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  • Kings of Kitsch

    Parker Kulczyk, The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    Most young people in small towns like Glasgow will tell you: There isn't much to do. So people like Cody King, his friends, and many others make their own fun tinkering with cars. Sometimes, the outcome can be different than you might have imagined starting out. Cody's 1976 Ford LTD is not really a car anymore, but kind of a work of art. Its back end and trunk have been replaced with a custom flatbed (with plans for a built-in cooler), some recycled black rims, a custom sound system and a big... Full story

  • Guttenberg Honored at Event

    Georgie Kulczyk, The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    By now, you've probably heard about Morgan Guttenberg and her recent efforts to address childhood hunger in Glasgow. As previously reported in the Courier, Guttenberg is in the process of putting together a Snack-Pack program for the elementary students in the Glasgow Public School system. The idea originated after she attended a retreat regarding the growing problem of childhood hunger in Montana. At the retreat, she learned about actions that could be taken to help end this problem. Her goal...

  • Closure Planned for Hwy 117

    Riverside Contracting Inc, For The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    Riverside Contracting has announced plans to close Highway 117 to through traffic from mile post 0.0 to mile post 11 (Milk River Bridge) beginning Monday, April 18, at 8 a.m. The closure is not expected to exceed four consecutive days. The work is in conjunction with the MDT, Fort Peck - NW Project that is currently under construction. Local traffic only will be allowed on either side of the bridge with no access of any kind across the bridge during work hours. The anticipated work sequence is as follows: Message boards will be provided to...

  • VCCF Grants Aid Area Projects

    James Walling, The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    Various local projects have received assistance recently via grants from the Valley County Community Foundation. A total of $16,067 has been awarded in all. The grants are intended for projects assisting young people, the elderly, and infrastructure, explained Glasgow’s Sam Waters, who chairs the Grant Committee. The following groups have received funding thus far: $2,000 to the Allies of Scouting to purchase roofing materials for the dining hall/main lodge and the rest room at Boy Scout Park on the Missouri River, $2,000 to the City-County L...

  • Clinton vs. Sanders Race Rolling Toward Montana

    John S Adams, For The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    As the race for the Democratic presidential nomination heads deeper into spring, some Montana Democrats are wondering if lightning will strike twice. That’s because for the second time in eight years their party may not have a clear-cut presidential nominee by the time Montana’s June 7 primary rolls around. The last time that happened was in 2008, when former New York Sen. Hillary Clinton and first-term Sen. Barack Obama brought their campaigns to the Treasure State in the run-up to a historic primary showdown. While the delegate math this tim...

  • Head Start Now Enrolling Students for 2016-2017 School Year

    For The Courier|Apr 13, 2016

    Action for Eastern Montana’s Head Start program in Glasgow is a comprehensive child development pre-school program serving children ages 3-4 and their families. The program is designed to increase school readiness and develop a child’s potential to the fullest. Children enjoy a creative learning experience while getting ready for kindergarten. Your 3-4-year-old will discover art and music, join in “hands-on” activities, develop fine and gross motor skills, explore reading, writing and math and make friends. The school program runs five days a...

  • Mosquito Season is Here

    Stone Tihista, Valley County Weed and Mosquito Coordinator|Apr 13, 2016

    As folks begin to enjoy spring gardening, mosquitoes will begin enjoying spring gardeners! The winter we have had this 2015–2016 has been quite mild to say the least. However we are not that lucky to escape the pesky little bloodsuckers. Over-wintering female mosquitoes will be on the lookout for a blood meal, which they need for egg production. Soon after egg development, they will be in search of water on which to lay their eggs, and for their young (larvae and pupae) to grow. Standing water left by recent rains will provide development sites...

  • Glasgow High School Performs The Wedding Singer

    Desiree Johnson, For The Courier|Apr 6, 2016

    Glasgow High School will be presenting the hit musical The Wedding Singer with performances on April 8-9 and 11 at 7 p.m. and April 10 at 4 p.m. Based on the hit movie, The Wedding Singer takes us back to 1985 when rock-star wannabe Robbie Hart is New Jersey's favorite wedding singer, the life of the party, until his own fiancée leaves him at the altar. Shot through the heart, Robbie makes every wedding as disastrous as his own until Julia, a waitress, wins his affection. As luck would have it,...

