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The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • 10

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Bismarck, North Dakota
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10
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10A 0 Tuesday, November 26, 1985 0 The Bismarck Tribune Resort plan selected CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Lodge Corp. under the condition that the development group more detailed plans for financing, the group's desired length of lease from the state and a third-party feasibility study. The committee also asked the developers to include a more definitive environmental plan discussing water and sewer details, a detailed management plan and an expanded marketing proposal. The committee has given the group three months to satisfy its re quests. The development corporation, which includes four developers from North Dakota and one from Iowa, originally proposed to investe $4.5 million of its own money with an additional $4.9 million in Bank of North Dakota revenue bonds, a $500,000 community development block grant and a $1.8 million urban development action grant.

Whitney called the financing package questionable when it was first proposed. However, both Whitney and lead Arikira developer Lowell Goodman of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, say a workable financial arrangement can be worked out. "We have never stated we're after state funds," Goodman said. "Our proposal is very high in equity capital." Goodman, who is a native of Powers Lake, said construction of Mayville task FARGO (AP) Gov. George Sinner today said he was disbanding a task forced formed to study the possibility of turning Mayville State College into a specialized school for math and science.

Anyone wanting to pursue the matter further will have to take their case to the state Board of Higher Education, Sinner said: at a Fargo news conference. Since early this year, Mayville State has been the focus of a proposal to create a sort of regional high school in North Dakota. The proposed school would have allowed gifted North Dakota youths, as well as those from other states, the resort could begin as early as March or April. He said the project will take about a year to complete. Plans for the resort, which is to be constructed near Pick City, include a 125-room lodge with a ballroom, restaurant, weight room, small group meeting room, amphitheater and indoor and outdoor pools.

The plans also include 10 retail outlets, a nine-hole golf course and docks for houseboat parking and rental of fishing and sports boats. Developers also have plans to construct tennis and basketball courts and an building. The project, which Goodman said will be constructed in a turnof-the-century motif, has a total price tag of about $9 million. Goodman said developers do not anticipate a problem filling 25 rooms at the lodge that, he said, will be "very, very plush" and will cost a day to rent. "North Dakota is no different from any other state," he said.

"They just don't have as many people. Studies have shown that if you have those kind of rooms they'll be full all of the time." Goodman said developers plan to launch a nationwide advertising campaign before the resort opens. "We're using a different approach. We want to attract people to North Dakota rather than attract those coming through (to stop)." force disbanded to study in a campus-like setting. Mayville State officials had strongly opposed the governor's idea.

Sinner said he still favored the idea, but he said discussion was being discontinued on whether Mayville would be a good site. School officials blamed the uncertainty about the school's future for recent declines in its enrollment. When asked if North Dakota's 11 state-supported schools are too many for taxpayers to pay for, Sinner said, "The jury's still out on that." WARD GRAND FORES MERIDAN WELLS GRIGGS COLDER VALLEY BURLEIGH KIDDER CASS STARE GRANT RANSOM PLANE SARGENT Emma Stewart, Carson: Monday was cloudy with blowing wind and some snow. The high was 8 and the low was -15. It's partly cloudy today.

Local stations battle for fans By The Associated Press Snow, freezing rain and sleet belted the nation from the Pacific Northwest to New York today, bitter cold settled in the Plains and Rockies and rain spread from the heartland to the Atlantic Coast. Snow was falling across most of the northern and central Rockies and parts of the Pacific Northwest and stretched from the northern Plains across the upper Great Lakes to most of New York and northeast Pennsylvania. Freezing rain, sleet and snow extended from southeast Nebraska across southern Minnesota to western Pennsylvania. Bitter cold prevailed across the northwest Plains and northern Rockies, with earlymorning readings below zero over most of the region and readings of 15 degrees below zero or lower in central and eastern Montana. Travelers' advisories were posted for parts of South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa, WEATHER WATCH and freezing rain pound nation Minnesota, most of Wisconsin and Michigan, northwestern Pennsylvania and western New York state.

Winter storm warnings were in efect for eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota, where an additional snowfall of up to 8 inches and northerly winds of up to 25 mph were expected. Temperatures in the single digits to teens were expected to combine with the wind to produce wind chills of as much as 45 degrees below zero. A low pressure system over southwest Arizona spread rain across southern California. A flash flood watch was issued for southeast Arizona. Today's forecast called for snow from the northern Pacific Coast through Montana and from northern Minnesota through northern Michigan; freezing drizzle across northern Wisconsin and upper sections of southern Michigan; rain across southern New York and southern New England; and snow, sleet and freezing rain across upstate New York and central New England.

