collect the 300 needed signatures the next day.

While he has no specific goals regarding the local park system, Mueller says that his expertise would be valuable. "I COULD bring a lot of experience, particularly in planning and administration," he said. Mueller, 39, has been with the state park system since 1972. A native of Minot and graduate of Minot State College, he and his family live at 1625 Wichita Drive. Other candidates for the Bismarck Park Board are: Incumbent Connie Sprync-zynatyk, 34, 2506 Stevens freelance home economist.

Ed Hasche, 49, 820 W. Central owner of Athlete's Foot. James Smid 44, 333 W. Brandon president of CapCare. THE RACE for mayor pits incumbent City Commissioner Mar-Ian Harlan Haakenson, 49, 115 S.

Griffin owner of Hawk's Pit Stop and Sheridan House Saloon, against former City Commissioner Three leap into races in Burleigh By JANELL COLE Tribune Staff Writer Voters in Burleigh County are going to have more of a choice than ever after three more candidates for county offices came forth late Thursday. County Commissioner Russell Stuart of Bismarck said he has decided to run for re-election. He will be seeking a second term on the board. Also making his formal jump into the commissioners race is Claus Lembke, Bismarck, executive director of the Bismarck-Man-dan Board of Realtors. AND AL Brose, who is the county's director of emergency management, has become the third candidate for register of deeds.

Stuart, 71, said his decision was affected somewhat by Commissioner Deanna Hill's announcement that she's not running for re-election. "I was a little concerned. If two of us (incumbents) go off, it might be a little bit rough on the board," he said. Stuart is a former North Dakota game and fish commissioner. He says he has "no special group except the taxpayer" that he looks out for, and wants to continue efforts to streamline local government.

STUART HAS a record of voting conservatively on county money matters and he says "when it comes to spending public dollars I admit I'm very conservative." Lembke, 43, has lived in Burleigh County since 1979, when he moved here to be administrator for the local and state Realtors organizations. He is a native of Germany and immigrated to the Fargo area in 1965. He lives in the Green Acres subdivision just north of Bismarck. Lembke said he would like to provide "a much needed vitality to the county commission" and said the biggest issue facing the county is the cuts in federal and state revenue sharing. Also, he said, "we need to get improved relations with other elected (county) officials." BROSE, 48, has been the county's emergency management director, an appointive position, the past five years.

He was also the county's personnel director until the city of Bismarck and Burleigh County combined its personnel office into one. When personnel offices were combined, Brose took a cut in pay. He said his decision to run for register of deeds was affected Bank Bismarck. Mandan Park Board candidaates are: Ronald Biberdorf, 43, 411 16th St. N.W., principal, Lewis and Clark Elementary School.

Pam Maki Berge, 31, 1004 Sixth St. S.W., housewife-volunteer. Sandra Christianson, 33, 208 11th St. N.E., housewife-volunteer. Incumbent Larry Schafer, 38, 305 14th St.

N.E., produce manager, Bill's Super Valu. Incumbent Bradley Thornton, 31, 1023 27th St. N.W., self-employed electrician. FOR JUDGE, the only candidate is incumbent Thomas Schneider, 35, 207 14th St. N.E., judicial referee, South Central Judicial District.

By JEFF OLSON ot The Tribune AM va 4 Vf tf By TED QUANRUD and STAN STELTER Tribune Staff Writers With only minutes to spare, Timothy Mueller guaranteed there would be a race for the three seats on the Bismarck Park Board. Mueller, deputy director of the state Department of Parks and Recreation, arrived at the City County Building with his petitions just about 10 minutes before the filing deadline at 4 p.m. Thursday. Mueller's decision brought to four the number of candidates seeking the three open seats on the Bismarck Park Board in the April 1 municipal election. IN THE other Bismarck races, two candidates are seeking the mayor's office and eight are in the race for the two other open City Commission seats.