  • City Council Brief

    James Walling, The Courier|Apr 6, 2016

    Some meetings of the Glasgow City Council are busier than newspaper reports in the Courier reflect. With various grants pending and the potential acquisition of the Valley Court Apartments in the works, this is one of those weeks. At the April 4 meeting, the council approved resolutions to advertise a call for bids for a new lawn mower to be used by athe cemetery department, and authorization for the submission of the Community Development Block Grant program non-competitive grant application, as well as the release of police department funds...

  • Investigation Continues, Leads to Further Arrest

    Parker Kulczyk, The Courier|Apr 6, 2016

    Valley County Sheriff’s office, during their continued drug investigation, has arrested yet another on meth charges. Rodney Carlton Harrell was arrested on criminal possession of dangerous drugs - methamphetamine - on April 1. KLTZ reported that Harrell has multiple drug offenses, as well as multi-state convictions, and a burglary charge in Valley County. Harrell joins Joseph Jones, Jessica Taylor and Patricia Doney, who were arrested on drug charges last week.... Full story

  • A Penny for Your Thoughts

    James Walling, The Courier|Apr 6, 2016

    It's hard to imagine a family less interested in publicity, but that didn't stop Penny Strommen and her husband Eliot from making time when we came calling. They opened their doors gladly for a couple of out-of-town scribblers and one of Glasgow's first-rate photographers during the past week. When I drove into town to take the job as your new managing editor nearly a year ago, the Strommens' iconic white school house at the crossroads in Vandalia was the first place I made a point of visiting....

  • Glasgow High School Prom 2016

    Apr 6, 2016

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  • Glasgow UM Student Wins Congressional Udall Internship

    Laure Pengelly, For The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    Lillian Alvernaz of Glasgow and 11 other American Indian and Alaska Native college, graduate, and law students will participate in the Udall Native American Congressional Internship this summer. The students will be placed in U.S. Senate, U.S. House and federal agency offices to learn firsthand how the U.S. government works with Native nations. Alvernaz, a traditional Assiniboine/Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate from northeast Montana, is pursuing her master's degree in public administration, a...

  • Glasgow Residents Face Drug Charges

    Gwendolyne Honrud, The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    Joseph Jones, Jessica Taylor and Patricia Doney are currently incarcerated in the Valley County Detention Center after arrests last week. Jones and Taylor face charges of felony criminal possession of dangerous drugs-methamphetamine, misdemeanor possession of dangerous drugs , and misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia. Doney was arrested for partner/family member assault and also faces charges of felony criminal possession of dangerous drugs-methamphetamine, misdemeanor possession of drug paraphernalia-methamphetamine, misdemeanor...

  • Child Abuse Stats Soar

    James Walling, The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    According to statistics from Montana’s Supreme Court, there were 42 new child abuse cases reported in Valley County in 2015. That is more new cases of child abuse than in 2013 and 2014 combined, and 55 percent more cases than 2012, the previous worst year on record. The flood of cases has swamped the child welfare system, according to Mark Douglass, local director for Court Appointed Special Advocates, an organization which trains and coordinates everyday citizens to speak out for abused children. “CASA in Montana began on the Hi-Line, but in...

  • Bike Peddler

    Parker Kulczyk, The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    Ron Guttenberg is 82 years old, but he is one of the busiest and most active 82 year-olds I have met. Guttenberg has been fixing bicycles since his children had their first two-wheelers. His first project for someone other than his own kids, was for a neighbor girl whom he found crying on his front porch because her bike was broken. Since then, Guttenberg has developed a knack for restoring bicycles to "just like new." After retiring from State Farm Insurance over a decade ago, Guttenberg and...