National Park, Medora: Today is the northwest. The wind blew and it The high was 3 and the low was -8. REVELE BOTH CAVALR Bob Powell, Theodore Roosevelt bright and clear with winds from snowed off and on all day Monday. We got inches of new snow. MOLINTRAR RAMSET WALSH DEATHS Richard Bubel CENTER Richard Bubel, 86, Center, died today in Missouri Slope Lutheran Home, Bismarck.

Arrangements are pending at Buehler Funeral Home, Mandan. Esther Gran BOWMAN Esther B. Gran, 73, Bowman, did Friday at her home. Services were scheduled for this morning at Bowman Lutheran Church, with burial in the Bucyrus Cemetery. Esther Sarsland was born June 29, 1912, in Harding County, S.D., where she grew up and received her education.

She married Trygve E. Gran, June 30, 1928, in Ludlow, S.D. Briefly they lived at Gascoyne, where she worked in a hotel and cafe. Next, they moved to Ludlow and in the late 1930s, returned to Bucyrus, where they owned and operated the Bucky Russ Bar. Mr.

Gran died in 1965 and she moved to Bowman, where she worked at Bowman Dry Cleaners, Gene's Cafe and 'Cafe. In 1980, she became a resident of Pleasant Manor, Bowman. She is survived by one daughter, Mrs. Mervin (Georgene) Ellefson, Rapid City, S.D.; four sisters, Alice Mack, Ruth Sarsland and Irene Kralicek, all of Bowman, and Mabel Sindahl, New London, three brothers, Billy, Scranton, and Lloyd and Walter, both of Ludlow; six grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. (Krebsbach Funeral Service, Bowman) Beata Hummel GARRISON Services for Beata Hummel, 72, Garrison, who died Sunday in the Garrison hospital, will be held at 2 p.m.

Wednesday at St. Paul's Lutheran Church, Garrison, with burial in Garrison Cemetery. Beata Mehlhoff was born July 13, 1913, i in rural Garrison. She married Reinhold Hummel, Dec. 30, 1931, in Garrison.

They farmed east of here until 1969, when they moved into town. From 1966 to 1971, she was employed Fredericks Variety Store and from 1971 to 1977 at the Garrison Nursing Home. Mr. Hummel died in 1972. Survivors are two sons, Ronald V.

Garrison, and Gordon Colorado Springs, one daughter, Mrs. Roger (Karen) Jacobson, Stanton; eight grandchildren; two stepgrandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; one step-great-grandchild; six sisters, Freida Strecker, Garrison, Alvina Flath, Apache Junction, Dorothy Elam, Stanton, Mandy Peterson and Rita Johnson, both of Hamilton, and Pauline Munson, Helena, and one brother, Melvin "Corky," Garrison. Visitation is at Thompson Funeral Home, Garrison. The Forecast for 7 p.m. EST, Nov.

27. -30 19200 30 COLD 70 80 70 High Temperatures 70 70' 180 80 80 FRONTS: Warm Cold Showers Rain Flurries Snow Occluded we Stationary BISMARCK DATA Sunshines Sunrise Today. 8:02 a.m. Sunset Today. 5:00 p.m.

Missouri River Missouri River Stage. 11.4 ft. 24 hour change down .1 ft. Missouri River flood stage 16.0 ft. Precipitation Total this month to date .79 in.

Normal this month to date .46 in. Total Jan. 1st to date 17.38 in. Normal Jan. 1st to date 14.80 in.

SAKAKAWEA POOL RIVERDALE (AP) Lake Sakakawea pool elevation today 1,837.6 feet above sea level; up 0.1 foot from Monday; year ago 1,843.6. Discharge Monday 18,300 c.f.s.; estimated discharge today 18,000. 'OAHE POOL PIERRE, S.D. (AP) Oahe reservoir elevation 1,599.55 feet above mean sea level, up .22 feet in the past 24 hours. Tailwaters 1,422.47 feet.

Discharge 24,600 c.f.s. Temperature 44 degrees. Big Bend elevation 1,421.05 feet. Discharge 26,200 c.f.s. Temperature 34 degrees.

STATE FORECASTS North Dakota Tonight cloudy, with a chance of light snow west and central. Partly cloudy east. Lows 10 to 20 below. Wednesday cloudy with a chance of snow. Highs 5 below to 5 above.