In Mandan, there'll be races for the two City Commission seats and three Park Board openings. Four filed for City Commission and five for the Park Board. The municipal judge will run unchallenged. Mueller said he was urged by friends Wednesday evening to PSC official interviews for FERC position Leo Reinbold, who has said he intends to run for a second term on the Public Service Commission, says he is being considered for a federal regulatory appointment. Reinbold was interviewed Wednesday in Washington, D.C., for a spot on the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and he said Thursday night he believed he was one of about 10 people being "seriously considered" for the post.

"Well, it's impossible for me to say yes right now," Reinbold said when asked if he would accept a FERC job. "But if the president called and said, 'Leo, I want you' it would be awfully difficult, perhaps impossible, to say no," Reinbold said. There is one vacancy on the five-member commission, which regulates various energy matters that come under federal jurisdiction, The Associated Press reported. Its chairman, Raymond O'Connor, left the commission effective Jan. 31, and the Reagan administration is seeking a Republican to replace O'Connor, Reinbold said.

A decision on O'Connor's replacement is expected within a month. If he is not appointed, he still intends to run for re-election to his state job, Reinbold said. He has known for about six weeks that his name was being considered to replace O'Connor. Appointments to the federal commission are for four-year terms and are subject to Senate approval. The job pays $70,000 annually.

Reinbold now makes $46,000. O'Connor's term expires in 1988, and Reinbold's understanding is that O'Connor's replacement will serve out that term and then be reappointed to a second four-year term. Reinbold, 52, was elected to his first six-year term on the state Public Service Commission in 1980. Before that, he was chairman of the geography department at Valley City State College for 17VZ years. Cable TV starts new channel for kids and families Beginning at noon Saturday, Bismarck-Mandan Cable TV will offer a new channel on the system's Variety Tier.

Channel 33 will consist of two programming services: Genesis Cable Storytime, a computer graphic story channel with no audio, and Eternal Word Television Network, a Catholic programing service. Genesis Storytime is geared for young children who can view a story picture being built one item at a time by computer, while parents read the accompanying text. The stories are 10-15 minutes long and are packaged in half hour segments. The programming offers families an opportunity to interact with the television and enhance the reading skills of older children. EWTN has been on the local cable channel 29 since May 1985 with Trinity Broadcasting Network.

With its removal to channel 33, a non-denominational Christian channel will be carried 24 hours a day. retired telephone technician for Western Electric. Gene Baldwin, 60, 1424 N. 19th retired construction supervisor for Northwestern Bell. FOR THE two Mandan City Commission seats, the lineup is Incumbent Bruce Boehm, 33, 810 First St.

N.W., laboratory technician, Northern Great Plains Research Center. Incumbent Robert Dykshoorn, 33, 310 Third Ave. N.W., field representative, Workmen's Compensation Bureau. Edward R. Froehlich, 60, 806 Second Ave.

N.W., engineer, Burlington Northern Railroad. Doug Kocourek, 34, 700 17th Ave. N.W., vice president, Norwest 1 toxic rules kits, monitoring, and training for supervisors and employees. The commissioners heard from several people at Thursday's hearing. Lawrence Klemin of the National Federation of Independent Businesses told the commissioners on Thursday the Right to Know Act was unconstitutional because of the way the Legislature passed the measure.

The rules duplicated federal laws and would be "unduly burdensome," especially to small businesses, he said. Don Litchfield of the Greater North Dakota Association and Lowell Ridgeway of the North Dakota Petroleum Council both said the rules went beyond the intent of the Legislature. Devoted Ted tickets Association but it seeing along tabs on vacation the to help ticket provided Patriots Patriots John VonRueden, 52, 1232 E. Coulee Road, general sales manager, KXMB-TV. Vying for the two other openings on the City Commission are: Emeroy Swanson, 64, 2907 Winnipeg Drive, retired principal of Bismarck High School.