  • Feda Scholarship Adds Areas of Study, Additional Award

    Maggan Walstad, For The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    Two changes to the application requirements for the Feda Scholarship for the Trades become effective with this spring’s applications, Ken Oster announced this week. He chairs the Valley County Community Foundation, which administers the scholarship. Remaining unchanged is the scholarship award to a Valley County high school senior graduating in 2016 with plans to attend a trade school. The first change allows previous recipients to apply for a second scholarship, providing they have successfully completed one semester of study. The second c...

  • Wheatgrass Artist of the Month: Jason Brock

    Tess Fahlgren, For The Courier|Mar 30, 2016

    Wheatgrass Arts and Gallery in downtown Glasgow will be holding a First Friday Art Exhibit of Wolf Point artist Jason Brock’s paintings this Friday evening, April 1, at 5:30. Brock was born and raised in Wolf Point, where in grade school he fell in love with doodling - an interest that became a love for art, eventually pushing him to attend Dickinson State University in pursuit of an art degree. Since returning to Wolf Point from Dickinson, however, family life superseded his art and his return to creativity has mostly been, as he says, ...

  • And The Winners Are...

    Mar 30, 2016

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  • Spotlight on the Stockyards

    Ginevra Kirkland, For The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    Agriculture isn't all about crops and livestock, it's also about the people who choose to pursue it as a career. Working at the Glasgow Stockyards is tough, and their established, experienced staff work all year long, in and out of all kinds of weather. To find out more about the people working at one of Glasgow's linchpin businesses, the Courier talked to some of their yard hands to get a better feel for their day-to-day lives. We caught up with Mary Abrahamson at Doc Z in Wolf Point on March...

  • Plea Agreement in FPFAC Case

    Gwendolyne Honrud, The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    Mary Strand, her attorney Vernon Woodward, and Valley County Attorney Nick Murnion have reached a plea agreement in the embezzlement case involving the Fort Peck Fine Arts Council. The agreement will be heard by the Court at a date yet to be determined. Per the agreement, Strand will plead guilty to five felony charges, four for embezzlement and one for money laundering. In exchange she will be sentenced to five years in the Montana Department of Corrections, with all five years suspended for each count, and 30 days in the Valley County Detenti... Full story

  • Nashua School District Awarded Rural Community Grant from Northwest Farm Credit Services

    Jennifer Rohrer, For The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    Northwest Farm Credit Services has awarded the Nashua School District a $1,500 Northwest FCS Rural Community Grant to help replace their playground equipment. "Much of the playground equipment on our playground is outdated, thus becoming a safety concern," said Nashua School District Superintendent Jennifer Cunningham. "Our goal is to replace all outdated equipment with new, safer playground equipment that will be used not only by our students, but also by families in our community." In 2015,...

  • Kompel Reminds Public on Fencing

    James Walling, The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    City of Glasgow Public Works Director Robert Kompel asks the public to be aware of changes to the city ordinance on fencing, which took effect last summer. The changes listed in Ordinance No. 953 impact the construction of fences at corners and intersections within city limits. Kompel reports an uptick in fencing related calls to Montana 811, the national number designated by the Federal Communications Commission to help protect do-it-yourselfers, landscapers and contractors from unintentionally hitting underground utility lines while working...

  • Abuse Victim Still Waiting for Restitution

    Georgie Kulczyk, The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    In 2009, former Glasgow resident Dan Burns was found guilty – per plea agreement - of sexual abuse of children, a felony, and was ordered to pay $82,352.23 in restitution to his victim. Seven years later, even after the death of Burns while he was incarcerated for the crime, his victim is still waiting for compensation. Billings attorney Bill O’Connor explained that the state tried unsuccessfully for six years to collect the court ordered restitution from Burns. O’Connor represents the victim and his interests via his mother, Maugeen McGra...

  • City Council: In Brief

    James Walling, The Courier|Mar 23, 2016

    Adam Morehouse was approved as a hire for a vacant position in the city's street department at the March 21 meeting of the Glasgow City Council, marking a return to the crew after a stint with the Glasgow Police Department. Also approved for rehire was Robert Webber, who is returning to the GPD after a stint with the Billings Police Department. Mayor Becky Erickson took the opportunity to thank City Clerk-Treasurer Stacy Amundson for preparing an environmental report which was sent to Montana's...

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