North Dakota Bismarck 09 B08 .27 Dickinson 0 B12 .05 Fargo 19 B03 17 Gd Forks 12 B07 .40 Jamestown 14 B09 .24 Minot B01 B13 .23 Williston B01 B17 .17 South Dakota Aberdeen 17 01 .21 Huron 22 03 .06 Lemmon 06 B13 Mobridge 14 B08 .18 Pickstown 25 07 Tr. Pierre 21 01 .05 Rapid City 11 B07 .04 Sioux Falls 23 18 .01 Watertown 17 03 .04 Minnesota Alexandria 18 13 .18 Bemidji 14 07 .20 Duluth 21 18 .30 Hibbing 19 15 Int. Falls 12 06 26 Red. Falls 22 18 T. Rochester 26 24 01 St.

Cloud 20 17 .11 Montana Billings -3-12 .15 Glasgow -2-20 .10 Great Falls -8 -21 tr Havre -5 Helena -6-15 .01 Miles City m-12 .02 Missoula 13 7 .07 Elsewhere Albany 39 26 .26 Albuquerque 56 .02 Amarillo 72 Anchorage 20 Asheville 63 49 Atlanta 65 59 Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Birmingham 71 65 Boise 03 Boston 43 26 .03 Brownsville 84 Buffalo 39 .23 Casper Cheyenne 28 Chicago .35 Cincinnati .22 Cleveland 38 32 .51 67 .23 Columbus, Oh. 53 .13 39 Dallas 76 Dayton 42 37 .28 Denver 58 30 Josephine Matz MOTT Mrs. Louis (Josephine Helen) Matz, 77, Mott, died Sunday in a Bismarck hospital. Services will be held at 10 a.m. MST Wednesday at St.

Vincent's Catholic Church, Mott, with burial in the church cemetery. A rosary will be said at 7 tonight at Evanson-Jensen Funeral Home, Mott. Josephine Scharosch was born Nov. 7, 1908, in rural Mott. She grew up here, in Louisiana and in Michigan.

In 1921 the family returned to the Mott area and in 1922 she married Frank Yates here. He died in 1938. She was a cook at Mott restaurants and worked for Grant Real Estate and Insurance Agency. On June 26, 1950, she married Louis Matz in Mott. They lived at New England, Terry, Marmarth and Scranton, where he worked for the Milwaukee Road.

In 1965 they returned to Mott. She was a past president of the Mott American Legion Auxiliary. Survivors include her husband; three sons, Frank Yates, Mott, Robert Yates, New England, and Charles Krause, Mandan; two daughters, Mrs. William (Pat) Heuther, Regent, and Mrs. Jake (Mary) Brucker, Mandan; 14 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren; two brothers, Tony, Billings, and Herbert, Portland, and two sisters, Mrs.

Betty Wentz, Medford, and Mrs Mary Kliner, Euclid, Minn. Freda Oster HAZEN Mrs. Edwin (Freda) Oster, 66, Hazen, died today in the Hazen hospital. Arrangements are pending at Goetz Funeral Home, Hazen. Harry Stebbins BOWMAN A longtime Bowman farmer and truck driver, Harry T.

Stebbins, 74, Bowman, died Sunday in a Bismarck hospital. Services will be held at 2 p.m. MST Wednesday at Bowman Lutheran Church with Masonic services at Bowman Cemetery. Mr. Stebbins was born May 1, 1911, in Bowman County, where he was raised and attended Eden School.

He worked on the family dairy farm and was a truck driver. In 1932, he married Hazel Johnson in Bowman, where he continued to work as a truck driver and farmer. She died in 1977. He married Jeraldine Rea, Sept. 10, 1980, in Bison, S.D., and they continued to live here where he maintained his work.

His memberships included the Dickinson Elks and the Bowman Masonic Lodge. Survivors are his wife; three sons, Darrell and Jim, both of Bowman, and Frank, Billings, one sister, Mrs. Margaret DiTullio, San Jose, five brothers, Emery and Robert, both South Dakota Increasing cloudiness with a slight chance of snow west tonight. Partly cloudy with flurries possible central and east. Lows 10 below north to 5 above south.

Chance of snow north and west Wednesday. Increasing cloudiness southeast. Highs zero northwest to the teens southeast. Montana East of Continental Divide North winds 15 to 25 mph developing tonight causing bitter wind chill temperatures with local blowing and drifting. Highs on Wednesday 10 below to 10 above.

Lows tonight mostly 15 below to 25 below. Minnesota Tonight clear to partly cloudy and cold. Lows from 10 below northwest to 5 above southeast. Wednesday increasing cloudiness with a chance of light snow north. Highs near zero in the northwest to the lower 20s southeast.