Roger Peet, 59, 1109 Prairie Drive, insurance agent. Jack Kavaney, 40, 3134 Manitoba Lane, real estate agent, developer. Ray O'Hara, 63, 124 W. Arikara retired sales manager for Amoco. Marie Engelhard, 53, 1119 S.

Ninth lot 1122, homemaker. LeRoy Walker, 56, H8'2 N. Fifth owner, Walker's N' Daughters Jewelers. Sylvester Danzl, 53, 1318 N. 22nd 1 for more than 30 days since the rules were announced Feb.

19, Chairman Katherine Satrom said. The bureau began speaking about and distributing an outline of the proposed employee information program in October, and although there has not been much comment, most people want to try to improve safety in the work place, Satrom said. "The question today is how much they want to be regulated in that regard," she said. The bureau is preparing a publication to help employers! set up employee information programs. Employers would be required to have a hazardous chemical inventory, labeling controls, spill or emergency response teams and vflD' ATT A fans Schlaht, left, had to take at the Western Dakota basketball tourney didn't stop him from the games.

He brought a portable TV to keep the action. Schlaht took time from his job at State Highway Department out his wife, Lou, who is manager for the tournament. Bismarck Century fans lots of vocal and visual support, above, for their in Thursday afternoon's opening round, but the fell 53-40 to the Willis-ton Coyotes. slightly by the decrease in pay he suffered. The elective office would pay about $6,000 a year more than he's now making.

But Brose said he "totally supported the consolidation and I still support the consolidation." HE SAID, however, that he's "interested in doing something different" and that the record-keeping involved in the register of deeds office is something that fits his capabilities. Brose, a native of Wing, was director of State Radio Communications, worked at Clark Equipment Co. and ran his own business before joining the county. April 16 is the deadline for county candidates to file petitions. Immigrants too busy to hear Nazis The subject of how the Nazis prior to World War I tried through North Dakota newspapers to sway German-Russian immigrants to their cause will be presented Sunday at the Heritage Center by Johnathon Wagner of the Minot State College history department.

Sponsored by the North Dakota Humanities Council, the presentation will be at 2 p.m. in Russell Reid Auditorium. Wagner's research reveals that the Nazis failed because of indifference. The immigrants were too busy being assimilated into the American way of life and battling the Great Depression, deflated farm prices and foreclosures. Two newspapers, both published in Bismarck, tried.

They were the Staats Anzeiger (State Review) and the Dakota Freie Press (Dakota Free Press). After the editor of the Freie Press, H.F. Fritsche, toured Germany 1937, he came back to write 16 full-page articles on the "prosperous and peaceloving" motherland. The editor of the Staats Anzeiger, Frank Brandt, depicted Hitler as "a world historical figure of immense power and genius." He made numerous anti-Semetic attacks on Jews. The third German newspaper in the state, the Catholic North Dako-.

ta Herald of Dickinson, denounced Nazis as "anti-Christian, heathen, end nihilist." Deadline extended on testimony But David Funsten, representing the North Dakota Building and Construction Trades Council, said some employees in the state are working with toxic substances without knowing about it. "There are a lot of cases where you don't have any idea. There are no requirements to tell you what you're working with," Funsten said. The proposed rules could be made even stronger, according to Dennis Tetzloff of the Bismarck Painters and Allied Trades Union. "The risk for all workers is greater than the public realizes," he said.

Federal rules do not cover construction workers, so the state rules should, Jie said. North Dakota's Workmen's Compensation Bureau has extended the deadline for testimony on new rules that require employers to inform workers about toxic substances they use. Several people requested a 30-day extension because they received short notice of Thursday's hearing on the rules, according to The Associated Press. The rules being considered stem from the Right to Know Act passed by the 1985 Legislature. That measure requires the state's employers to establish an employee information program on hazardous substances in the work place.

After the hearing, the bureau decided to extend the comment period until March 25, which allows fcn 11 fci 1 gi fci 1 1 11 fcli Hil rM fflw ll.

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