EXTENDED OUTLOOKS Thursday through Saturday North Dakota: Chance of snow Thanksgiving Day. Very cold Thursday through Saturday. Lows 5 below to 20 below. Highs 5 above to 10 below. South Dakota: Chance of snow Thursday.

Lows from to 10 above Thursday and from 5 below to zero 15 below Friday and Saturday. Highs in the teens Thursday, from 5 to 15 above Friday and Saturday. flurries Minnesota: Chance of light snow or mainly in the south Thursday. Partly cloudy Friday and Saturday. Continued unseasonably cold.

Highs from 2 below to 5 above northwest to the lower 20s Thursday, near zero north to the mid-teens south Friday and Saturday. Lows from 10 to 15 below north to 5 to 10 above south Thursday, 20 to 25 below north to zero to 10 below south Friday and Saturday. Des Moines 31 29 .02 OklaCty 67 58 Detroit .38 .30 Omaha 28 26 Duluth 18 Orlando 82 El Paso 49 Philadelphia 42 .04 Evansville .41 Phoenix Fairbanks Pittsburgh .18 Flagstaff Portland, Me. Grand Rapids 31 29 .23 Portland, Or. .01 Hartford 43 28 .07 Providence Honolulu Raleigh Houston Reno Indianapolis .25 Richmond Jackson, Ms.

76 64 Sacramento Jacksonville 58 Louis .10 Juneau 27 St Pete 83 Kansas City SitLkeCty 52 .02 Las Vegas 64 San Antonio 79 Los Angeles 65 60 San Fran Little Rock 64 88882 San Diego 1.47 Louisville 64 56 St Ste Marie 25 .06 Lubbock 75 55 Seattle 29 .01 Memphis 70 64 .07 Shreveport .02 Miami Beach 79 76 Spokane 07 -03 .03 Midind 77 57 .01 Syracuse 38 27 .16 Milwaukee 38 34 .15 Topeka 36 34 .05 Mpls- St Paul 25 21- .04 Tucson 60 52 .47 Nashville 62 .02 Tulsa 53 .32 New Orleans 82 70 Washington 42 New York 44 34 .12 Wichita Norfolk, Va. 56 Wilkes Barre 37 .24 North Platte 27 09 Wilmington 42 37 .03 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Petersen's view, and KBMR has "tightened" rather than changed. Finding that too many of its DJs were second jock to do one in late afternoon. "playing their own music," KBMR now insists they Over at KBMR, sales manager Dick Petersen restrict themselves to that which has been doesn't deny some slippage in the past couple of "approved." years, but will concede nothing else. This policy was pivotal in Marv Allen's switch to "We are in the market, not a satellite dish," he KLXX, after 13 years behind the mike at KBMR.

says, counting KBMR's "talk," or local information, Saying that he was feeling "too programmed," as a strength. He also downplays his rival's Allen asks, "What do I have to sell but my nighttime effectiveness, since KLXX has only a 250- personality, and my longevity in the market? The watt reach after the sun goes down, as opposed to people here believe in me. I'm totally happy, and 1,000 watts during the day. here I have the freedom I want." In Krahn's plans is an increase to 5,000 watts both He says, "These people here mean business day and night. Meanwhile, KBMR has poured on the they're here to make a mark." Krahn, saying the juice, transmitting at 50,000 watts since early addition of Allen has made "a big difference" in the November in a move designed to strengthen its response of advertisers and listeners, ventures a signal in existing markets rather than to extend prediction: reach, Petersen says, although "now we blanket the "There's going to be a real realignment in radio entire state." stations, with some of the big players in this market Expansion to night broadcasting may be coming being real losers." later.

Included in the sweepstakes is his new "adultKLXX, in Peterson's view, has the more difficult contemporary" FM station, KBYZ, which is task of "trying to establish a country format in a competing with Bismarck-Mandan's other two metro (essentially Bismarck-Mandan) market." commercial stations, KFYR (AM) and Y93 (FM). KBMR has responded to the KLXX challenge by All, for sure, are giving it everything they have, hiring its first farm director (for increased rural pouring over the survey data that will give them the news coverage) and by luring two popular disc key to audience appeal "a very complicated jockeys Jay Jackson and Charlie Williams marketing strategy," Petersen calls it. (formerly Charlie Jay) away from Jamestown's But even if you're only an "uncomplicated" KSJB, one of those out-of-town stations that was dummy who gets off on the way a fiddle rubs against showing up in listener-surveys. a steel guitar, you'd better believe that you are in Otherwise, "You don't score points on defense," in demand. Friends hoping to save lawyer CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1A Columbia Law School, "We all thought that this was a career that was going to blossom," recalled Kemp.

That summer he worked in the Washington office of Sen. Donald Stewart of Alabama, and met the young woman at the barbecue. "He was very funny, very friendly," and they began dating, she said. After Columbia he clerked for a federal judge in Montgomery, and got a job at a Miami law firm. But he became depressed after the woman broke off their relation- Cities report record By The Associated Press Williston recorded a record low temperature as this month's snowfall total neared 20 inches in Fargo, according to the National Weather Service.

A 19 below zero reading in Williston today broke the previous low mark of 17 set in 1897 for ship and he failed the Florida bar exam in 1984. He quit the firm and stayed in his apartment, staring out his window at Biscayne Bay. He arrived in New York this spring and began living on the street. Kemp, who had lost touch with Garry, spotted him on a street corner this summer. "It was a situation where you think, 'It's and then think, 'It can't be she said.

"He was eating out of a garbage can." Like his former girlfriend, Kemp has tried unsuccessfully to get Garry to seek help. Working on the theory that he has abandoned his low temperatures Nov. 26, the weather service said. In Fargo, where it has snowed 19.2 inches this month, the amount of snow is the second most received in the city during November in this century. The city received 7.2 inches in Monday's snowstorm, the weather service said.

Buchler Funeral Home 1210) 1701 SUNSET DRIVE CHAPELS IN TAMERAL BUENLER CARPEL I NEW SALEM CENTER Center Chapel MANDAN 663-9630, Warren Buehler of Bowman, Vic, Beulah, Scott, Grafton, and Bill, Glendive, 11 grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. (Krebsbach Funeral Service, Bowman) Reinhold Wittmayer HAZEN Reinhold Wittmayer, 75, Hazen, was dead on arrival Monday at the Hazen hospital. Arrangements are pending at Erdman Funeral Home, Hazen. Ben Wolbaum DICKINSON Ben Wolbaum, 87, Dickinson, died Sunday in the Dickinson Nursing Center. usual haunts in recent weeks, she looked for him over the weekend on the upper West Side of Manhattan.

"We weren't the closest of friends, but he was my classmate, and you can't let one of your classmates go down the drain," she explained. When the temperature drops below 32 degrees, police are allowed to pull "endangered" people off the street. That's the only way to save his life, his former girlfriend said. "'He doesn't think there's anything wrong with "Here's someone who had everything against him, a poor black guy from the South," McDonald said. "But his intelligence and hard work brought him up.

If he can recover from this, I can see him helping a lot of other homeless people." STATE DEATHS BOTTINEAU Esther 's. Boettcher, 77. CHAFFEE Robert E. Hahn, 57. DEVILS LAKE Mrs.

John A. Nord, 85. FARGO Mrs. C.R. Landblom, 93.

FORTUNA Earl Jeglum, 79. JAMESTOWN Magdaline Buck, 82; Tula W. Gronewald, 80. MINOT Glenn A. Anderson, 75; Maggie Berntson, 102; Emma Hoppman, 84; Emil Simonson, 77.

MOHALL Truman A. Dahle, 80. PLAZA Melvin Strand, 75. RUGBY Mary Brossart, 85. WILLISTON Myrtle Haroldson, 82.

Services will be held at 10 a.m. MST Wednesday at St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Dickinson, with spring burial in the church cemetery. Visitation is at Price-Gaffaney Funeral Home, Dickinson, where a St. Anthony's Club rosary will be said at 7:30 tonight.

Mr. Wolbaum was born Sept. 27, 1898, in Muenchen, the Ukraine. He attended rural school and St. Joseph's school.

On Nov. 25, 1924, he married Magdalena Emineth in Rosebud. They farmed in the Dickinson area until 1936 when they moved into town, where he worked for Stark County. In 1942 he began working at the briquette plant. He had worked there for 14 years when he retired, then he worked part time for Parkway Ford.

His wife preceded him in death. Survivors include three sons, Jack Dickinson, Albert, Spearfish, S.D., and Vernon, Choteau, two daughters, Mrs. Doyle (Henrietta) Hunt, Spanaway, and Mrs. Ken (Carole) Heidecker, Dickinson; 16 grandchildren; 10 great one brother, Jack, Dickinson; and two sisters, Mrs. Louie Kadrmas and Mrs.

Henry Geiger, both of Dickinson. FUNERAL SERVICE Dorothy Beierle, 89 Mandan Villa Arrangements Pending DIRECTORS CHUCK EASTGATE BOB EASTGATE GERHARDT JOHN LAWLOR BISMARCK STEELE 23rd St. Divide 8 Bismarck 223-7322.

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